DV Lottery Frozen in 2026: Official Suspension Update (March 18) + Will DV‑2027 Be Cancelled?

The DV visa issuance suspension is still active as of March 18, 2026

The latest official statement posted by the U.S. Department of State on December 23, 2025 says it has paused all visa issuances to DV immigrant visa applicants. The same guidance says DV applicants may still submit applications and attend interviews, and consular posts may keep scheduling appointments, but no DV immigrant visas will be issued during the pause. 

Important details from the official guidance (still the latest public DV issuance guidance):

Why the pause happened

In the December 23, 2025 notice, the Department explained the pause was triggered by national security/public safety concerns and was connected to high‑profile violent incidents referenced in that guidance—specifically noting concerns arising from a shooting at Brown University and the killing of a Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor, which the Department said was suspected to have been committed by someone admitted through the DV program. The Department said the pause is to allow a review of DV screening/vetting protocols. 

What “still active” means in practice

As of today, the State Department’s U.S. Visas News index still lists December 23, 2025 as the most recent DV issuance update, with no newer announcement posted that lifts or replaces it. 

What the suspension means for applicants

For DV selectees outside the United States

If you are processing through a U.S. embassy/consulate, the current official position is straightforward: you may be interviewed, but you should not expect a visa to be issued until the pause is lifted. 

This matters because DV cases have hard fiscal‑year deadlines. Official State Department DV instructions and State Department publications repeatedly stress that eligibility typically ends with the fiscal year. For DV‑2026, that deadline is September 30, 2026

For DV selectees inside the United States

If you are in the United States and filing adjustment of status, reputable immigration law firms report that U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services has instructed adjudicators to place certain DV adjustment cases (and related work/travel benefit filings) on hold while additional reviews occur, with interviews or re‑interviews possible. 

Note: At the time of writing, USCIS primary-source pages and PDFs were not accessible to this research environment (the USCIS site returned access errors), so the adjustment-of-status details above rely on reputable secondary reporting and legal analysis rather than direct USCIS text. 

A separate set of restrictions may also affect some applicants

Even if the DV‑specific pause changes, there are additional, separate nationality-based restrictions described in State Department notices and a presidential proclamation that took effect January 1, 2026 and restricts visa issuance/entry for certain nationals, with limited exceptions. 

Separately, the State Department also announced a pause effective January 21, 2026 for immigrant visa issuance to nationals of a long list of countries described in an official notice (with limited exceptions such as certain dual nationals). 

Will DV Lottery 2027 be cancelled?

What people usually mean by “cancelled”

Most searches and social posts use “cancelled” in one of three ways:

  1. The DV‑2027 entry period never opens (so no one can apply).
  2. The lottery opens but selection/results are delayed (or changed).
  3. The program is ended or defunded (a true cancellation).

Only the first two can happen without Congress changing the underlying law. The third would be a major legal/political change—and no official U.S. government announcement has declared the DV program ended as of today. 

What official sources actually say about DV‑2027

There is no official announcement that DV‑2027 has been cancelled. Instead, the State Department has said:

Separately, an official State Department Visa Bulletin previously stated that DV‑2027 registration dates would be “widely publicized” in the coming months and directed interested people to monitor the Diversity Visa page. As of today, those DV‑2027 entry dates still have not been formally published via that channel. 

Why DV‑2027 looks delayed (but not “dead”)

Two major government actions point to “delayed + redesigned,” not “cancelled”:

A DV-specific rule change finalized March 11, 2026 (effective April 10, 2026).
The State Department published a final rule in the Federal Register that:

A DV registration fee that is already on the books.
A separate final rule (effective September 16, 2025) created a $1 DV lottery registration fee to be collected at the time of registration. 

Together, these rules show the government is actively restructuring DV entry requirements and operations (passport scan + fee + form updates) in a way that presumes a future entry period will occur—rather than announcing a cancellation. 

The honest answer for March 18, 2026

What to do now checklist

This checklist is designed to be practical whether you are (a) already selected for DV‑2026, or (b) planning to enter DV‑2027 when it opens.

If you are a DV‑2026 selectee (consular processing)

If you are a DV selectee inside the United States (adjustment of status)

If you want to apply for DV‑2027 (next entry period)

Timeline of key events since December 2025

Key points to understand from the timeline: the DV issuance pause is consular-issuance focused and remains the defining bottleneck today, while DV‑2027 is simultaneously being retooled via rulemaking (passport scan + form updates + fee integration), but its entry dates remain unannounced

Assumptions and what is still unknown

What is confirmed by official sources

What is uncertain

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