A US visa from your city.
Every city has its own profile — an IT hub, a capital context, a CIS hub queue. The DS-160 strategy is built for your specific case, not from a template.
For applicants in Poland
Warsaw
You're physically in Warsaw, but the consul treats you as a citizen of your home country, not a Polish resident. That's not a drawback — it's a nuance to get right in the DS-160.
Read →Kraków
A smaller consulate, shorter queues, the same procedure. For people in southern Poland, Kraków is a good alternative to Warsaw.
Read →Wrocław
Wrocław has a large Ukrainian community (~80,000 with PESEL UKR). There's no US consulate here — you travel to Kraków (3-4 h by train) or Warsaw (4 h).
Read →Łódź
Łódź is Poland's third-largest city, centrally located. ~30,000 Ukrainians with PESEL UKR. Closest to Warsaw of all central Poland.
Read →Poznań
Poznań is the academic capital of western Poland. ~50,000 Ukrainians with PESEL UKR.
Read →Gdańsk
Gdańsk is Poland's third city, a port capital. ~70,000 Ukrainians with PESEL UKR. No US consulate — you travel to Warsaw.
Read →Lublin
Lublin is the Polish city closest to the Ukrainian border (170 km to Warsaw, 100 km to Dorohusk). A large flow of Ukrainians from across the border. Poland's student capital — many young Ukrainians here.
Read →Białystok
Białystok is an eastern Polish city near the Belarusian border. Many Belarusian immigrants, plus Ukrainians. Logistically convenient for central-eastern Poland.
Read →Katowice
Katowice is the heart of Silesia, an industrial region. ~25,000 Ukrainians with PESEL UKR. Closest to Kraków of the Polish cities.
Read →Gdynia
Gdynia is the port part of the Tricity area (with Gdańsk and Sopot). Many Ukrainian seafarers and IT workers. Close to Gdańsk.
Read →The Intel.Viza logic works for any profile
We build local guides for cities with their own specifics. For everyone else, the same Intel.Viza wizard builds a DS-160 strategy for your profile. Take the test and learn your 214(b) risks in 60 seconds.