Visa Advice

Why Did I Get a Single Entry Visa Instead of Multiple? (Schengen, UK & US Explained)

Outbound Team
Why Did I Get a Single Entry Visa Instead of Multiple? (Schengen, UK & US Explained)

Why Did I Get a Single Entry Visa Instead of Multiple? (Schengen, UK & US Explained)

TL;DR: It wasn't a mistake. Visa officers issue Single Entry visas when your travel history is thin, your passport expires soon, or your submitted itinerary doesn't prove a need for multiple trips. In 2026, many consulates apply a progressive issuance approach, especially for Schengen visas.


You opened your passport expecting a broad 1-year or 5-year Multiple Entry sticker. You found a Single Entry stamp valid for 15 days instead.

It feels personal. It isn't.

The decision usually comes down to risk assessment, not your bank balance. Consular officers have broad discretion, but they operate under specific guidelines. If you got a Single Entry, you likely failed the "Justification of Need" test or the "Integrity" test. Here is exactly what those mean and why the officer downgraded your application.

1. The "Waterfall" Rule (Schengen & UK)

If you applied for a Schengen or UK visa, you are subject to the "cascade" regime revised heavily in recent years and fully standard in 2026. You don't just get a Multiple Entry Visa (MEV) because you ticked the box.

Under the Schengen “cascade” system (Article 24 of the Visa Code), applicants who have lawfully used previous short-stay visas may be granted progressively longer multiple-entry visas. However, this is not automatic and remains subject to consular discretion.

The officer sees a fresh applicant. They grant a Single Entry to "test" your compliance. If you return on time, you gain trust for the next round.

2. Your Itinerary Didn't Scream "Multiple Entry"

Officers are literal. If you submitted a flight reservation entering Paris on July 1st and leaving July 10th—and nothing else—they have no legal reason to give you more.

To approve an MEV, the U.S. Department of State Foreign Affairs Manual (FAM) and similar EU guidelines require a "predictable travel pattern."

What they were looking for:

  • For Schengen and UK visas, officers often look for a demonstrated need for frequent travel. For U.S. visas, validity is typically determined by reciprocity agreements with your nationality rather than your itinerary alone.
  • A letter from an employer stating you need to travel frequently for business.
  • Proof of family members residing in the destination country.

If you only showed plans for one vacation, you got a visa for one vacation. Ticking "Multiple" on the form without supporting documents gets ignored.

3. The Passport Validity Trap

This is the most common technical error. A visa cannot be valid beyond the validity of your passport (minus a 3-month buffer for most regions).

If you applied for a 5-year MEV but your passport expires in 6 months, the officer physically cannot issue the long-term visa. Often, rather than issuing a short MEV, they simply issue a Single Entry to match the specific trip dates you provided, forcing you to renew your passport before applying again.

4. Insurance Gaps

For Schengen and comparable visas, your travel medical insurance must cover all intended visits.

If you applied for a Multiple Entry visa but your insurance policy was only valid for 10 days, the officer is restricted. They will often align the visa validity strictly with the dates of your insurance coverage. No insurance, no visa days.

Next Steps: How to Fix It

You cannot change the current sticker. Do not write the embassy asking for a "correction"—it wasn't a typo.

  1. Use it correctly: Travel, respect the exit date, and do not overstay.
  2. Apply earlier next time: Submit an itinerary showing two distinct trips to justify the request.
  3. Check the expiration: Ensure your passport has at least 2+ years remaining.

For those considering another application, reviewing real-world cases can provide useful context. Our visa forum contains recent discussions from applicants who received both Single and Multiple Entry visas, offering insight into how travel history, passport validity, and documentation may influence issuance decisions.

Verified Sources

Published on February 27, 2026 by Outbound Team

Why Did I Get a Single Entry Visa Instead of Multiple? (Schengen, UK & US Explained) | outbound Life Stories