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Procedures

Immigrants from Honduras in the US — complete guide

Complete US-immigration guide for the 1,000,000 Honduras-origin community in the United States. Consulate network, US visa reciprocity, TPS, tax treaties,

Immigrants from Honduras in the United States — complete guide

Diaspora overview

Approximately 1,000,000 people of Honduras-origin live in the United States according to recent US Census American Community Survey (ACS) estimates.

Honduran-Americans; large TPS designation since 1999; concentrated in TX, FL, NY, CA

Honduras consulate network in the US

For routine consular services (passport renewal, national ID, civil registry, notarial services, voting from abroad), visit the nearest Honduras consulate in the US. See the Honduras consulate directory for all locations.

Honduras Embassy in Washington, DC

The Embassy of Honduras in the United States handles bilateral diplomatic relations and emergency support.

US visa for Honduras citizens

See US visa reciprocity for Honduras citizens

US travel advisory for Honduras

US State Department’s current advisory level for Honduras:

Level —: — (updated —) — https://travel.state.gov/en/international-travel/travel-advisories/honduras.html

For details and re-entry guidance, see Traveling to Honduras from the US.

Temporary Protected Status (TPS)

TPS status: see /procedures/tps-by-country/honduras/ for current designation.

US bilateral tax treaty status

❌ Honduras does NOT have a US bilateral income-tax treaty. Standard 30% US withholding on FDAP income; Foreign Tax Credit available.

Social Security Totalization Agreement

❌ Honduras does NOT have a Social Security Totalization Agreement with the US.

DV-2026 Diversity Visa Lottery eligibility

❌ Honduras citizens are NOT eligible for DV-2026 — Over 50K immigrants in past 5 years. See /procedures/dv-diversity-visa-lottery/ for details and exception rules.

Common immigration pathways for Honduras citizens in the US

PathwayUSCIS formTypical processingEligibility
Family-based (USC spouse/parent/child)I-130 + I-4856 months - 5+ years (per Visa Bulletin)Family relationship to USC or LPR
Family-based (USC sibling, F4)I-130 + I-48510-25+ years for Honduras (visa cap)Sibling of USC
Employment-based EB-1/EB-2/EB-3I-140 + I-4851-15+ years (per Visa Bulletin)Employer sponsorship + extraordinary ability OR advanced degree OR skilled occupation
Asylum (within 1 year of US arrival)I-5896 months - 5+ yearsPast persecution OR well-founded fear
TPS (if Honduras currently designated)I-821 + I-76530-60 days for re-registrationHonduras national in US as of designation date
DACAI-821D90+ daysCame to US under 16, school/military/work, no major crimes
U-visa (crime victim)I-9185-10+ years (waitlist)Victim of qualifying crime + helpful to law enforcement
T-visa (trafficking victim)I-9141-3 yearsVictim of severe trafficking + cooperation
VAWA self-petitionI-3601-2 yearsAbuse by USC or LPR spouse/parent
Cancellation of removal (LPR)EOIR Form 42A1-5 years in courtLPR 5+ years, certain conditions
Cancellation of removal (non-LPR)EOIR Form 42B5-15+ years in court10+ years US presence, exceptional hardship to USC/LPR family

Last verified: 2026-05-27. General procedural information — not legal advice. Immigration rules change frequently; verify current status before relying.

Recent fee, deadline, and contact context (2025-2026)

Embassy of Honduras in Washington DC main phone: +1 (202) 966-7702 Monday-Friday business hours US Eastern Time. The 2026-05-29 H.R.1 / OBBBA immigration fee changes affect several USCIS forms (Form I-589 asylum filing fee $100 + $100 Annual Asylum Fee; Form I-102 I-94 replacement +$24). The Form I-821 TPS fee (approximately $50) is set separately by the 2024 USCIS fee rule and capped by INA § 244(c)(1)(B) — it was not changed by OBBBA. Verify current USCIS fees at uscis.gov/g-1055 (Form G-1055) before filing.

For US embassy/consulate services IN Honduras (visa interviews, US passport renewal for citizens abroad): see travel.state.gov. US embassies abroad maintain Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP) at step.state.gov for US citizens registering travel plans.

USCIS Contact Center: 1-800-375-5283 (TTY 1-800-767-1833) Monday-Friday 8:00am-8:00pm ET. ICE Detention Locator System (ODLS): locator.ice.gov/odls. EOIR immigration court case status: 1-800-898-7180 (24/7 automated, English/Spanish). State Department visa information: 1-800-373-3340. The Visa Bulletin priority dates publish monthly around the 15th.

For US-Honduras consular protection emergencies: contact the Embassy of Honduras in Washington DC at +1 (202) 966-7702 OR the nearest Honduras consulate. Many consulates have 24/7 emergency phone lines for severe situations (death, arrest, medical emergency, missing person).

Frequently asked questions

How many people from Honduras live in the US?
Approximately 1,000,000 people of Honduras-origin live in the United States (per US Census, recent ACS estimates). Honduran-Americans; large TPS designation since 1999; concentrated in TX, FL, NY, CA
Where is the Honduras embassy in the US?
The Embassy of Honduras in the United States is located in Washington, DC. Main phone: +1 (202) 966-7702 (Monday-Friday business hours US Eastern Time). The embassy handles bilateral diplomatic relations and assists nationals during emergencies. For routine consular services (passport, ID, civil registry, voting from abroad), you’ll typically go to the nearest Honduras consulate — see /consulates/honduras/.
Can Honduras citizens enter the US without a visa?
Generally NO. Honduras is NOT a member of the US Visa Waiver Program (VWP). Honduras citizens need a US visa (B-1/B-2 for tourism/business, F-1 for study, H/L/O for work, etc.) AND a passport from Honduras. Consular fees and validity vary by category — see /procedures/us-visa-reciprocity-by-country/honduras/ for the full reciprocity schedule. Apply for visas at the US Embassy/Consulate in Honduras, not at a US embassy elsewhere.
What's the path from Honduras immigrant status to US green card?
Multiple pathways: (1) Family-based — US-citizen relative files I-130, then I-485 or consular processing (priority dates vary — see /procedures/visa-bulletin/); (2) Employment-based — employer files I-140 in EB-1/2/3/4/5 category; (3) Asylum — file I-589 within 1 year of US arrival if persecution-based; (4) Diversity Visa lottery — annual lottery (DV not currently available for high-immigration countries; see /procedures/dv-diversity-visa-lottery/ for Honduras eligibility); (5) VAWA self-petition for abuse survivors; (6) U-visa or T-visa for crime/trafficking victims; (7) Cancellation of removal for long-term residents in removal proceedings. Each path has different fees, processing times, and requirements — consult an immigration attorney.