🇺🇸 For visa applicants — United States

Draft your visa file. Don't pay a consultant thousands for your SOP.

1,000+ master prompts for your SOP, refusal response, partnership evidence, study plan. + 3 free AI drafts every day, forever — generate directly on the site, no copy-paste. Same AI toolkit consultants use. Reviewed by you before filing.

$15once · lifetime access
Pay once. Use forever.
Stripe · cards/Apple Pay·7-day refund·1,000+ prompts·3 AI drafts/day·Reviewed by you

A drafting tool, not legal advice. Have a licensed immigration consultant or lawyer review AI-generated drafts before submission.

Search 1,000+ prompts, countries, services…⌘K
Canada
67 prompts · 5 services
All67Study Visa21Work16PR16Refusal8
Study visa
Canada study SOP — undergrad
8 Qadvanced
Refusal recovery
R216(1)(b) refusal rebuttal
5 Qadvanced
Permanent residency
EE strategy — CRS optimisation
12 Qstandard
Work permit
LMIA C10 cover letter
7 Qstandard
Family sponsorship
PGP super visa narrative
6 Qstandard
Document checklist
GIC funding letter (ICICI)
4 Qbasic

The actual library · click any prompt · paste into ChatGPT or Claude · or generate on-site

How it works

Pick a prompt. Generate the draft — here or in your own ChatGPT. Ship to the client.

Same library. Two ways to run it. Use whichever fits your workflow — even switch mid-file.

Step 1

Pick a prompt

Search 1,208 master prompts. Filter by destination, service, scenario. First one free, no signup.

Step 2 · two ways to run

Generate the draft

On this site
1 free AI draft/day after signup. 3 with lifetime. Unlimited with Firm.
Or your AI
Paste into ChatGPT, Claude, or any AI you already pay for. Works the same.
Step 3

Review & ship

Edit the DRAFT hand-off line, validate the citations, deliver to your client. 25 min → 2 min per file.

The reality of filing my own US visa

I want to study or work in the US. I don't want to pay an immigration attorney $3,000 for an SOP.

I'm sitting in Hyderabad, Beijing or Mexico City with my DS-160 half-filled and 14 Chrome tabs open on USCIS, AILA, /r/F1visa, /r/USCIS and the State Department's visa-wait-time tracker. The US immigration attorney I emailed quoted $3,000 for the F-1 file (and that didn't include the H-1B prep when I convert later). The State Department says self-representation is fine. I just don't know how to write a Statement of Purpose that survives a 60-second F-1 visa interview at the consulate.

This library gives me the US-specific Statements of Purpose, I-20 financial-evidence covers, DS-160 supporting narratives, H-1B cap-petition letters and B-1/B-2 visitor cover letters a US immigration attorney would draft. Every prompt is anchored to actual INA sections, USCIS Policy Manual chapters and FAM 9 visa-officer guidance.

Where my drafts live right now
  • r/F1visa screenshotsin my camera roll
  • WhatsApp "F-1 Fall 2026"half-baked SOP samples
  • Google Drive "US visa"8 untagged SOP drafts
  • Notes app the night before interview"what to say"
  • Telegram "US Visa Helpers"PDF from 2022
MyVisaPrompts Apply
1,000+ prompts· 12 countries · indexed · plain-English intake

$3,000 for an attorney. SEVIS fee is $350 by itself.

F-1 visa application fee: $185. SEVIS fee: $350. Tuition deposit at a US grad school: $5,000. Flight: $1,200. Attorney retainer for F-1 file: $3,000 (and they want another $5,000 for the H-1B prep next year). I'd rather have $3,000 toward my security deposit in Boston or Austin than into an attorney for a file I can write myself.

214(b) refusal = silent 5-year barrier

Section 214(b) of the INA presumes I'm an intending immigrant unless I overcome that presumption — and consular officers refuse F-1 and B-1 applications under 214(b) every day, with no appeal mechanism. If I get refused, my SEVIS record is paused, my I-20 might get rescinded, and a 214(b) on my record makes the next interview harder. The attorney retainer is small money against a 214(b) hit — but only if it actually buys me a better answer.

I have 60 seconds at the consulate to convince the officer

F-1 interviews at US consulates last 60-90 seconds on average. The officer is looking for nonimmigrant intent under 214(b) and program credibility. The DS-160 question 'who is funding your study' has to align with my I-20 financial certification. My SOP has to articulate program rationale and a clear return-home plan. The library prompts walk me through the answers I'll actually say at the window — not paragraph-long essays the officer will never read.

ChatGPT keeps citing the wrong INA section

I asked ChatGPT for my SOP and it referenced 'INA Section 214(c)' for my F-1 nonimmigrant intent. The correct section is 214(b). It also told my friend his H-1B cap-petition needed a 'Form I-797' — that's the receipt, not the petition (the petition is I-129). If a consular officer's notes show I'm citing the wrong sections, my credibility under 214(b) is gone before the second question.

Built for US-bound applicants

If you've watched 8 YouTube videos on 'US visa interview tips' this week, this is for you.

Students, H-1B / O-1 work-visa applicants, family-sponsorship filers, B-1/B-2 visitor applicants. You'd rather put $3,000 toward your security deposit in Boston or Houston than into an attorney for a file you understand better than they do.

F-1 student-visa applicants

Filing your own DS-160 and F-1 file. You need an SOP that addresses 214(b) nonimmigrant intent, an I-20 financial-evidence cover that matches your bank statements, and a 60-second answer pack for the consular interview.

H-1B / O-1 / L-1 work-visa applicants

You have the employer sponsoring you. You need help with the cap-petition supporting narrative, the specialty-occupation rationale (for H-1B), the extraordinary-ability evidence pack (for O-1), the intracompany-transferee history (for L-1).

I-130 / I-140 family + employment sponsorship applicants

Filing I-130 for a relative or I-140 for employment-based PR. You need the relationship narrative, the bona-fide marriage evidence (Form I-130A), the employer support letter, the priority-date timing narrative.

214(b) refusal-recovery and re-application candidates

Your F-1 or B-1/B-2 came back refused under 214(b). You're re-applying or moving to a different visa class. You need a structured re-application that addresses the specific concerns the consular officer raised — not the 'just apply again' Reddit advice.

What you can write yourself.

Most visa files come down to four documents. Each prompt walks you through the questions, then drafts the page calibrated to United States visa office expectations.

SOPs

Statements of Purpose & cover letters

Study permits, skilled-worker applications, family sponsorship — the AI asks you about gap years, finances, intent, then writes the draft.

Refusals

Refusal-response & reconsideration drafts

Address every refusal reason point-by-point. The prompt knows the common refusal triggers — R216(c), GTE, finances, intent — and helps you rebut each.

Checklists

Document checklists & intake interviews

A complete checklist for your visa type. Bilingual where you need it. Each line cites the source so you can verify.

Smart Mode

Adaptive interview — answer questions, get the doc

Not a long form to fill. The AI asks the next question based on your last answer, then drafts the artifact when it has enough.

Here's what I actually get

$340 in value. $15 today.

Seven things I'd otherwise be cobbling together at midnight — or paying a US immigration attorney $3,000 for. On-site AI drafts, the full US-specific prompt library, my variable vault, free updates when USCIS or the State Department changes a Policy Manual chapter. Bundled, paid once.

Lifetime · No subscription · Weekly updates
value $60

3 AI drafts per day, forever

Hit 'Generate' on any prompt and the scripted intake + draft renders right here on the site — I never need ChatGPT Plus or Claude Pro for the standard SOP / cover-letter work. Three full runs per calendar day, lifetime, on Google Gemini Flash.

value $80

98 US-specific master prompts

F-1 Statements of Purpose, I-20 financial covers, DS-160 supporting narratives, H-1B cap-petition supporting letters, O-1 extraordinary-ability evidence packs, I-130 family-sponsorship files, B-1/B-2 visitor letters, 214(b) refusal-recovery responses. Anchored to actual INA sections and USCIS Policy Manual chapters.

value $40

My personal applicant vault

Name, DOB, passport number, SEVIS ID, I-20 details, employer EIN (if applicable), academic history, financial-evidence totals — saved once, auto-fills into every prompt. Stop typing my own SEVIS ID 25 times.

value $25

Bookmarks · notes · drafts · history

Star the SOP version that finally addresses 214(b) cleanly. Add notes on what the mock-interview tightened. Re-open last Sunday's H-1B draft from /saved with one click.

value $40

30 personal-branding prompts (for after I land)

Once I'm in Boston or San Jose: a LinkedIn rewrite for the US market, a community Reels script, an introduction note to my new manager, a thank-you to my US referees. Same library, post-arrival.

value $30

Install inside Claude / Cursor / ChatGPT

One-line MCP install — the library appears as a callable tool inside Claude Desktop. I can say 'find me the H-1B specialty occupation rationale' and it pulls the right prompt. Goodbye 27 Chrome tabs.

value $65

Lifetime weekly US updates

When USCIS updates the H-1B cap-selection rules, when the State Department changes the DS-160 question set, when a Policy Manual chapter gets reissued — affected prompts refresh within 7 days. The 12 months of regulatory updates is included in the $15.

Total value$340
$15
Lifetime — pay once
12 months of weekly updates included

No subscription. No monthly fee. No 'per petition' charge. Pay $15 once on Stripe, use it forever with weekly updates for 12 months. 7-day refund if it doesn't save me one weekend of rewriting my own SOP from scratch.

MCP install · one command

Drop the entire vault inside Claude.

The catalog ships as an MCP server. Run one command and all 1,000+ prompts become searchable tools your AI can call — not just paste-and-go. Type / in Claude Desktop, hand it a client name, and watch Claude pick the right prompt, run the intake, and draft.

search_prompts(query)
Claude searches the catalog by intent
fill_prompt(id, vars)
Claude substitutes your client’s details
30 flagship prompts
Exposed as slash commands
License-key gated
Only buyers get full access
Terminal — claude mcp
$ claude mcp add anyimmi-prompts \
-- npx -y @anyimmi/prompts-mcp \
--env ANYIMMI_LICENSE_KEY=aip_live_…
✓ MyVisaPrompts MCP server registered.
✓ 1,000+ prompts indexed · 30 slash commands available
✓ Restart Claude Desktop to activate.
$ claude /anyimmi find me a refusal-recovery
prompt for IRPR R216”
▸ Found: ca-refusal-r216-temporary
▸ Loading intake (5 questions)…
Works with
Claude DesktopClaude CodeCursorClineContinue
What’s inside

Every prompt. Every country. Every regulation actually cited.

Canada, Australia, UK in full depth. Seven more covered for the long-tail services. Every prompt cites a real regulation or case — no hallucinated R216(c) inventions.

10 countries · 3 in full depth

Country coverage, Indian-volume ranked

943 prompts
Canada132
CA · Full
Australia100
AU · Full
UK118
UK · Full
USA86
US · Top svc.
Germany87
DE · Top svc.
UAE / Dubai81
AE · Top svc.
New Zealand86
NZ · Top svc.
Ireland86
IE · Top svc.
Singapore87
SG · Top svc.
Schengen80
EU · Top svc.

Tier 1 (full depth): Canada · Australia · UK — every service, every sub-stream, every regulatory anchor. Tier 2: US · DE · AE · NZ · IE · SG · Schengen — top services covered.

15 service categories

Across every visa class

  • Study visa69
  • Work permit76
  • PR55
  • Citizenship61
  • Family sponsorship63
  • Investor visa60
  • Visitor visa55
  • Extension60

+ 7 more service categories

Regulatory anchors

Real laws. Real cases.

  • IRPA s.40 (misrepresentation)
  • IRPR R216 (study permits)
  • Migration Act s.359A (natural justice)
  • Migration Reg 1.20K (genuine entrant)
  • UK Appendix FM (family)
  • INA §214(b) (non-immigrant intent)

IRPA · IRPR · Migration Act · UK Appendix · SCC

Indian-context built-in

Names your clients use

  • ITR + Form 16 funding narratives
  • EPFO / UAN service letters
  • GIC banks (ICICI, SBI, CIBC)
  • Hindi · Punjabi · Tamil interpreter clauses
  • India PCC + MEA apostille flow
  • PAN ↔ name-match scripts

ITR · EPFO · GIC · PCC · PAN · NOC

All of this

1,000+ prompts. 12 countries. $15 once. Lifetime access.

Get access — $15
Pricing

One small payment. Every prompt, lifetime.

Pay once. Get the full library. Use it for your file today and again the next time you, a sibling, or a friend applies. 7-day refund if it doesn’t earn its keep.

🇺🇸 United States — DIY applicant
$15once
USD · one-time · single-user license
  • Full 1,000+ prompt library — every destination, every visa type
  • Smart Mode adaptive intake — fewer wrong turns
  • SOPs · cover letters · refusal responses · checklists
  • 12 months of prompt updates included
  • 7-day refund, no questions
  • Use with your own ChatGPT or Claude — your data stays with you
Get started — $15

Stripe-secured · billed in USD

🇺🇸 What consultants in United States say

Real practitioners. Modest claims.

Licensed practitioners in United States are using these prompts in their own files — the same tool that helps them is what you'll be using on yours. Photos are gradient placeholders — we never use stock photos of strangers. Regulator IDs shown are illustrative placeholders unless explicitly confirmed.

Jessica T., Esq.
AILA member, NY Bar — New York, NY
H-1B and O-1 intake prompts catch the evidentiary criteria I usually surface in the second meeting. I trimmed about thirty minutes off each new-matter onboarding.
David R., Esq.
AILA member, CA Bar — San Francisco, CA
EB-2 NIW prompt walks the client through the three Dhanasar prongs before they even open Word. My petitions read tighter and my first drafts are usable.
Maria G., Esq.
AILA member, TX Bar — Houston, TX
Family-based intake on I-130 is where the vault earns its keep for me. The questions on prior filings and overstay history catch the things that wreck cases later.
Honest answers — US applicant edition

The 6 questions every US applicant asks before paying.

Yes for F-1, B-1/B-2 and most family files — the State Department and USCIS both allow self-representation. For employer-sponsored H-1B and O-1 the petition is filed by the employer, and most employers use their own retained immigration counsel for the I-129 itself. But the supporting narrative (your specialty-occupation rationale, your work-history letter, your O-1 evidence pack) is something you can — and should — draft yourself before handing it to the employer's lawyer. This library gives you the structured intake and INA-anchored drafting an immigration attorney would use. You can save your employer's legal fee on the supporting material, and pay attorneys only for the petition strategy itself.
Free to sign up

Sign up. Try a sample. Pay only when you’re sure.

Create your 🇺🇸 United States applicant account in 30 seconds. We unlock a starter set of prompts so you can run a full intake → draft loop on your own file before paying anything.

Upgrade later · $15 once · lifetime · 7-day refund

No credit card needed to sign up
Use your own ChatGPT / Claude account
Drafting tool — not legal advice

If you are filing your own US immigration application, please remember: AI drafts are starting points, not final answers. Read every line, verify all facts against current USCIS, DOS, and EOIR guidance, and strongly consider engaging a US immigration attorney (AILA-member preferred) or DOJ-accredited representative to review your final submission. Errors on US immigration filings can result in denial, RFEs, NOIDs, fraud / misrepresentation findings, and permanent inadmissibility under INA §212(a)(6)(C).

In the United States, only attorneys licensed by a state bar and DOJ-accredited representatives (recognised under 8 CFR §1292.2) may represent clients in immigration matters. UPL rules vary by state but typically prohibit non-attorneys from giving legal advice, preparing applications for a fee, or holding themselves out as authorised to practise law. "Notarios," "visa consultants," and "immigration consultants" who are not licensed attorneys or DOJ-accredited may not provide legal services for compensation. MyVisaPrompts is for use by licensed practitioners and by individuals filing their own cases.