It means “not convinced — today.” But in Nigeria a refusal costs you twice: the fee, and another 9–13 months for the next slot. So the reattempt has to land. We change what the officer sees and rebuild your file until your intent is undeniable.
The trap
A 214(b) gives you no written reasons — just a slip and a polite “not this time.” In Nigeria the next slot is most of a year away, so a wasted reattempt isn’t a small loss — it’s another long wait. To reverse it, the officer has to see a genuinely different applicant — a new file, a new story.
No letter to fix. Without a proper de-brief, you're guessing what went wrong.
Nothing material changed. Same ties, same story, same answers = same presumption.
Another 9–13 month wait. A refused reattempt costs you the fee and most of a year.
You waited months for that interview. The next one is winnable — but only if the reattempt is genuinely different.
Not luck, not a different officer — these three, genuinely changed and clearly shown.
The heart of 214(b) — employment, property, family, all evidenced
Funds explained, the trip affordable, no surprise deposits
A fresh, consistent DS-160 — so the officer sees a new applicant, not a repeat
How it works
214(b) gives no written reasons — so we reconstruct the interview, identify the weak signal the officer saw, and tell you honestly whether to reapply now or strengthen first. With a 9–13 month wait, you only want to book when you're truly ready.
We strengthen and document your ties, fix the financial and purpose story, and complete a fresh, consistent DS-160 — so the officer sees a different applicant.
We document and evidence every weak signal the officer flagged — ties, funds, purpose — so your non-immigrant intent is undeniable on paper, and you walk back in with a genuinely stronger case.
Flat fees. Priority handling is included on higher tiers. The service guarantee applies.
Self-guided, expert-checked
Review + full rebuild
A specialist handles it all
Priority · zero effort
The $185 MRV fee is paid again at GTBank on each attempt — we never mark it up.
Yes — there's no mandatory waiting period. But 214(b) means the officer wasn't convinced you'd return, and reapplying without anything material having changed almost always repeats the result. With a 9–13 month wait for the next Lagos/Abuja slot, you can't afford to waste the attempt. Opaige reconstructs what went wrong, strengthens your case, and rebuilds the file before you book.
214(b) is the presumption that every applicant intends to immigrate until they prove otherwise. You were refused because, in a 90-second interview at the US Embassy Lagos or Abuja, the officer wasn't satisfied you'd return to Nigeria — usually weak or undocumented ties, an unclear purpose or funds, or a shaky interview. The refusal is verbal, with no detailed letter, which is why a proper de-brief matters.
Not if something material changes. The same DS-160, the same ties and the same unprepared answers produce the same 214(b). Opaige changes what the officer sees — documented ties, a credible story — so your intent is obvious on paper. Our reapplication approval rate is around 87%.
Interview appointment wait times at the US Embassy Lagos and Abuja have been around 9–13 months. That's exactly why you should only rebook once your case is genuinely stronger — Opaige tells you, honestly, when you're ready rather than just eager.
You pay the $185 MRV fee again on each attempt (non-refundable), at GTBank before scheduling, plus a fresh interview. Opaige service fees are separate, from $199 flat — and priority handling is included on higher tiers.
214(b) was “not today.” You waited months for that window — don’t waste the next one. We change what the officer sees, rebuild your file, and make your return intent undeniable. 87% of our reapplications are approved. Flat $199.
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