Contact
Email is the only way to reach Visa Bulletin Tracker, and corrections are what it most wants to hear: if a cut-off, a movement, a history or an estimate here does not match the bulletin it cites, that is a bug. Every figure is stored with the exact text the State Department printed and the bulletin month it came from, so a report can be checked against the source rather than argued about — include the visa category, the chargeability column, the bulletin month and what you expected to see. Questions about sources or method, confusing wording, accessibility problems, and reuse questions are all welcome too. Questions about your own case are not something this site can answer: it is a reference to a published government table, not a law firm, and for advice you need a licensed immigration attorney. There are no accounts, no newsletter and no forms; your message is used only to reply to you and to fix what it reports.
Email: [email protected]
Corrections come first
If a cut-off date, a movement, a history or an estimate on this site does not match the bulletin it cites, that is a bug and it should be fixed. Corrections are the priority here and they are the single most useful thing anyone can send.
They are also easy to act on, by design: every figure on this site is stored with the exact text the State Department printed for it and the bulletin month it came from, so a report can be checked against the source rather than argued about. Include the visa category, the chargeability column, the bulletin month, and what you expected to see — that is enough to find it. Every reported figure is re-checked against the original bulletin before anything changes.
Also welcome
Questions about where the data comes from or how something is computed — though the methodology page is written to answer most of them in more detail than an email would. Notes on wording that is confusing or misleading, which on a site read under stress and often in a second language is a real bug and treated as one. Accessibility problems. Reuse and licensing questions, although the underlying bulletin data is public domain and needs no permission from anyone.
Gaps in the record are worth a special mention. 5 bulletins (March 2009, September 2009, October 2009, November 2009, October 2012) are missing because no public capture of them appears to exist. If you know of one that does, that would genuinely improve the archive.
What this cannot be
Questions about your own case cannot be answered here, and it would be wrong to try. This site is a reference to a published government table. It is not a law firm, it is not affiliated with the State Department or U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, and nobody here is in a position to tell you what your priority date means for you, what to file, when to file it, or what will happen next. For that, please consult a licensed immigration attorney — the answer matters far too much to get from an email address on a data site.
What to expect
Visa Bulletin Tracker is an independent data project. Email is the only contact channel — there are no accounts, no newsletter, no forms and no chat — and your message is used only to reply to you and to fix what it reports. It is not added to any list, because there is no list. See the privacy policy, which is short.
This is a lean project and replies may take a little time. A correction will be looked at whether or not it gets a reply.