L1 Visa Processing in Mumbai: A 2026 Step-by-Step Guide

Updated 2 May 2026. Written by Sukanya Raman, Esq., Managing Attorney, Davies & Associates, India. Reviewed by Mark I Davies, Esq. MBA (Wharton), Fellow University of Pennsylvania Law School, Chairman of Davies & Associates.

L1 visa processing in Mumbai 2026 — step-by-step guide to the US Consulate General at Bandra Kurla Complex for L-1A and L-1B intracompany transferees from India
Davies & Associates handles every stage of L1 visa processing in Mumbai at the US Consulate General on Bandra Kurla Complex — consular preparation, DS-160 review, document compilation, and post-interview follow-up.

L1 Visa Processing in Mumbai — the short answer

If you are wondering how to process an L1 visa in Mumbai, here is the short version. The US Consulate General in Mumbai handles individual L-1A and L-1B applications for residents of Maharashtra, Gujarat, Goa, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, and the union territories of Daman & Diu and Dadra & Nagar Haveli. Processing an L1 visa in Mumbai runs through a seven-step sequence under 8 CFR 214.2(l): secure USCIS approval of Form I-129 (see our Form I-129 guide), complete the DS-160 (see our DS-160 guide), pay the $205 MRV fee, book an interview at C-49 Bandra Kurla Complex, prepare with your attorney, attend the interview, and receive your passport with the visa stamp. Adjudication at post follows 9 FAM 402.12, with issuance procedures at 9 FAM 403.9 and refusal procedures at 9 FAM 403.10. In our experience, stamping is typically completed within 7–14 working days after a successful interview, although individual cases vary and INA 221(g) administrative processing can extend the timeline. Note: since 6 September 2025, the State Department’s end of third-country processing means Indian L-1 applicants must interview in India — the previous workaround of routing through Singapore or Ho Chi Minh City to skip Mumbai wait times is no longer available except in narrow humanitarian or foreign-policy cases. Blanket L-1 cases are not handled in Mumbai — those go to Chennai under 8 CFR 214.2(l)(5).

2026 advisory: Three rule changes affect L-1 applicants in Mumbai. (1) Third-country processing ended. Effective 6 September 2025 (updated 10 October 2025 and 12 December 2025), Indian L-1 applicants must interview in India — routing through Singapore, Ho Chi Minh City or other posts to bypass wait times is no longer permitted except in narrow humanitarian or foreign-policy cases. (2) L-1 Dropbox / interview waiver eliminated. Effective 2 September 2025, L-1 (and L-2, H-1B, H-4, F-1, J-1, O-1, E-1, E-2) applicants are no longer eligible for the interview waiver — almost all L-1 cases now require an in-person interview at the consulate. Only B-1/B-2 holders meeting strict criteria remain Dropbox-eligible. (3) Consular fees and Proclamation 10998. A new Consular Exchange Rate (96 INR per USD) took effect at U.S. posts in India on 1 April 2026, and Presidential Proclamation 10998 (effective 1 January 2026) introduced limits on entry and visa issuance for nationals of certain countries. Indian nationals are not on the restricted list, but if your case touches a restricted nationality through dual citizenship or family, speak to counsel before you book.
Who this page is for: This is the consular processing guide for individual L-1A and L-1B applicants interviewing at the US Consulate General in Mumbai — specifically Indian nationals (or Indian-resident foreign nationals) whose USCIS-approved I-129 petition is being adjudicated at Mumbai. If your employer holds a Blanket L-1 approval and you are travelling on a Form I-129S, you will interview at the US Consulate in Chennai, not Mumbai — see the Blanket L-1 section below or read our dedicated Chennai Blanket L-1 guide. For L-2 dependents (spouse, children under 21), see the L-2 dependents section.

If you need legal advice on processing an L1 visa in Mumbai, the Davies & Associates immigration lawyers in Mumbai can help — particularly where there are complex corporate structures, new office filings under 8 CFR 214.2(l)(3)(v), or prior refusals to overcome under 9 FAM 306.2. You can also request a free consultation with our team.

What is the L-1 Visa?

The L-1 visa, codified at INA 101(a)(15)(L), regulated under 8 CFR 214.2(l), classified by visa symbol at 22 CFR 41.12, and adjudicated at post under 9 FAM 402.12, allows for the transfer of certain employees to a business in the United States which is related to the Indian business. The L visa family includes L-1A, L-1B, and L-2:

1.  L-1A — for executives and managers (8 CFR 214.2(l)(1)(ii)(B); managerial-vs-executive standard at 9 FAM 402.12-6).
2.  L-1B — for staff with specialised knowledge (8 CFR 214.2(l)(1)(ii)(D); specialised-knowledge test at 9 FAM 402.12-7).
3.  L-2 — the dependent visa for the principal L-1 holder’s spouse and unmarried children under 21 (8 CFR 214.2(l)(7)(ii)). L-2 is a separate visa classification, not an L-1 sub-type.

The L category also requires an "ongoing international nature" of the qualifying organisation, addressed in 9 FAM 402.12-10(C). For the requirements, process, and timeline as they apply specifically to Indian applicants, see our L-1 visa for Indians: requirements and process guide.

Who Should Apply at the Mumbai Consulate?

The Mumbai Consular District

The US Consulate General in Mumbai handles non-immigrant visa applications — including L-1A and L-1B — for applicants who live in Maharashtra, Goa, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, and the union territories of Daman & Diu and Dadra & Nagar Haveli. Per the U.S. Embassy India consular district map, this is the western India catchment. You can apply for the L-1 visa from any country where you are lawfully resident, but Indian applicants who are new to the category should first read our L-1 visa requirements and timeline guide for Indian applicants — or, for the wider picture, our 2026 guide for Indian entrepreneurs, business owners and investors. Important: since the State Department’s 6 September 2025 guidance, third-country processing is sharply restricted — applicants must apply at a post in their country of nationality or legal residence, and applicants applying outside their home jurisdiction will face longer waits, lost fees, and a real risk of refusal (see 9 FAM 403.10). Narrow exceptions remain for humanitarian, medical-emergency or foreign-policy cases.

The Singapore / Ho Chi Minh City Route is Closed

Until September 2025, our Indian clients sometimes processed their L visas in Singapore or Ho Chi Minh City to avoid excessive waits in India. That route is now closed. Under the State Department’s 6 September 2025 guidance (further updated 10 October 2025 and 12 December 2025), Indian L-1 applicants must apply at a post in India — the procedures described on this page are for Mumbai specifically. Narrow exceptions remain for humanitarian, medical-emergency or foreign-policy cases, but these are unusual. Our team is happy to consult with you and you may click here to contact us to arrange a free consultation to discuss your business’ needs, personal circumstances and plans. Visit our Mumbai office page to see how we work with Western-India-based clients.

Blanket L-1 Cases Go to Chennai — Not Mumbai

Important: all Blanket L-1 petitions filed in India are processed exclusively at the Consulate in Chennai (using Form I-129S, per 8 CFR 214.2(l)(5), with consular procedure at 9 FAM 402.12-7(E) on the burden of proof and 9 FAM 402.12-7(F) on Blanket L denials). Mumbai handles individual L-1A and L-1B cases, plus L-2 dependents. The U.S. Consulate General in Mumbai and U.S. Consulates in New Delhi, Kolkata and Hyderabad no longer accept or process applications for the Blanket L category. The blanket L category includes specialised knowledge professionals, executives and managers. For an overview of how consular processing differs across all five Indian posts, see our L-1 visa consular processing in India guide.

How to Process an L1 Visa in Mumbai — The 7-Step Sequence

Below is the sequence we walk every Mumbai-based L-1 client through, from petition approval to passport return. This is the operational answer to "how to process an L1 visa in Mumbai" — each step maps to a specific section of 9 FAM 402.12 and the corresponding 8 CFR 214.2(l) regulation.

L1 Visa Processing in Mumbai — The Seven-Step Sequence
Petition approval through to passport return at the Bandra Kurla Complex consulate
Step What it involves
1. Get your Form I-129 approved by USCIS Mumbai is the consular stamping stage of L1 visa processing in Mumbai — the case begins with a Form I-129 petition filed by the US employer under 8 CFR 214.2(l)(7). USCIS reviews and either approves on Form I-797, denies, or returns with a Request for Evidence. The effect of an approved petition on the consular interview is set out at 9 FAM 402.12-5 and 9 FAM 402.12-6(A). Read our guide to the petition stage for Indian businesses.
2. Complete the DS-160 online application Each applicant fills out the DS-160 separately, including dependents on L-2. State Department guidance is at the DS-160 FAQs; see also our DS-160 guide. Print the barcode confirmation page — that goes with you to the interview. Per current US Mission India policy, if you correct the form after booking, bring both the original and corrected confirmation pages on the day of the appointment.
3. Pay the $205 MRV visa fee Fees are quoted in US dollars but paid in Indian Rupees through HDFC Bank or online channels. Keep the receipt — you need the receipt number to schedule the interview. The MRV fee is set under 22 CFR 22.1; the consular exchange rate at U.S. Mission India was updated to 96 INR per USD on 1 April 2026. See L Visa Fee Information and Bank & Payment Options.
4. Book your Mumbai interview You may schedule your interview at any U.S. Consulate, however, since the State Department’s 6 September 2025 third-country processing guidance, you must schedule at a post in your country of nationality or legal residence — for Indian residents that means India. Booking outside your home jurisdiction now risks a refusal under 9 FAM 403.10, and any fees paid will not be refunded or transferred. You will need to provide the receipt number that is printed on your approved L-1 petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker, Form I-129, or Notice of Action, Form I-797, to schedule an interview. Book online via Schedule a Visa Appointment or call +91 120 4844644 / +91 40 46258222 (India), +1 703 520 2239 (US). Important: under the State Department’s 2 September 2025 interview-waiver update, L-1 visas are no longer eligible for the Dropbox / interview waiver programme. Almost all L-1 applicants — first-time and renewals — must now attend an in-person interview at the consulate.
5. Prepare for the interview with your attorney We, at Davies and Associates, are ideally positioned to assist you in your preparation for the interview through our team in India. We can answer all your questions about the interview process, give you valuable tips and conduct mock interviews. For over 15 years, we have worked with many Indian nationals across L-1A executive, manager, and L-1B specialised-knowledge cases, and have gained a deep understanding of their needs and culture. We tailor our services to meet our clients’ needs and produce the very best immigration solutions possible. Our team has extensive experience preparing Indian L-1 applicants for consular interviews, including complex manager, executive, and specialised-knowledge cases — though no lawyer can guarantee any consular outcome, since the consular officer’s decision is theirs alone under 9 FAM 301.2. Our preparation tracks the L-1 statute at INA 101(a)(15)(L) and the FAM standards at 9 FAM 402.12 — the qualifying relationship (9 FAM 402.12-5), the manager-vs-line-employee distinction (9 FAM 402.12-6), the specialised-knowledge test for L-1B (9 FAM 402.12-7), and credible new-office business plans under 8 CFR 214.2(l)(3)(v).
6. Attend the interview at C-49 BKC Bring: current passport plus old passports, a passport-style photo, the DS-160 barcode page, HDFC fee receipt, original I-797, three copies of the complete I-129 with L supplement, evidence of employment with the Indian entity, and the US offer letter with tenure proof. The Consulate does not accept documents sent directly by the petitioning company — you must carry them in. Documentation expectations are at 9 FAM 402.12-8.
7. Receive your passport with the L-1 visa stamp If approved, the consular officer keeps your passport and the visa is printed and couriered back. In our experience this typically takes 7–14 working days, although individual cases vary. Issuance procedures are at 9 FAM 403.9. If the officer puts your case in INA 221(g) administrative processing, the timeline depends on the question raised — see If You Get a 221(g) below.

Need help with L1 visa processing in Mumbai?

Speak to an L1 Visa Lawyer for Mumbai

L1 Visa Processing Time at Mumbai (2026)

L-1 visa processing in Mumbai breaks into two distinct stages, and the bulk of the wait sits in the first one:

  1. USCIS petition stage (I-129): 1–6 months on regular processing, or roughly 15 calendar days with premium processing under 8 CFR 103.7(e) (see our Form I-907 premium processing guide).
  2. Mumbai consular stage: from the day the I-797 issues, plan on the time below to reach the interview, plus 7–14 working days from interview to passport return in our experience (individual timelines vary).

Wait Times Across India’s Five US Posts

Wait times for an L-1 interview slot at Mumbai are typically materially shorter than the headline B1/B2 visitor visa wait, because work visas are scheduled separately. The table below reflects the pattern we have observed in early 2026 across India’s five posts. Wait times shift month to month, so before booking you should always verify the current figure on the State Department’s Global Visa Wait Times page:

L-1 Visa Interview Wait Times — India’s Five US Posts (2026)
Time to first available L-1 interview slot, current as of early 2026
US Consulate / Embassy Typical L-1 interview wait Jurisdiction notes
Mumbai (Bandra Kurla Complex) A few weeks to ~2 months Maharashtra, Gujarat, MP, Chhattisgarh, Goa, Daman & Diu, Dadra & Nagar Haveli
New Delhi (Shantipath, Chanakyapuri) A few weeks to ~2 months Delhi NCR and northern Indian states (Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan, UP, Uttarakhand, HP, J&K) plus Bhutan
Chennai A few weeks to ~2 months The only post in India for Blanket L-1 (I-129S) cases
Hyderabad A few weeks to ~2 months Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Odisha
Kolkata A few weeks to ~2 months West Bengal, Bihar, Jharkhand, Sikkim, and the seven northeastern states

Dropbox / Interview Waiver No Longer Available for L-1

Effective 2 September 2025, L-1 (and L-2, H-1B, H-4, F-1, J-1, O-1, E-1, E-2) applicants no longer qualify for the interview waiver programme. Only B-1/B-2 holders meeting strict criteria (previous visa expired within 12 months, applying in country of nationality or residence, no prior refusals) remain eligible. All L-1 renewals and new applications must now attend an in-person interview at the consulate. The previous practice of L-1 holders dropping off documents at a VFS centre and skipping the consular interview is no longer permitted.

Post-I-797 Checklist — What to Do the Day Your Approval Notice Arrives

The day USCIS issues your I-797 Notice of Approval, the consular clock starts. Run this checklist so nothing slips:

  1. Verify the I-797 details. Check the petitioner’s name, your name (matching your passport), the L-1A or L-1B classification, the validity period, and the consulate the petition is being routed to. Errors here are easier to fix at the I-797 stage than at the consulate.
  2. Confirm passport validity. Six months beyond your intended US stay is the floor. If your passport is short, renew it now — before you build up appointment dependencies.
  3. Complete the DS-160 for yourself and each L-2 dependent at ceac.state.gov/genniv. Save the barcode confirmation page. Per current US Mission India policy, bring both the original confirmation page and (if you correct the form later) the corrected confirmation page to your appointment.
  4. Pay the $205 MRV fee per applicant through HDFC Bank or the online channel at ustraveldocs.com/in. Fee receipts are valid for 365 days from issue. The consular exchange rate at U.S. Mission India was updated to 96 INR per USD on 1 April 2026.
  5. Schedule the Mumbai interview slot using the I-797 receipt number. Book the earliest viable date — under the State Department’s 6 September 2025 third-country processing rule, Indian residents must apply in India.
  6. Compile the document folder. Use the Document Checklist below. One folder, no laptop bag, no mobile phone (per Consulate security rules).
  7. Run a mock interview with counsel. Sample questions are in the Mumbai Interview Preparation section below. Rehearse the qualifying-relationship answer, the role description, and the new-office plan if applicable.
  8. Plan post-interview logistics. Most successful Mumbai cases see the passport return in 7–14 working days. Build that buffer into any travel plans — do not book US-bound flights for the day after the interview.
  9. If 221(g) administrative processing is issued, follow the instructions on the slip exactly. See the 221(g) section below for what to expect.

Third-Country Processing — What Changed in 2025/2026

The Background: Why Singapore and HCMC Worked Before

For years, our Indian L-1 clients had a useful safety valve: if Mumbai or Delhi wait times became excessive, we routed them through Davies & Associates’ offices in Singapore or Ho Chi Minh City, where consular wait times were shorter and our clients had a strong success record. That route is now closed.

The New Rule: Apply in Your Country of Nationality or Residence

On 6 September 2025 the U.S. Department of State updated its instructions to direct all non-immigrant visa applicants — including L-1 — to schedule interviews at the post in their country of nationality or legal residence. The guidance was further tightened on 10 October 2025 and again on 12 December 2025. The practical effect for Indian L-1 applicants:

  • Indian nationals resident in India must apply at one of the five Indian posts (Mumbai, New Delhi, Chennai, Hyderabad, Kolkata) — not Singapore, not Ho Chi Minh City, not Bangkok or Dubai.
  • Indian nationals lawfully resident in another country may apply there if they can demonstrate residence (residency permit, utility bills, tax filings).
  • Applicants who book at the wrong post will face significantly longer wait times, are at material risk of being refused, and any MRV fees paid will not be refunded or transferred.
  • Existing third-country appointments booked before September 2025 are generally not being cancelled, but new bookings must follow the rule.
  • Narrow exceptions remain for genuine humanitarian or medical emergencies and for foreign-policy reasons. Casual convenience or wait-time avoidance does not qualify.

What This Means For Your Mumbai L-1 Case

If you are an Indian national resident in India, plan to interview in India. Davies & Associates’ Singapore and Ho Chi Minh City offices remain available for clients who are genuinely resident in those jurisdictions, or who fall within one of the narrow State Department exceptions — please speak to us directly before booking anything. Where the third-country route was previously used to avoid Mumbai waits, the answer now is to book the Mumbai (or another Indian post) interview as early as possible after the I-797 issues, and to use premium processing at the I-129 stage to compress the USCIS half of the timeline.

Please note that spouse and children visas (L-2) and individual L visas (L-1B and L-1A individuals) may be processed at all five posts in India: Mumbai, New Delhi, Chennai, Hyderabad, and Kolkata. Blanket L-1 cases remain Chennai-only. See our directory of US embassies, consulates and USCIS offices for contact details across all posts. If your case involves expanding into the US through franchising or setting up a US business, we can coordinate the corporate and immigration sides through the same team in Mumbai.

L-1 Visa Document Checklist for the Mumbai Interview

The documentary record the Mumbai officer expects flows from 8 CFR 214.2(l)(3) on the petition side and 9 FAM 402.12-8 on the consular side — for the broader USCIS-stage list, see our L-1 visa documents required guide. Bring the originals listed below in a single folder — no laptop bags, no large handbags, and (per US Consulate Mumbai security rules) no mobile phone:

  • Valid passport with at least six months’ validity beyond intended US stay, plus all old passports
  • Form I-797 original Notice of Action
  • Three sets of the complete Form I-129 with the L supplement and all exhibits filed with USCIS
  • Original DS-160 barcode confirmation page (and corrected confirmation page if applicable, per current US Mission India guidance)
  • MRV fee receipt (HDFC)
  • One passport-style photograph meeting US specifications
  • Employer support letter from the Indian entity confirming one continuous year of qualifying employment within the past three years (8 CFR 214.2(l)(1)(ii))
  • Offer letter or assignment letter from the US employer
  • Recent payslips and Form 16 from the Indian employer (typically 3–6 months)
  • Organisational charts showing your role on both sides of the transfer
  • Marriage certificate and children’s birth certificates if L-2 dependents are applying
  • For new office L-1A: business plan, lease, evidence of US capitalisation, hiring plan (8 CFR 214.2(l)(3)(v))

L-1 Visa Fees (2026)

Three fee buckets are relevant for L1 visa processing in Mumbai. For the full breakdown including premium processing, fraud fee, and attorney costs, see our L-1 visa costs and fees guide:

  • USCIS petition fees — paid by the US employer with the I-129 under 8 CFR 103.7. These vary by employer size and whether premium processing is elected. See the current USCIS fee schedule for the latest figures.
  • MRV consular fee$205 per applicant (including L-2 dependents), paid in INR before booking the Mumbai interview. Set by 22 CFR 22.1 / Fees for Visa Services. Note the consular exchange rate moved to 96 INR per USD on 1 April 2026.
  • Visa issuance / reciprocity fee — for Indian nationals on L-1, this is generally zero. Confirm against the State Department reciprocity table for India.
  • Fraud Prevention and Detection Fee — where applicable to blanket petitioners under 8 CFR 214.2(l)(17).

Why the Foreign Affairs Manual (FAM) Matters at the Mumbai Interview

Why it matters for Indian applicants

For Indian L-1 applicants, 9 FAM 402.12 sets out how the officer reviews the qualifying relationship (9 FAM 402.12-5), the executive/managerial nature of the role (9 FAM 402.12-6), the specialised knowledge test for L-1B (9 FAM 402.12-7), and the documentary record (9 FAM 402.12-8). Knowing the test the officer is applying lets us draft the support letter and rehearse interview answers in language that maps cleanly onto the FAM standard.

Davies & Associates Hot L-1 Visa Tip

Read 9 FAM 402.12 yourself before you go in. You do not need to recite it — but the questions will land differently when you know the rule the officer is checking against.

Need legal representation for your Mumbai L-1 case? Our L-1 visa lawyer in Mumbai handles petition drafting, USCIS filing, and consulate interview preparation in person at our Bandra Kurla Complex office — minutes from the U.S. Consulate General Mumbai.

Mumbai Interview Preparation — Sample Officer Questions

The Mumbai consular officer typically has 2–4 minutes per L-1 case. They have already read the petition and the I-797 — the interview tests whether your live answers match the paper record under 9 FAM 402.12. Inconsistency, hesitation on the corporate relationship, or vague descriptions of your role are the main triggers for 221(g) administrative processing. Below are the question patterns we rehearse with every Mumbai-bound L-1 client — broken out by L-1A, L-1B, and new-office.

For L-1A (Executive or Manager) Applicants

  • What does your Indian company do? How is it related to the US company?
  • Who owns the Indian entity and the US entity? Walk me through the ownership structure.
  • What is your current title in India? How many people report to you, and what do they do?
  • What will your title be in the US? How many people will report to you there?
  • How do you spend a typical week — what percentage of your time is spent on managerial vs operational work?
  • Why does the US entity need an executive transferred from India rather than a US hire?
  • What strategic decisions have you made in the last 12 months? (Be ready with concrete examples.)
  • What is your annual salary in India? What will it be in the US?
  • How long do you intend to stay in the US? What are your plans after the L-1 period ends?

For L-1B (Specialised Knowledge) Applicants

  • What is your specialised knowledge? Be specific — what proprietary process, product, or methodology?
  • How did you acquire this knowledge? How long did it take?
  • Why can’t the US entity train a US worker to do this?
  • What project will you work on in the US? Who are the US clients or end-users?
  • How does your knowledge differ from publicly available training in your field?
  • Has your knowledge been documented internally? Patents, internal manuals, training materials?
  • How many other people at your Indian company have this same knowledge?

For New-Office L-1A Applicants (under 8 CFR 214.2(l)(3)(v))

  • What does the US business do? Who are your target customers?
  • Have you secured US office premises? Walk me through the lease.
  • How much capital has been transferred to the US entity? From what source?
  • What is your hiring plan for the first 12 months?
  • What revenue do you project for Year 1, 2, and 3? On what basis?
  • Will you continue to manage employees, or will you initially be doing operational work yourself?
  • If your Year 1 plan is mostly operational, can you point to the specific managerial role that will exist by the time of the I-129 extension?

Common questions across all L-1 cases

  • How long have you worked at the Indian company? In what roles?
  • Are you married? Will your spouse and children travel with you on L-2 visas?
  • Have you been to the US before? On what visas?
  • Have you ever been refused a US visa, or had a US visa cancelled?
  • Have you ever overstayed a US visa or been deported from the US?
  • Where will you live in the US? Have you arranged housing?
Davies & Associates Hot L-1 Visa Tip

The two most common Mumbai-specific friction points we see are: (a) Indian-side compliance gaps — outdated Shops & Establishments Act licence, missing tax filings, no visible employees if a consular investigator visits; and (b) vague answers about the US role, especially where the US entity is small or newly opened. Tighten both before you book the interview slot.

Maximum Period of Stay on an L-1 (5 / 7 Years)

Under 9 FAM 402.12-14(C), total time on an L-1B (specialised knowledge) is capped at five years; total time on an L-1A (executive or manager) is capped at seven years. Time previously spent in H status counts toward the cap (9 FAM 402.12-14(B)). After the cap, you generally must reside outside the US before re-qualifying (9 FAM 402.12-14(D)).

Blanket L-1 Cases — Chennai-Only

Mumbai does not accept Blanket L-1 (I-129S) applications. Every Blanket L-1 case in India is acceptance-stamped at the US Consulate in Chennai. The U.S. Consulate General in Chennai is the sole acceptance centre in India for all applications for intra-company transfers under the blanket L category. The blanket L category includes specialised knowledge professionals, executives and managers. The Blanket L programme is governed by 8 CFR 214.2(l)(4) and (l)(5), with the consular burden of proof at 9 FAM 402.12-7(E) and the procedure for denying a Blanket-L visa at 9 FAM 402.12-7(F). Read about the Chennai Blanket L-1 process here.

If your employer holds Blanket L approval and you live in Mumbai’s catchment, you will travel to Chennai for the interview.

L-2 Dependents at Mumbai

Spouse and unmarried children under 21 apply for the L-2 visa under 8 CFR 214.2(l)(7)(ii), which can be processed at any of the five posts in India — including Mumbai. Each dependent files a separate DS-160 and pays a separate $205 fee, and they normally interview alongside the principal L-1 applicant.

L-2 spouses are work-authorised on entry under 8 CFR 274a.12(a)(18) — following the USCIS L-2S admission policy, they no longer need a separate EAD card to start work in the US. Many Mumbai-based L-1A clients eventually transition to permanent residence through the EB-1C green card for multinational managers and executives; others combine the L-1 with parallel pathways like the EB-5 investor visa (see also our dedicated EB-5 visa India practice site for processing timelines, the India backlog, and source-of-funds compliance under FEMA / RBI rules) or the E-2 treaty investor visa for Indian nationals (typically via a Grenadian passport, since India is not on the E-2 treaty list).

Administrative Processing, 221(g), and Passport Return at Mumbai

The two outcomes of a Mumbai L-1 interview

At the close of the interview the consular officer will tell you one of two things:

  • Approved — the officer keeps your passport. The visa foil is printed at the consulate, your passport with the L-1 stamp is couriered back, and in our experience this typically takes 7–14 working days from interview to passport return. Issuance procedures are at 9 FAM 403.9. You can track the status on ustraveldocs.com/in. Do not book US-bound flights for the day after the interview — build a 2–3 week buffer.
  • 221(g) administrative processing — the officer hands you (or e-mails you) a slip listing what is needed before issuance. The case is not denied; it is on hold pending the post’s further review. Most Mumbai 221(g) holds clear within 60 days, but the timeline varies with the question.

What 221(g) means

A refusal under INA 221(g) (8 USC 1201(g)) is the most common L-1 hold-up. It is rarely a final denial — it usually means the officer wants more documents, wants to verify a fact, or wants to refer the case for inter-agency review before issuing the visa. The case enters “administrative processing”, which can run from a few days to several months depending on what is being checked. The procedure the officer must follow when issuing a 221(g) is set out at 9 FAM 403.10-3, and the route to overcoming it is at 9 FAM 306.2. Helpfully, the FAM bars the post from charging a second MRV fee if you re-apply within 12 months of a 221(g) refusal.

What to do if Mumbai issues a 221(g)

  1. Read the slip carefully. Note the exact information requested and the channel for submitting it (e-mail, courier, or in-person at VFS).
  2. Reply through the specified channel only. Replies sent through other channels (e.g. directly to the consul) get lost.
  3. Cover the legal point, not just the document. Where the request relates to the qualifying relationship or specialised knowledge, send the document plus a covering letter that points to the specific FAM section in play (9 FAM 402.12-5, 402.12-6, or 402.12-7).
  4. Keep the petition open. If you let the I-129 expire while in administrative processing, you may be back to square one.
  5. Watch for a return-to-USCIS letter. If the post issues a notice that the petition is being returned to USCIS for revocation under 8 CFR 214.2(l)(9), the strategy shifts — you should engage counsel immediately, because the next move is at USCIS, not at the post.

We have had repeat success at Mumbai by overnighting targeted further evidence with a covering letter that points to the specific FAM section in play. The most common Mumbai 221(g) triggers we see are: (a) corporate-relationship documents that don’t cleanly tie the Indian and US entities together; (b) Indian-side compliance gaps the officer wants verified; and (c) ambiguous or thin role descriptions, particularly for L-1B specialised-knowledge cases.

US Consulate Mumbai — Address & Contact

Address:
U.S. Consulate General, Mumbai
C-49, G-Block, Bandra Kurla Complex
Bandra East, Mumbai 400051
Phone: (91-22) 2672-4000

Official non-immigrant visa portal for India: in.usembassy.gov / Nonimmigrant Visas · appointment scheduling: usvisascheduling.com (the U.S. Mission India support address has migrated from [email protected] to [email protected] — verify the current channel before sending anything).

Email (non-immigrant visas): [email protected]

Call Center:
India: +91 120 4844644 or +91 40 46258222
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Davies & Associates — Mumbai Office

Our India headquarters sits in the same Bandra Kurla Complex as the US Consulate, which is convenient for in-person interview prep:

Davies & Associates US Immigration Law
Enam Sambhav, C-20, G Block
Bandra Kurla Complex, Mumbai
Maharashtra 400051, India
Phone: +91 22 4880 8721
Map and driving directions

Mark I Davies, Chairman of Davies & Associates, with Pulkit Srivastava and Axis Bank clients at the Bharat Diamond Bourse in Bandra Kurla Complex Mumbai — meeting Indian L-1 and EB-5 visa applicants in the diamond and jewellery industry
Davies & Associates Chairman Mark I Davies and Pulkit Srivastava, Regional Marketing Manager, meeting Axis Bank clients at the Bharat Diamond Bourse in Bandra Kurla Complex — the world’s largest diamond exchange and a short walk from the US Consulate General Mumbai. Diamond and jewellery exporters from Surat, Mumbai, and Antwerp are a long-standing part of the firm’s L-1 visa practice.

L1 Visa Processing in Mumbai — Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to process an L1 visa in Mumbai?

L1 visa processing in Mumbai takes 1–6 months at the USCIS petition stage (or roughly 15 calendar days with premium processing under 8 CFR 103.7(e)), plus the consular stage at Mumbai. Once the I-797 is issued, the Mumbai stage typically runs three to eight weeks: a few weeks to land an interview slot, and 7–14 working days from interview to passport return. The figure changes month to month; the State Department publishes current Mumbai data on its Global Visa Wait Times page, and adjudication standards at post are at 9 FAM 402.12.

How do I process an L1 visa in Mumbai step by step?

Processing an L1 visa in Mumbai runs through a seven-step sequence under 8 CFR 214.2(l): (1) USCIS approves Form I-129; (2) the applicant completes the DS-160; (3) the $205 MRV fee is paid in INR through HDFC Bank; (4) the Mumbai interview is booked online; (5) the applicant prepares with their attorney, including mock interviews aligned to 9 FAM 402.12; (6) the applicant attends the in-person interview at C-49 Bandra Kurla Complex; (7) the consular officer issues the visa or places the case in 221(g) administrative processing. Most successful L1 cases see passport return in 7–14 working days. See the 7-step sequence above for the operational detail.

Who is eligible to apply for an L-1 visa in Mumbai?

Under INA 101(a)(15)(L) and 8 CFR 214.2(l), you must have worked for the foreign employer for at least one continuous year within the previous three, in an executive, managerial, or specialised knowledge role, and be transferring to a qualifying related US entity in the same or a comparable role. The full eligibility test is set out in our L-1 visa requirements guide.

Can I attend my L-1 interview at a different consulate if Mumbai is fully booked?

Generally no. Since the State Department’s 6 September 2025 guidance, applicants must apply at a post in their country of nationality or legal residence. For Indian residents that means India — you may move between Indian posts (Mumbai, New Delhi, Chennai, Hyderabad, Kolkata) but third-country processing in Singapore or Ho Chi Minh City is no longer available except in narrow humanitarian or foreign-policy cases. Booking at the wrong post risks refusal under 9 FAM 403.10, and any fees paid will not be refunded. Within India, applying outside your home jurisdiction can attract sharper questioning on residency and ties.

What documents must I bring to the L-1 interview in Mumbai?

Original passport, I-797, three copies of the I-129 packet, DS-160 barcode page (and any corrected confirmation page), MRV fee receipt, employer support letter, payslips, organisational charts, and (for L-2) marriage and birth certificates. The full list is in the checklist above. Adjudication standards are set out in 9 FAM 402.12.

What is the L-1 visa fee in Mumbai for 2026?

The MRV application fee is US $205 per applicant, paid in Indian Rupees through HDFC. The consular exchange rate at U.S. Mission India was updated to 96 INR per USD on 1 April 2026. For Indian nationals on L-1, the visa issuance reciprocity fee is generally zero — check the current reciprocity table. The petition-stage USCIS fees are paid separately by the US employer.

Can my spouse and children travel with me on the L-1?

Yes. Spouses and unmarried children under 21 apply for L-2 dependent visas at Mumbai, either with you or later. L-2 spouses are work-authorised on admission under 8 CFR 274a.12(a)(18).

What happens if my L-1 case is placed in 221(g) administrative processing?

A 221(g) hold under 8 USC 1201(g) is usually a temporary information request, not a final denial. The officer normally hands you (or e-mails) a coloured slip listing what is needed. Submit it through the channel specified, and the case re-opens. Most 221(g) holds clear within 60 days — the procedure the officer must follow is at 9 FAM 403.10-3. If the post returns the petition to USCIS under 8 CFR 214.2(l)(9), that is more serious — we would step in to push back through the post or through the National Visa Center.

What is the maximum time I can stay in the US on an L-1 visa?

Under 9 FAM 402.12-14(C), total time on an L-1B (specialised knowledge) is capped at five years; total time on an L-1A (executive or manager) is capped at seven years. Time previously spent in H status counts toward the cap (9 FAM 402.12-14(B)). After the cap, you generally must reside outside the US before re-qualifying (9 FAM 402.12-14(D)).

Can I get an L-1 visa stamped in Mumbai for a Blanket L-1 case?

No. The Consulate in Chennai is the sole post in India for Blanket L-1 (I-129S) acceptance under 8 CFR 214.2(l)(5). If your employer holds blanket approval, you will travel to Chennai for the interview, even if you live in Mumbai’s catchment.

Is the Dropbox (interview waiver) available for L-1 renewals in Mumbai?

No. Effective 2 September 2025, L-1 (and L-2, H-1B, H-4, F-1, J-1, O-1, E-1, E-2) applicants are no longer eligible for the interview waiver programme. Only B-1/B-2 holders meeting strict criteria remain Dropbox-eligible. All L-1 renewals and new applications must now attend an in-person interview at the consulate. For renewal strategy more broadly — including how 2026 third-country stamping rules affect L-1 holders — see our L-1 visa renewal guide.

Mumbai is one stage of a longer L-1 case. Depending on where you are in the process, these companion pages will be useful:

Davies & Associates offices in India

L-1 visa fundamentals

USCIS forms involved in the L-1 process

  • Form I-129 guide — the petition that starts the L-1 case at USCIS.
  • Form I-907 guide — premium processing to get a 15-calendar-day USCIS decision.
  • DS-160 guide — the online non-immigrant visa application required for the Mumbai interview.
  • Form I-140 guide — for L-1A holders who later move to the EB-1C green card.

US business setup & tax (for the petitioning company)

India-specific L-1 guidance

Other Indian consulate guides

L-1 lawyers by Indian city

From L-1 to a green card — permanent-residence pathways

Every section above is grounded in the public legal record. The primary sources we rely on for L1 visa processing in Mumbai are:

Statute (Immigration and Nationality Act)

Regulations (8 CFR & 22 CFR)

Foreign Affairs Manual (consular adjudication)

  • 9 FAM 402.12 — the master FAM section for L-visa adjudication, including the qualifying-relationship test (402.12-5), executive/managerial test (402.12-6), specialised knowledge (402.12-7), and documentation (402.12-8).
  • 9 FAM 301.2 — visa applicant burden of proof and consular discretion.
  • 9 FAM 306.2 — addressing past refusals and the route to overcoming a 221(g).
  • 9 FAM 403.9 — visa issuance procedures.
  • 9 FAM 403.10 — consular procedure for refusals (including 221(g) administrative processing).
  • 9 FAM 403.5-4(A)(1) — interview waiver criteria (no longer applicable to L-1 as of 2 September 2025).

USCIS Policy Manual

Official consular sites & tools

About the Author and Reviewer

Author: Sukanya Raman, Esq.

Managing Attorney, Davies & Associates, India. Based in Mumbai, working with L-1 and E-2 clients across India.

Sukanya leads the firm’s India practice from the Mumbai office at Bandra Kurla Complex and works directly with L-1 applicants on petition strategy, consular preparation, and post-interview follow-up at the US Consulate Mumbai. She advises Indian multinational employers, founder-led businesses expanding into the US, and individual L-1A and L-1B transferees, with day-to-day oversight of every L-1 case the firm runs through Mumbai.

Reviewer: Mark I Davies, Esq.

Chairman of Davies & Associates; focused on E and L visa strategy and complex consular filings.

Mark I Davies, Esq. JD, University of Pennsylvania Law School, Licensed with the SRA (SRA ID: 384468) in the UK, Member Law Society of England & Wales, MBA, Wharton School of Business. Top 10 Investment Visa Lawyer, Licensed (USA), Georgia State Bar. AILA Member.

Mark I Davies — Credentials at a Glance
Area Details
Education JD, University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School · MBA (Finance), The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania · Chartered Accountant (ICAEW)
Financial Training Completed Analyst Training Program at a major international bank; Chartered Accountant background with professional training in financial analysis and reporting
Legal Practice Admitted to practice in Georgia (USA) · Registered Solicitor with the Law Society of England & Wales · Former CMBS lawyer at one of the world’s largest international law firms
Immigration Track Record 15+ years advising HNW investors · Zero denials for clients advised on source-of-funds compliance in EB-5 · Hundreds of successful EB-5 cases globally
Recognition Named a Top 25 EB-5 Immigration Attorney by EB5 Investors Magazine (2018–2023)
Professional Engagements Lecturer/trainer for AILA, ACA, University of Pennsylvania Law School · Frequent speaker at global investment immigration conferences

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