US Trends

what is country of eligibility for the dv program

Your country of eligibility for the U.S. Diversity Visa (DV) program is normally your country of birth , not your current citizenship or where you live now.

Quick Scoop: What “Country of Eligibility” Means

When the DV instructions talk about country of eligibility (also called chargeability), they are basically asking:

“For DV purposes, which country are you counted under?”

In almost all cases, that answer is the country where you were born.

Key points:

  • It is not based on your current passport.
  • It is not based on where you currently live.
  • It is not something you choose freely just to avoid a non‑eligible country.

The General Rule

  • If you were born in a country that is on the eligible list for that DV year, then your country of eligibility = your country of birth.
  • The list of eligible and ineligible countries can change from year to year, depending on how many people from that country have immigrated to the U.S. in the previous five years.

Example:

  • If you were born in Nepal and the instructions say “Nepal is eligible,” then you select Nepal as your country of eligibility, even if you now live in Germany and hold a Canadian passport.

Exceptions: When You Can Use Another Country

There are a couple of narrow exceptions where your country of eligibility can be different from your country of birth.

  1. Spouse’s Country of Birth (Married Couples)
    • If you were born in a non‑eligible country but your spouse was born in an eligible country, you may “borrow” your spouse’s country of birth as your country of eligibility.
 * You must:
   * Both apply and be issued visas together, and
   * Both intend to immigrate to the U.S. together.
  1. Parents’ Country of Birth (Born in a Non‑Eligible Country)
    • If you were born in a country where neither of your parents was a legal resident at the time (for example, your parents were just temporarily there), you might be able to use the country of birth of one of your parents , if that country is eligible.

These rules are detailed in the official DV instructions for each year.

Why This Matters So Much

Choosing the wrong country of eligibility is one of the fastest ways to get automatically disqualified , even if everything else is perfect.

Common mistakes:

  • Selecting citizenship instead of birth country.
  • Intentionally picking a different country just to get around ineligibility.
  • Misusing the spouse or parents exception without actually qualifying.

What You Should Do When Applying

  • Check the current official DV instructions for your specific year (DV‑2026, DV‑2027, etc.), because eligibility lists are updated each year.
  • On the entry form, select:
    1. Your country of birth (default), or
    2. Your spouse’s or parent’s eligible country of birth , only if you clearly qualify under those exception rules.
  • Use only the official government website (dvprogram.state.gov) to enter.

Mini FAQ

Q: I was born in a non‑eligible country but now I’m a citizen of an eligible country. Can I use my new citizenship?
A: No. Eligibility is about where you were born , not what passport you hold.

Q: I live in an eligible country now. Can I use that country?
A: No, your country of residence does not control DV eligibility.

Q: How do I know if my birth country is eligible this year?
A: Check the latest DV instructions page for your program year and look at the list of countries whose natives may not apply; if yours is not listed there, it is generally eligible.

TL;DR:
For the DV program, your country of eligibility is almost always your country of birth , unless you legally and clearly qualify to use your spouse’s or a parent’s country of birth under the specific exceptions described in the official yearly instructions.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.