Visas for many many years were placed in your passport using a rubber stamp, same as most entry and exit stamps are done today. And there are still countries that use rubber stamps for visas today.
Hence the slang for getting visas evolved to being “stamped” and the visa itself was termed a “visa stamp“. While modern visas have evolved to stickers with high security features, the old slang remains in common usage all around the world.
Perhaps with time as all us old fogies, who remember visas being stamped in our passports, pass on to that great bike tour in the sky, travelers will start using “stickered” for getting their visas or maybe “stored” as epassports evolve
The confusion arises out of different terminology that some people use due to misconceptions about what a US “visa” is.
Technically, the “visa” is what some people call the “visa stamp”, which is the physical sticker that is placed into the passport. A US visa is solely for traveling to the US to apply to enter. A US visa only has to be valid on the day of entry (for example, you can use a visa to enter the US on the day before it expires, or even on the day it expires).
After entry, how long you can stay in the US is determined by your “status“, which lasts until the date on your I-94 that you are given on entry (which is electronic nowadays), and as long as you continue to satisfy the conditions of your status (e.g. for F-1 students, having a valid I-20 and continuing studies). Your visa’s expiration date is completely irrelevant after entry.
This is very different from how some other countries work. In some other countries, your visa has to be valid during your stay. As a result of familiarity with how other countries do this, or as a result of popular misconceptions, people (even most Americans) will often incorrectly believe that you must have a valid “visa” to legally stay in the US, and that the visa is somehow a proof of your legal status.
There are many cases where people in some kind of long-term status will remain in status long after their visa expires, or will extend their status beyond their visa’s expiration, or will change their status to a status that they did not have a visa for. For example
In these cases, the person would not have a valid visa matching their current status in the US. If they ever want to leave the US and return to the US, they would need to apply for a new US visa from a US consulate abroad (it’s generally impossible to get a US visa inside the US, because visas are only for entering the US).
For people who have the misconception that you must have a valid “visa” to legally stay in the US, the idea that you can have valid status in the US for long periods of time without a valid visa, until you need to leave the US, seems wrong. So instead, they use a different set of terminology that seems to be more consistent with their misconception:
The physical visa in a passport is frequently referred to by a number of names. For US visas, the term “Stamp” is commonly used, whilst for other countries it might be a “foil” or a “sticker”. The term “stamp” dates back to the days when Visas generally were a full-page stamp, which would then have the details of the visa written into boxes/areas within the stamp.
Thus the process of having a visa “stamp” physically placed into your passport is common referred to as “Stamping”.
The main reason this term is frequently used is due to the way that many US visas are issued, especially for work visas, where there is largely a distinction between the application phase (which can often be done remotely, and is normally done by an employer or an immigration lawyer), and then actually receiving the visa stamp itself which needs to be done in person at a US consulate outside of the US. People will normally refer to the second step of this process as their “Visa Stamping”.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
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