Alphabet Inc.’s Google has issued stringent travel advisories to employees requiring U.S. visa stamps, cautioning against international travel due to severe processing delays at American embassies and consulates worldwide. According to an internal memorandum obtained by Business Insider, the technology giant’s external immigration counsel, BAL Immigration Law, alerted staff on Thursday that visa appointment backlogs have reached critical levels—extending up to twelve months in certain diplomatic missions.
The advisory explicitly warned that departing the United States without secured visa revalidation would risk prolonged stranding abroad, potentially disrupting both personal and professional obligations. This development compounds existing pressures on foreign-born tech workers, particularly those under H-1B visas—a program fundamental to Silicon Valley’s recruitment of specialized talent from nations like India and China.
This corporate directive emerges amid heightened visa scrutiny under the Trump administration, which recently implemented intensified vetting protocols for H-1B applicants, including social media screening. The program faced additional constraints this year with the introduction of a $100,000 fee for new applications. Google’s travel restriction echoes its parent company’s September advisory urging H-1B holders to remain stateside, reflecting growing institutional concerns over immigration volatility affecting tech sector mobility.
