What does a 214(b) visa refusal mean?
Section 214(b) of the US Immigration and Nationality Act presumes that every nonimmigrant visa applicant intends to immigrate until they convince the officer otherwise. A 214(b) refusal means you did not overcome that presumption in the interview — usually on ties to your home country, the credibility of your trip's purpose, or how the finances add up. It is the most common US visa refusal, it is not a ban or fraud finding, and you can reapply.
Can I appeal a 214(b) refusal?
No. There is no appeal, no review request, and no letter that reopens the case — a 214(b) decision is final for that application. The only path is a fresh application: new DS-160, new fee, new appointment, ideally with something genuinely changed. Be very wary of anyone selling "214(b) appeal services" — they are charging you for something that does not exist.
Does 214(b) apply to H1B and L1 visas?
Largely no, and this surprises people. H1B and L1 are dual-intent categories — the law lets those applicants pursue permanent residence without it counting against the visa, so the 214(b) immigrant-intent presumption mostly does not apply. H1B and L1 cases get refused or delayed under other provisions, most commonly 221(g) administrative processing. If a consultant tells an H1B applicant to fear 214(b), that is a sign they do not know the categories.
How long does a 214(b) refusal stay on my record?
Permanently, as a record — but not as a bar. Every future DS-160 asks whether you have been refused, and officers can see the history either way, so always disclose it honestly. A prior 214(b) does not block approval: officers refuse and later approve the same people routinely once the weak point is fixed. What genuinely damages future applications is lying about the refusal, not the refusal itself.
How soon can I reapply after 214(b), and what should change?
You can reapply immediately — there is no waiting period. But the officer's first question will be some form of "what has changed?", and "nothing" is a losing answer. Real changes include stronger and clearer funding evidence, a materially better explanation of the trip or program, new employment or family circumstances, or simply a truthful story told more clearly. Then it becomes a slot problem: new DS-160, new fee, and a new appointment from the same crowded calendar — which is where monitoring and fast booking matter.