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United States Visa photo requirements

The U.S. nonimmigrant visa (DS-160) photo is a 2×2 inch (51×51 mm) square in color, taken within the last 6 months, with the head 1 to 1⁄8 inches (25–35 mm) from chin to crown, a neutral expression with both eyes open, a plain white or off-white background, and no glasses. Verified against the U.S. Department of State.

L’essentiel

Dimensions de la photo
51×51 mm (2.01×2.01 in)
Hauteur de la tête
50–69 % de la photo (menton au sommet du crâne)
Ligne des yeux
56–69 % depuis le bas
Arrière-plan
WhiteOff-white
Expression
Neutre, bouche fermée
Résolution de sortie
600×600 px à 300 dpi
Taille de fichier maximale
234 KB (JPEG)

Chaque règle, sourcée

Taille, forme et position de la tête

Source

The photo is 2×2 inches (51×51 mm), square. The head — measured from the bottom of the chin to the top of the head (including the hair) — must be 1 to 1⁄8 inches (25–35 mm), i.e. 50% to 69% of the image height, with the head centered in the frame and shown in full-face view directly facing the camera. For digital images, the eyes must sit between 56% and 69% of the image height from the bottom.

Expression

Source

Use a neutral facial expression with both eyes open. Unlike the U.S. passport, the visa photo does NOT permit a smile — the Department of State requires a neutral expression.

Lunettes

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Eyeglasses are no longer allowed in new visa photos (effective November 1, 2016), except in rare circumstances when eyeglasses cannot be removed for medical reasons — which requires a signed statement from a medical professional.

Couvre-chefs (religieux / médical)

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Do not wear a hat or head covering that obscures the hair or hairline, unless worn daily for a religious purpose. If worn, your full face must be visible and the head covering must not cast any shadows on your face.

Chapeaux et casquettes

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Hats and non-religious head coverings are not allowed. Wear clothing you normally wear on a daily basis; uniforms should not be worn (except religious clothing worn daily), and headphones or wireless hands-free devices are not acceptable.

Éclairage

Non spécifié par l’autorité

Not specified by the U.S. Department of State; the ICAO/best-practice default applies — use even, diffuse lighting so the face is clearly and uniformly lit with no hot-spots or harsh contrast.

The Department of State specifies shadows only in narrow contexts: a religious head covering must not cast any shadows on the face, and there must not be shadows or refraction from eyeglasses that obscure the eye(s). A general no-shadow rule for the background is not specified; the ICAO/best-practice default is a background free of shadows.

Arrière-plan

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Use a plain white or off-white background.

Yeux rouges et flash

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It is acceptable to use the red-eye reduction option on your camera when taking the photo. However, you cannot use any photo editing tool to digitally remove the red-eye from your photo.

Cheveux et obstruction du visage

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Your full face must be visible and nothing may obscure it. You must remove hats or head coverings that obscure your hair or hairline (unless worn for a religious purpose), and there must be no glare, shadow, or refraction from eyeglasses that obscures the eye(s).

Regard et yeux

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The photo must be taken in full-face view directly facing the camera with both eyes open. Profile shots or photos that are not in focus will not be accepted.

Bébés et enfants

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For a child's visa photo the child must be the only person in the photo, with eyes open and looking at the camera. Nothing used to support the child may be in the camera's frame, including the arms or hands of a parent holding the child.

United States visa photo requirements, in plain English

The U.S. nonimmigrant visa photo (the one you upload with the DS-160) shares the exact 2×2 inch square format of the U.S. passport photo, but it is stricter in one important way: you may not smile. Every rule below comes straight from the U.S. Department of State's official photo pages.

Size, head height, and position

Your photo must be a 2×2 inch (51×51 mm) square, in color, and taken within the last 6 months to reflect your current appearance. Within that square your head must measure 1 to 1⅜ inches (25–35 mm) from the bottom of the chin to the top of the head (including hair) — that is, 50% to 69% of the image height. The head must be centered and shown in full-face view directly facing the camera. For a digital image, the eyes should sit between 56% and 69% of the image height from the bottom, and the file must be a square at least 600×600 and at most 1200×1200 pixels.

Expression — neutral, no smile

The visa photo requires a neutral facial expression with both eyes open. This is the key difference from the U.S. passport: smiling is not allowed. Keep your mouth closed and relaxed, with no visible teeth and no exaggerated expression. Profile shots or out-of-focus photos will not be accepted.

Glasses — take them off

Eyeglasses are no longer allowed in new visa photos — a rule in effect since November 1, 2016. The only exception is a rare medical circumstance in which glasses cannot be removed, which requires a signed statement from a medical professional. If glasses ever are worn under that exception, there must be no glare, shadow, or refraction from the lenses that obscures the eyes.

Head coverings and hats

Do not wear a hat or head covering that obscures the hair or hairline, unless it is worn daily for a religious purpose. If a religious covering is worn, your full face must be visible and the covering must not cast any shadows on your face. Wear clothing you normally wear day to dayuniforms are not allowed (except religious clothing worn daily), and headphones or wireless hands-free devices are not acceptable.

Lighting, shadows, and red-eye

The State Department does not publish a single general lighting rule, but best practice is even, diffuse lighting with no harsh shadows. The specific shadow rules it does state are narrow: a religious head covering must not cast shadows on your face, and there must be no shadow, glare, or refraction from eyeglasses that obscures the eyes. On red-eye, the rule is distinctive: it is acceptable to use your camera's red-eye reduction setting when taking the photo, but you may not use a photo-editing tool to digitally remove red-eye.

Background

A plain white or off-white background. Snapassport standardizes your background to the exact compliant colour automatically, so a slightly off-colour or busy wall is corrected for you.

Children and infants

For a child's visa photo, the child must be the only person in the photo, with eyes open and looking at the camera. Nothing used to support the child may appear in the frame — including the arms or hands of a parent holding the child.

Recency and format

Submit one color photo taken within the last 6 months, as the original, unedited photo — you may not digitally enhance or alter the photo to change your appearance in any way. Acceptance of any photo is ultimately at the discretion of the U.S. embassy or consulate where you apply.

Foire aux questions

Can you smile in a US visa photo?
No. Unlike the U.S. passport, the visa photo requires a neutral facial expression with both eyes open. Smiling, visible teeth, or an open mouth will cause the photo to be rejected.
Can you wear glasses in a US visa photo?
No. Eyeglasses have not been allowed in new visa photos since November 1, 2016. The only exception is a rare medical circumstance in which glasses cannot be removed, which requires a signed statement from a medical professional.
What size is a US visa photo?
2×2 inches (51×51 mm), square, in color, taken within the last 6 months. Your head must measure 1 to 1⁄8 inches (25–35 mm) — 50% to 69% of the image height — from the bottom of the chin to the top of the head.

Sources, vérifiées le 2026-06-15 : U.S. Department of State — Photo Requirements · U.S. Department of State — Photo Composition Template · U.S. Department of State — Photo Frequently Asked Questions

Les règles évoluent. L’acceptation finale est toujours déterminée par l’autorité émettrice — Snapassport valide selon les exigences publiées, il ne se prononce pas.

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