I’ve been watching the travel industry for decades, and I can tell you that when governments make it harder to cross their borders, local economies bleed cash.
Right now, while many Americans are simply trying to figure out how to get the best deals on travel, Washington is quietly building a financial fortress around the country. Two new hurdles are being thrown at international tourists: steep visa bonds and unprecedented social media background checks.
The goal is to increase security and stop visa overstays. But the economic blowback is going to be brutal. If you own a restaurant, run a hotel, or work anywhere near the hospitality sector, you need to pay attention. We’re looking at a scenario where international visitors take their money to Europe or Canada instead.
Here’s why the tourism industry is sounding the alarm.
1. The $15,000 pay-to-play bond
Starting April 2, travelers from 50 countries are going to face a financial wall just to visit the United States. According to the U.S. State Department, consular officers can demand a refundable bond of $5,000, $10,000, or up to $15,000 before they’ll even issue a B-1 or B-2 visa.
The policy is designed to ensure people don’t overstay their welcome. If the visitor leaves the country on time, they get their money back.
But let’s be realistic. Most ordinary families can’t afford to lock up $15,000 in a government account just for the privilege of taking a vacation to Florida or California. It’s a deterrent that will immediately kill demand from the affected countries.
2. Intrusive social media interrogations
The financial barrier isn’t the only problem. U.S. Customs and Border Protection has proposed a sweeping new policy that forces tourists to hand over their social media history from the past five years. Is that something you’d endure to visit America?
The agency also wants phone numbers, email addresses used over the last decade, and detailed biometric data. For a family simply looking to visit Disney World or take a road trip to the Grand Canyon, this level of surveillance feels unwelcoming. Many will simply choose to spend their money elsewhere.
This isn’t just targeting high-risk nations. This requirement applies to 42 countries whose citizens currently enjoy visa-free travel to the U.S. We’re talking about massive, reliable sources of tourism revenue like Great Britain, France, Germany, Italy, and Spain.
A $15.7 billion hole in the economy
You don’t have to guess what happens when you treat tourists like suspects. The numbers speak for themselves.
The World Travel and Tourism Council ran the math on these proposed social media changes. It warns that making the U.S. a less attractive destination could result in a staggering loss of $15.7 billion in visitor spending. That isn’t just an abstract number. It translates to real pain for local businesses and the potential destruction of up to 157,000 American jobs.
Security matters, but we can’t ignore the economic reality. When you make it painfully expensive and invasive to visit, people stop coming. And when the tourists vanish, it’s the American worker who ends up footing the bill.

