MUST READ THIS BEFORE APPLYING DV-2026
- The law allows only one entry per person during each entry period.
- No late entries or paper entries will be accepted.
- Do not wait until the last week of the registration period to enter as heavy demand may result in website delays.
- The Department of State uses sophisticated technology to detect multiple entries.
- Submission of more than one entry for a person will disqualify all entries for that person.
By having eligible spouses and children enter the DV lottery along with you, you can legally increase the chances of obtaining a U.S. green card this way.
The choice of winners of the U.S. diversity visa (DV) lottery is completely random. For the 50,000 available visas to people from select countries each year, between 13 million to 20 million eligible people typically apply.
Of course, interested foreign nationals are always looking for ways to increase their chances of success. For example, some have tried entering the lottery registration more than once. This led the U.S. Department of State to implement a system that automatically disqualifies anyone who submits multiple visa lottery entries. You can, however, increase your family’s chances of becoming residents of the United States by various legal and acceptable means, namely:
- having a spouse apply, and
- having your children apply.
Both Spouses, If Eligible, Should Enter the Diversity Visa Lottery Drawing
The best way to increase your family’s chances of success is to have all eligible family members register for the DV lottery. For details on who meets the country, educational, and other eligibility requirements, see Winning a Green Card Through the Visa Lottery. A winning applicant can bring both spouse and unmarried children under age 21.
For example, let’s say you and your spouse are both citizens of New Zealand, you both work in skilled jobs, and both graduated from secondary school. As a family, you now have two eligible applicants who might win the lottery. You can file one application under your name, and your spouse can file one application under their name. You will each receive a confirmation number. If one of you wins, the other applies for a U.S. green card as a derivative spouse.
It is important to remember that each person applying for a diversity visa must meet the eligibility requirements. Therefore, if your spouse does not meet the employment, country, or education requirements, they are not eligible to apply personally, in their own name.
Eligible Children Should Also Apply for the DV Lottery
There is no limit on how many eligible members of the same family may apply for the DV lottery. If you have any children who have met the educational or work experience requirements (which usually requires them to be at least 16 to 18 years of age), those children should also enter the lottery. They won’t, if they win, be able to bring you to the U.S. immediately; but they will start a path to helping you and other family members immigrate in the future.
For example: Let’s say you and your 20-year-old son are eligible for diversity visas, and you both apply. Your son wins, but you do not. Unfortunately, your son cannot bring parents along as “derivatives.” So, your son enters the United States and becomes a lawful permanent resident. After five years of living in the U.S., your son can potentially apply to become a U.S. citizen. As a U.S. citizen, he can petition for you (considered his “immediate relative”) to become a resident of the United States.