The United States Customs and Border Protection this week published a series of proposed changes to its current entry and exit protocols for foreign nationals. They include new requirements for business travellers and tourists entering the US from Visa Waiver Program countries to submit five years of social media identifiers through the Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA), which would allow CBP access to five years of social posts.
The proposed new requirement comes after travel risk management advisors earlier this year flagged social media as an area that was ripe for review during the immigration process and cited European Union officials using “burner phones” to “avoid issues of free speech” when passing through border patrol at US airports.
Requiring a foreign national to submit five years of social media history upfront during the ESTA process would shift such an inspection to a pre-travel approval, potentially preventing or delaying individuals engaging in derogatory statements about the US or its government in their social media accounts from receiving authorisation to travel into the country.
The social media requirement rides along with several other expanded information fields that CBP wants to impose on international business travellers and tourists. Other fields would include up to five years of prior telephone numbers and addresses for the ESTA applicant, IP addresses, and broadly expanded information about immediate family members like dates and places of birth, residences and telephone numbers going back ten years. It also calls for the current ESTA website forms to be phased out in favour of a fully mobile app-based protocol.
The CBP proposal is open for public comment for the next 60 days.
According to the documentation on the Federal Register, the additional information is required to meet the standards required by an executive order that President Donald Trump signed in January to increase vetting of international visitors to protect the US “from foreign terrorists and other national security and public safety threats.”
If finalised, the requirements could have implications for many international travellers, beyond the increased time it takes to fill out the request for authorisation, which Erickson Immigration Group estimated would increase to 22 minutes.
Immigration law firm Fragomen wrote on its website about the proposed requirements:
“ESTA applicants should be aware that if these changes are finalised, they would be asked for a higher level of personal detail in future applications and become subject to a social media review by CBP. The increase in data collection could also mean that ESTA applicants would face an increased likelihood of being flagged for closer scrutiny and/or would experience longer waits for ESTA approval.”
Both firms wrote that they were closely monitoring the developments around the proposed changes.
Another deterrent for US travel?
The US Travel Association in October estimated arrivals of international visitors would reach 67.9 million in 2025. That’s down from 72.4 million in 2024, and a $12.5 billion decline in travel revenue. The association cited stricter entry rules and “America First” policies for the decline.
USTA predicted arriving international visitors numbers would jump back up in 2026 by 3.7 per cent and continue its upward trajectory with a number of global events scheduled to take place in the US over the next 36 months, headlined by the FIFA World Cup, America 250 and the 2028 Olympics.
How such expanded ESTA requirements might impact the country’s ability to draw in visitors is not clear, but according to US Travel, the country has seen the impact of other, similar moves. The association in October called out the potential risks to its sunnier travel forecasts for 2026: … “the US risks further decreasing international inbound visits based on potential increases in visa fees, extended wait times for visa applications and renewals, and negative sentiment towards the US in key markets.”
Several countries, including Ireland, the Netherlands, Denmark, the United Kingdom, Germany, Finland and Canada, previously this year issued travel warnings about the US.
Significant changes in the information required to travel into the US – especially information that could be seen as an invasion of free speech – are unlikely to further tourism or business travel.