Please Contribute Here to help us Grow!

Contribute
Fri. Jun 12th, 2026
Share this article

Please Contribute Here to help us Grow!

Foreigners who are allowed to come to the United States without a visa could soon be required to submit information about their social media, email accounts and extensive family history to the Department of Homeland Security before being approved for travel.

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

Manukau motors

Advertisement

Travelers wait in a TSA checkpoint at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport.

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

The notice published Thursday in the Federal Register said Customs and Border Protection is proposing collecting five years’ worth of social media information from travellers from select countries who do not have to get visas to come to the US. The Trump administration has been stepping up monitoring of international travellers and immigrants.

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

The announcement refers to travellers from more than three dozen countries, including New Zealand, who take part in the Visa Waiver Program and submit their information to the Electronic System for Travel Authorisation, which automatically screens them and then approves them for travel to the US. Unlike visa applicants, they generally do not have to go into an embassy or consulate for an interview.

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

DHS administers the program, which currently allows citizens of roughly 40 mostly European and Asian countries to travel to the US for tourism or business for three months without visas.

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

The announcement also said that CBP would start requesting a list of other information, including telephone numbers the person has used over the past five years or email addresses used over the past decade. Also sought would be metadata from electronically submitted photos, as well as extensive information from the applicant’s family members, including their places of birth and their telephone numbers.

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

United States ESTA (Electronic System for Travel Authorization) application form paper.

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement


United States ESTA (Electronic System for Travel Authorization) application form paper. (Source: istock.com)

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

The application that people are now required to fill out to take part in ESTA asks for a more limited set of questions such as parents’ names and current email address.

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

The public has 60 days to comment on the proposed changes before they go into effect, the notice said.

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

CBP officials did not immediately respond to questions about the new rules.

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

The announcement did not say what the administration was looking for in the social media accounts or why it was asking for more information.

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

But the agency said it was complying with an executive order that Republican President Donald Trump signed in January that called for more screening of people coming to the US to prevent the entry of possible national security threats.

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

Travellers from countries that are not part of the Visa Waiver Program system are already required to submit their social media information, a policy that dates back to the first Trump administration. The policy remained during Democratic President Joe Biden’s administration.

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

But citizens from visa waiver countries were not obligated to do so.

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

Travelers wait in a TSA checkpoint at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport.
Travelers wait in a TSA checkpoint at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport. (Source: Associated Press)

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

Since January, the Trump administration has stepped up checks of immigrants and travellers, both those trying to enter the US as well as those already in the country. Officials have tightened visa rules by requiring that applicants set all of their social media accounts to public so that they can be more easily scrutinised and checked for what authorities view as potential derogatory information. Refusing to set an account to public can be considered grounds for visa denial, according to guidelines provided by the State Department.

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

US Citizenship and Immigration Services now considers whether an applicant for benefits, such as a green card, “endorsed, promoted, supported, or otherwise espoused” anti-American, terrorist or antisemitic views.

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

More on this topic
Composite image: Dianne McCauley
Addictive, toxic or essential? NZ teens’ mixed feelings about social media
6:00am

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement

The heightened interest in social media screening has drawn concern from immigration and free speech advocates about what the Trump administration is looking for and whether the measures target people critical of the administration in an infringement of free speech rights.:OneNews

reliance home ventilation

Advertisement


Share this article
The Editor The Indian News

By The Editor The Indian News

Yugal Parashar, Editor, The Indian news