ALGIERS, Algeria — France has twice rejected visa applications from Nabil Tabarout, a 29-year-old web developer from Algeria who hopes this year to visit his sister there.
He's among the many people navigating the often arduous visa process throughout Africa, which faces higher visa rejection rates than anywhere else in the world when it comes to visiting Europe's Schengen Area. Appointments are often difficult to secure. Applicants often must prove a minimum bank balance, substantiate the purpose of their visit and prove they plan to return home.
''That's how it is. Every pleasure deserves pain,'' said Tabarout, who has succeeded just once in obtaining a French visa.
Though much of Europe's debate about migration centers on people who arrive without authorization, many more people choose to come by legal means. It's painful, then, to discover that following the rules often fails.
The disproportionate rejection rates — 10% higher in Africa than the global average — hinder trade, business and educational partnerships at the expense of African economies, according to an April study from U.K.-based migration consultancy firm Henley & Partners.
The study called the practices discriminatory and urged Schengen countries to reform them.
Nowhere are applicants more rejected than in Algeria, where more than 392,000 applicants were rejected in 2022. The 45.8% rejection rate is followed by a 45.2% rejection rate in Guinea-Bissau and 45.1% in Nigeria.
Only one in 25 applicants living in the United States were rejected.