• Skip to main navigation
  • Skip to sub-navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to site map
  • Exchange Visitor Program Information on Coronavirus (COVID-19)
  • Visa Services Operating Status Update (November 19, 2021)
Exchange Visitor Program
Search Site
Route J1 Blog
  • VISA BASICS
    • J-1 VISA
    • J-2 VISA
    • OTHER STUDENT VISAS
    • FACTS & FIGURES
    • FAQs
  • PROGRAMS
    • NEW STEM INITIATIVES
    • AU PAIR
    • CAMP COUNSELOR
    • COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY
      STUDENT
    • GOVERNMENT VISITOR
    • INTERN
    • INTERNATIONAL VISITOR
    • PHYSICIAN
    • PROFESSOR
    • RESEARCH SCHOLAR
    • SECONDARY SCHOOL
      STUDENT
    • SHORT-TERM SCHOLAR
    • SPECIALIST
    • SUMMER WORK TRAVEL
    • TEACHER
    • TRAINEE
  • PARTICIPANTS
    • APPLY FOR A J-1 VISA
    • CURRENT J-1 VISA HOLDERS
    • AMBASSADORS FUND FOR SUMMER WORK TRAVEL
    • BRIDGEUSA LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM
  • PROGRAM SPONSORS
    • APPLY TO BE A SPONSOR
    • CURRENT SPONSORS
  • HOSTS
    • SCHOOLS
    • FAMILIES
    • EMPLOYERS

Programs

  •  
  • Au Pair
  • Camp Counselor
  • College and University Student
  • Government Visitor
  • Intern
  • International Visitor
  • Physician
  • Professor
  • Research Scholar
  • Secondary School Student
  • Short-Term Scholar
  • Specialist
  • STEM Initiatives
  • Summer Work Travel
  • Teacher
  • Trainee
Summer Work Travel portrait

Summer Work Travel

College and University students enrolled full time and pursuing studies at post-secondary accredited academic institutions located outside the United States come to the United States to share their culture and ideas with people of the United States through temporary work and travel opportunities.

Tweet
  • Participants
  • Program Sponsors
  • Employers

Participants

Summer Work Travel Students must be:

  • Sufficiently proficient in English to successfully interact in an English speaking environment;
  • Post-secondary school students enrolled in and actively pursuing a degree or other full-time course of study at an accredited classroom based, post-secondary educational institution outside the United States;
  • Have successfully completed at least one semester or equivalent of post-secondary academic study; and
  • Pre-placed in a job prior to entry unless from a visa waiver country.

Benefits

The Summer Work Travel program provides foreign students with an opportunity to live and work in the United States during their summer vacation from college or university to experience and to be exposed to the people and way of life in the United States.

More information

Summer Work Travel 2025 Season Program Dates by Country

Season program dates by country (PDF)

Summer Work Travel Community Support Groups

Find SWT community support groups near you

Map of Summer Work Travel Participants

View the number and locations of Summer Work Travel participants across the U.S.

Readmittance, Program Length, and Returning Home

  • Readmittance: Participants can be admitted to the program more than once;
  • Program Length: The maximum length of the program is four months; and
  • Returning Home: Students must return to their home country prior to the start date of their university or college.

Program Exclusions

Sponsors must not place participants:

  • In positions that could bring notoriety or disrepute to the Exchange Visitor Program;
  • In sales positions that require participants to purchase inventory that they must sell in order to support themselves;
  • In domestic help positions in private homes (e.g., child care, elder care, gardener, chauffeur);
  • As pedicab or rolling chair drivers or operators;
  • As operators or drivers of vehicles or vessels for which drivers’ licenses are required regardless of whether they carry passengers or not;
  • In positions related to clinical care that involves patient contact;
  • In any position in the adult entertainment industry (including, but not limited to jobs with escort services, adult book/video stores, and strip clubs);
  • In positions requiring work hours that fall predominantly between 10:00 pm and 6:00 am;
  • In positions declared hazardous to youth by the Secretary of Labor at Subpart E of 29 CFR part 570;
  • In positions that require sustained physical contact with other people and/or adherence to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Universal Blood and Body Fluid Precautions guidelines (e.g., body piercing, tattooing, massage, manicure);
  • In positions that are substantially commission-based and thus do not guarantee that participants will be paid minimum wage in accordance with federal and state standards;
  • In positions involved in gaming and gambling that include direct participation in wagering and/or betting;
  • In positions in chemical pest control, warehousing, catalogue/online order distribution centers;
  • In positions with traveling fairs or itinerant concessionaires;
  • In jobs that do not allow participants to work alongside U.S. citizens and interact regularly with U.S. citizens and to experience U.S. culture during the workday portion of their Summer Work Travel programs;
  • With employers that fill non-seasonal or non-temporary job openings with exchange visitors with staggered vacation schedules;
  • In positions that require licensing;
  • In positions for which there is another specific J visa category (e.g., Camp Counselor, Trainee, Intern);
  • In positions with staffing agencies, unless the placements meet the following three criteria:
    • Participants must be employees of and paid by the staffing agencies
    • Staffing agencies must provide full-time, primary, on-site supervision of the participants
    • Staffing agencies must effectively control the work sites, e.g., have hands-on management responsibility for the participants
  • After November 1, 2012, in positions in the North American Industry Classification System’s (NAICS) Goods-Producing Industries occupational categories industry sectors 11, 21, 23, 31-33 numbers (set forth at http://www.bls.gov/iag/tgs/iag_index_naics.htm).

Sponsors must also:

  • Use extra caution when placing students in positions at employers in lines of business that are frequently associated with trafficking persons (e.g., modeling agencies, housekeeping, janitorial services);
  • Consider the availability of suitable, affordable housing (e.g., that meets local codes and ordinances) and reliable, affordable, and convenient transportation to and from work when making job placements;
  • Actively and immediately assist participants with arranging appropriate housing and transportation, if employers do not provide or arrange housing and/or transportation, or if participants decline employer-provided housing or transportation;
  • Confirm at the beginning of each placement season:
    • The number of job placements available with host employers
    • That host employers will not displace domestic U.S. workers at worksites where they will place program participants
    • That host employers have not experienced layoffs in the past 120 days and do not have workers on lockout or on strike

Sponsors may place participants only in jobs that:

  • Are seasonal or temporary;
  • Provide opportunities for regular communication and interaction with U.S. citizens and allow participants to experience U.S. culture.
Program Resources Find a Program Sponsor Common Questions

Report Abuse or Exploitation

1-866-283-9090

 

Summer Work Travel Resources

Events
SWT Participant Map
Community Support Groups
Strengthening and Reforming the SWT Program
SWT Monitoring Report

Program Sponsors

Sponsors are required to:

  • Provide pre-arranged and fully-vetted employment to all participants who are not from a visa waiver country. Provide all participants, prior to entry:
    • A copy of the Department of State Summer Work Travel Program Brochure;
    • The Department of State’s toll-free emergency hotline telephone number;
    • The sponsor’s 24/7 immediate contact telephone number;
    • Information advising participants of their obligation to notify their sponsor when they arrive in the United States and to provide information of any change in jobs or residence; and
    • Information concerning any contractual obligations related to participants’ acceptance of paid employment in the United States, if pre-arranged.
  • Sponsors of participants who are nationals of Visa Waiver Program countries must:
    • Ensure that participants entering the United States without prearranged employment have sufficient financial resources to support themselves during their search for employment;
    • Provide such participants with information on how to seek employment and secure lodging in the United States before they depart their home countries; and
    • Provide participants with a job directory that includes at least as many job listings as the number of participants in their program who are entering the United States without prearranged employment.
  • Sponsors must undertake reasonable efforts to secure suitable employment for participants unable to find jobs on their own after one week;
  • Sponsors must inform program participants of Federal Minimum Wage requirements and ensure that, at a minimum, participants are compensated at the prevailing local wage, which must meet the higher of either the applicable state or the Federal minimum wage requirement, including payment for overtime in accordance with state-specific employment; and
  • Sponsors must maintain, at a minimum, a monthly schedule of personal contact with the program participants (in-person, by telephone or via-electronic mail), document such contact, and ensure that issues affecting the health, safety and welfare of participants are addressed immediately.

More information

2024 Program Date Chart

2024 Program Date Chart (PDF)

Program Exclusions

Sponsors must not place participants:

  • In positions that could bring notoriety or disrepute to the Exchange Visitor Program;
  • In sales positions that require participants to purchase inventory that they must sell in order to support themselves;
  • In domestic help positions in private homes (e.g., child care, elder care, gardener, chauffeur);
  • As pedicab or rolling chair drivers or operators;
  • As operators or drivers of vehicles or vessels for which drivers’ licenses are required regardless of whether they carry passengers or not;
  • In positions related to clinical care that involves patient contact;
  • In any position in the adult entertainment industry (including, but not limited to jobs with escort services, adult book/video stores, and strip clubs);
  • In positions requiring work hours that fall predominantly between 10:00 pm and 6:00 am;
  • In positions declared hazardous to youth by the Secretary of Labor at Subpart E of 29 CFR part 570;
  • In positions that require sustained physical contact with other people and/or adherence to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Universal Blood and Body Fluid Precautions guidelines (e.g., body piercing, tattooing, massage, manicure);
  • In positions that are substantially commission-based and thus do not guarantee that participants will be paid minimum wage in accordance with federal and state standards;
  • In positions involved in gaming and gambling that include direct participation in wagering and/or betting;
  • In positions in chemical pest control, warehousing, catalogue/online order distribution centers;
  • In positions with traveling fairs or itinerant concessionaires;
  • In jobs that do not allow participants to work alongside U.S. citizens and interact regularly with U.S. citizens and to experience U.S. culture during the workday portion of their Summer Work Travel programs;
  • With employers that fill non-seasonal or non-temporary job openings with exchange visitors with staggered vacation schedules;
  • In positions that require licensing;
  • In positions for which there is another specific J visa category (e.g., Camp Counselor, Trainee, Intern);
  • In positions with staffing agencies, unless the placements meet the following three criteria:
    • Participants must be employees of and paid by the staffing agencies
    • Staffing agencies must provide full-time, primary, on-site supervision of the participants
    • Staffing agencies must effectively control the work sites, e.g., have hands-on management responsibility for the participants
  • After November 1, 2012, in positions in the North American Industry Classification System’s (NAICS) Goods-Producing Industries occupational categories industry sectors 11, 21, 23, 31-33 numbers (set forth at http://www.bls.gov/iag/tgs/iag_index_naics.htm).

Sponsors must also:

  • Use extra caution when placing students in positions at employers in lines of business that are frequently associated with trafficking persons (e.g., modeling agencies, housekeeping, janitorial services);
  • Consider the availability of suitable, affordable housing (e.g., that meets local codes and ordinances) and reliable, affordable, and convenient transportation to and from work when making job placements;
  • Actively and immediately assist participants with arranging appropriate housing and transportation, if employers do not provide or arrange housing and/or transportation, or if participants decline employer-provided housing or transportation;
  • Confirm at the beginning of each placement season:
    • The number of job placements available with host employers
    • That host employers will not displace domestic U.S. workers at worksites where they will place program participants
    • That host employers have not experienced layoffs in the past 120 days and do not have workers on lockout or on strike

Sponsors may place participants only in jobs that:

  • Are seasonal or temporary;
  • Provide opportunities for regular communication and interaction with U.S. citizens and allow participants to experience U.S. culture.
Program Resources Common Questions SEVIS Information

Summer Work Travel 2024 Season Program Dates by Country

  • Summer Work Travel 2024 Season Program Dates by Country (PDF)

Employers

Host employers are required to:

  • Provide participants the number of hours of paid employment per week as identified on the job offer and agreed to when the sponsor vetted the jobs;
  • Pay those participants eligible for overtime worked in accordance with applicable state or federal law;
  • Notify sponsors promptly when participants arrive at the work site and begins their programs; when there are any changes or deviations in the job placements during the participants’ programs; when participants are not meeting the requirements of job placements; or when participants leave their position ahead of their planned departure; and
  • Contact sponsors immediately in the event of any emergency involving participants or any situation that impacts the health, safety or welfare of participants.
Program Resources Find a Program Sponsor Common Questions

“As an employer of international kids, keep your door open and be proactive in solving their issues.” 

WISP Resort, Summer Work Travel
WISP Resort

  • Visa Basics
    • Facts & Figures
    • About J-2 Visa
    • Other U.S. Student Visas
    • Common Questions
  • Participants
    • How to Apply
    • Current Participants
    • Participant Experiences
    • Common Questions for Participants
    • Videos
  • Program Sponsors
    • Become a Sponsor
    • Current Sponsors
    • How to Administer a Program
    • Common Questions for Program Sponsors
  • Host Families/Employers
    • For Host Families
    • For Employers
    • For Schools
    • Common Questions for Host Families/Employers
  • Programs
  • Resources
    • RO-ARO Virtual Training
    • SEVIS login
    • SEVIS Manuals
    • SEVIS Training Videos
    • DS-2019
    • Regulations and Compliance Administration
    • Contacts
    • About Us
    • Get Adobe Reader
  • U.S. Department of State
  • Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs
  • FOIA
  • Privacy Notice
  • Copyright Information
  • Facebook   Twitter   Instagram   Flickr