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How to Apply for the US DV Lottery 2027 from Egypt: The Ultimate Green Card Guide

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How to Apply for the US DV Lottery 2027 from Egypt: The Ultimate Green Card Guide
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📋 What You'll Actually Walk Away With (No Fluff, Just Facts)

Here's a reality check. Every year, over 500,000 Egyptians throw their names into the Green Card Lottery. Most of them are guessing. They're using blurry selfies, guessing at English spellings of their names, and hoping for the best. And every year, tens of thousands of those entries are tossed out by a computer before a human even sees them.

I'm Hussein Abdullah, founder of "Arabs in America." I've spent over a decade dissecting exactly why Egyptian applications succeed and why they fail. I've sat with winners in coffee shops in Alexandria and Cairo, and I've consoled losers over the phone. The difference between them was rarely luck. It was preparation.

This guide is not a collection of tips. It's a surgical manual. Here's exactly what you're going to master:

  1. The Timeline Demystified: You'll finally stop confusing DV-2027 with DV-2028. You'll know exactly when to set your calendar alerts.
  2. Your Egyptian Education, Decoded: A deep, no-nonsense breakdown of how the U.S. government views your Thanaweya Amma, your technical diploma, or your university degree. No more guessing if your "Sanaye'" diploma counts. (Spoiler: It does, and I'll prove it).
  3. The DS-5501 Form, Field by Field: I'll walk you through every single box as if I'm sitting next to you in a Cairo internet cafe. You'll learn the exact English spelling conventions that trip up Egyptians every single year.
  4. The Photo Section (Your Application's Heartbeat): This is where over 60% of Egyptian disqualifications happen. I'll give you the exact pixel dimensions, the file size limit, and a story that will make you physically go to your photographer and double-check their work.
  5. The Married Couple Loophole: If you're married, there is a 100% legal way to get two entries for your family. I'll show you the exact, safe way to do it without triggering the "duplicate entry" trap.
  6. The Egyptian Scam Ecosystem: From the "Maktab Khidmat" in Dokki to the friendly guy at the cyber cafe, I'll expose exactly how they steal dreams and what you need to do to protect yourself.
  7. Real Egyptian Stories: You'll hear from Ahmed (Alexandria), Fatima (Mansoura), and Omar & Zeinab (Cairo). Their real, anonymized experiences—both the crushing defeats and the life-changing victories—will be your roadmap.
  8. The Expanded FAQ: Over 20 direct, specific questions that Egyptians ask me every single day, answered with zero ambiguity.
  9. Hussein's Unfiltered Take: After every major section, I'll give you the advice I gave my own cousin in Shubra.

This is going to be detailed. It might even feel overwhelming. But trust me, every minute you spend reading this is an investment in protecting the opportunity of a lifetime. Let's get to work.


Chapter One: The Green Card Lottery—What Egyptians Need to Understand First

Across Egypt, from the narrow alleys of Sayyida Zeinab to the wide boulevards of New Cairo, people call it "El-Lottery." But let's strip away the casual nickname and understand the machine we're dealing with.

The Diversity Visa (DV) Program is a creature of the U.S. Department of State. Its sole purpose, mandated by Congress, is to diversify the immigrant population of the United States. It does this by awarding up to 55,000 Permanent Resident Visas (Green Cards) every fiscal year to natives of countries that have sent fewer than 50,000 immigrants to the U.S. in the preceding five years.

Here is the foundational fact for you: Egypt is permanently on that list. We are not a high-volume immigration country like Mexico, India, or China. This is our advantage. This means that as an Egyptian citizen born in Egypt, you have a clean, unobstructed shot at this every single year.

According to the official statistics published by the U.S. Department of State, Egyptians are consistently among the top winners in the Africa region. We're talking thousands of Egyptians receiving Green Cards annually through this exact program.

📅 The Timeline: A Definitive Breakdown (DV-2027 vs. DV-2028)

This is where smart, educated Egyptians get confused every single year. The program is named for the fiscal year the visa will be issued, which starts on October 1st. This has nothing to do with the year you apply. Let's lock this down forever.

Program Name Application Window (When You Apply) Results Announced (When You Check)
DV-2027 October - November 2025 (Already passed) May 2026
DV-2028 October - November 2026 (This is your next shot) May 2027

Important Nuance for Egyptian Students & Professionals: If you apply in October 2026 for DV-2028 and you win, your interview will likely be scheduled sometime between October 2027 and September 2028. This is critical for planning your life. If you're in the middle of your final year of university, or if you have a work contract ending, this timeline matters.

Hussein's Take: Don't obsess over the number 2027 or 2028. The rules do not change. The photo specs do not change. The website does not change. Focus on mastering the process described in this guide. If you master it now, you're ready for DV-2028, DV-2029, and beyond.

🔗 Related Reading: For a high-level overview that applies to all Arab countries, see our General DV Lottery Guide.


Chapter Two: Are You Actually Eligible? The Egyptian-Specific Deep Dive

Before you invest any more emotional energy into this dream, you need to pass two simple tests. Most Egyptians pass the first one without thinking. The second one requires a closer look at your educational background.

1. The Country of Birth (Nativity) Rule

The U.S. immigration law is unusually strict on this point. It cares about where you were physically born, not what passport you hold today.

Your Situation Are You Eligible as Principal Applicant?
Born in Egypt (any city, any governorate) YES.
Born in Egypt, but now hold Canadian, Italian, or any other citizenship YES. (Your other passports don't matter).
Egyptian citizen, but born in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE, or any Gulf country NO. (Unless you qualify for the exception below).
Egyptian citizen, born in an ineligible country, but your spouse was born in Egypt YES. (You "charge" your application to your spouse's country of birth. You MUST list them and immigrate together).

The "Gulf Baby" Problem: This is a huge issue for many Egyptians. If your parents were working in the Gulf when you were born, and you were born in a hospital in Riyadh, Jeddah, Kuwait City, or Dubai, you cannot apply based on your own birth. Your only path is the spousal exception mentioned above.

2. The Education OR Work Experience Test (The "12-Year Rule")

You must satisfy one of the following two paths.

Path A: Education (The Route for 98% of Egyptian Applicants)

You need a certificate that proves you completed 12 full years of formal primary and secondary education. Let's map this directly to the Egyptian system.

Egyptian Certificate Qualifies? Why?
Thanaweya Amma (General Secondary Certificate) YES 6 years Primary + 3 years Preparatory + 3 years Secondary = 12 years.
Technical/Vocational Diploma (3-Year System) YES 6 years Primary + 3 years Preparatory + 3 years Technical = 12 years. This is a common point of confusion. Yes, a 3-year Sanaye' diploma qualifies.
Technical/Vocational Diploma (5-Year System) YES 6 years Primary + 3 years Preparatory + 5 years Technical = 14 years. Qualifies easily.
Preparatory Certificate (Idadiya) Only NO Only 9 years of formal schooling.
Primary Certificate Only NO Only 6 years of formal schooling.
University Degree (Bachelor's, Master's, PhD) YES You obviously qualify. You will select "University Degree."

The Critical Nuance on Technical Diplomas: Many Egyptians with a "Diplom Sanaye'" or "Diplom Togary" are told by uninformed friends that they don't qualify. This is false. As long as your diploma was issued by the Ministry of Education and represents the completion of the 12-year cycle, you do qualify. You will select "High School Diploma" as your education level on the form.

Path B: Work Experience (The Alternative for Non-Graduates)

If you left school before completing 12 years, you can qualify by proving you have two years of work experience within the last five years in a skilled occupation.

How to Check if Your Job Qualifies: The U.S. Department of Labor's O*Net OnLine database is the official reference. Your specific job title must be classified as a Job Zone 4 or 5 and have an SVP Range of 7.0 or higher.

  • Examples of Qualifying Jobs (Job Zone 4/5): Master Automotive Mechanic, Senior Industrial Electrician, HVAC Technician, Registered Nurse (not an assistant), Executive Chef (not a line cook).
  • Examples of Non-Qualifying Jobs: General Construction Laborer, Janitor/Cleaner, Retail Salesperson, Taxi/Truck Driver (in most cases), Security Guard.

Hussein's Take: If you finished Thanaweya Amma or a 3/5-year technical diploma, you're in the clear. Don't overcomplicate this. Focus your energy on the photo and the form. And if you do win, your next step is the interview. Get a head start with our US Embassy Interview Preparation Guide.


Chapter Three: The Photograph—Where Egyptian Dreams Are Silently Killed

I am not exaggerating. I am not being dramatic. The single biggest cause of disqualification for Egyptian applicants—by a massive margin—is the photograph. The U.S. State Department uses facial recognition software to scan every image. It is unforgiving.

📸 Real Egyptian Story #1: Ahmed from Alexandria

Ahmed, an engineer from Sidi Gaber, shared this with me: "I went to a studio near my house. The guy said, 'A picture for the American lottery? Easy, I do hundreds.' He took the shot. I uploaded it. The website said 'Photo accepted.' I got my confirmation number and was over the moon. In May, I logged in and saw the words that still haunt me: 'Your entry has been disqualified because the photograph did not meet the requirements.' I went back to the studio and looked at the original file on his computer. The background wasn't pure white. It was a slightly cream 'off-white,' and if you squinted, you could see the faintest shadow of my head on the wall. The software saw it. My year was gone."

The Non-Negotiable Photo Specifications:

Requirement Exact Specification How Egyptians Get This Wrong
Dimensions & File Size 600 x 600 pixels. File must be under 240 KB. JPEG only. Photographer saves it as a large, 2MB file. Or saves it as a rectangle.
Background Pure white or off-white. ZERO shadows. The studio has a "white" wall that hasn't been painted in years. It's gray. Or the lighting casts a shadow of your head or shoulders.
Recency Photo must be taken within the last 6 months. "I'll just use the photo from last year's application." NO. The software can detect if a photo is reused.
Glasses Strictly FORBIDDEN. "But I always wear glasses. They're just clear prescription glasses." Doesn't matter. Take them off.
Head Coverings Allowed for religious purposes ONLY IF the full face is visible from bottom of chin to top of forehead, and from ear to ear. Hijab casting a shadow on the neck or cheek. Hijab covering part of the chin.
Retouching Absolutely FORBIDDEN. The photographer offers to "remove that pimple" or "smooth your skin." NO. Any digital alteration is grounds for disqualification.

A Deeper Explanation of Why Shadows Matter: The facial recognition algorithm works by mapping the contours of your face—the distance between your eyes, the shape of your jawline, the depth of your eye sockets. A shadow distorts these measurements. The computer flags the image as "altered" or "non-compliant" and your application is dead before it even enters the lottery.

Hussein's Take: Do not go to the cheapest studio on the corner. Go to a professional, modern photography studio in a major city (Cairo, Alex). Tell the photographer, word for word, in Arabic: "Ana 3ayez soura lel-lottery el-amrikani. Lazim takoon 600 fi 600 pixel, JPEG, wa aqal min 240 kilobyte. El-khalfiya lazim takoon bAYda' Nase3a 100% min ghayr ay zill. Abadan." Pay the extra 100 EGP. It is the most important investment you will make in this entire process.


Chapter Four: The DS-5501 Form—A Field-by-Field Egyptian Walkthrough

The application is 100% free. If you pay anyone a single pound to "submit" this form for you, you are being scammed. The only place to apply is the official U.S. government portal:

Official Website: dvprogram.state.gov

Beware of fake sites that look similar but end in .org or .com. The only legitimate site ends in .gov.

🛡️ Real Egyptian Story #2: Fatima's Friend from Mansoura

Fatima, a teacher, warned me about this: "My best friend used a 'Maktab Khidmat' in our city. The guy there took her information, filled out the form, and gave her a small piece of paper with a number scribbled on it. He said, 'Keep this. When you win, come back to me.' She won! She went back, and the man smiled and said, 'Congratulations. To get your confirmation number to check your results, you need to pay me $2,000.' She had no proof the number was hers. She couldn't pay. She lost her win. She couldn't even check the official result."

Do not let an intermediary come between you and your confirmation number. You have 30 minutes to complete the form. Have all your information ready before you click "Begin Entry."

Detailed Field Guide (with Egyptian-Specific Notes)

Field Name What to Enter (Egyptian Context)
Last/Family Name Your surname. Write it exactly as it appears in the Latin script of your passport. This is where mistakes happen. If your passport says "Mohamed" with one 'm', don't write "Mohammed." If it says "Abd El Rahman" with spaces, write it with spaces.
First/Middle Name Your given name(s), exactly as in your passport's Latin script.
Gender Male or Female.
Birth Date CRITICAL FOR EGYPTIANS: U.S. format is MONTH / DAY / YEAR. If you were born on July 23, 1995, you write 07 / 23 / 1995. Do not write 23/07/1995.
City of Birth Enter the city name as it's commonly known in English: Cairo, Alexandria, Giza, Tanta, Mansoura, Assiut, Luxor, Aswan.
Country of Birth Select Egypt from the dropdown.
Photograph Upload the meticulously prepared file from your professional photographer.
Mailing Address Enter your full, current residential address in Egypt. This is not used for correspondence, but it must be accurate.
Phone Number Optional but recommended. Use the format: +20 1xx xxxx xxx.
Email Address THIS IS YOUR LIFELINE. Enter an email address you use daily and to which you know the password. If you forget your confirmation number, this email is the only way to recover it.
Education Level - University graduate? Select University Degree. - High school or 3/5-year technical diploma graduate? Select High School Diploma. - Currently a university student (not graduated)? Select High School Diploma.
Marital Status Your legal status on the day you apply.
Spouse If married, you MUST list your spouse, with their photo. This is required even if you are separated (but not legally divorced) or if they don't plan to travel with you.
Children You MUST list ALL unmarried children under 21. This includes children from previous marriages and children who don't live with you. You must upload a photo for each child. Omitting a child is fraud and will get your Green Card revoked even if you initially receive it.

Step-by-Step Navigation

  1. Go to dvprogram.state.gov. Click Begin Entry.
  2. Enter the CAPTCHA code. Click Continue.
  3. You are now on the DS-5501 form. You have 30 minutes.
  4. Fill out Part 1: Applicant Information (Name, Birth, Photo).
  5. Fill out Part 2: Mailing and Contact Information.
  6. Fill out Part 3: Education and Marital Status.
  7. Fill out Part 4: Spouse and Children Information (if applicable).
  8. STOP. Review every single field. Triple-check the spelling of names. Triple-check the birth date format (MM/DD/YYYY).
  9. Click Submit.
  10. THE CONFIRMATION PAGE APPEARS. You will see a 16-character Confirmation Number (e.g., 20281ABCDEF12345).

⚠️ EXTREME WARNING FOR EGYPTIANS: This number is your only proof of entry. The U.S. government will not email it to you. They will not call you. If you lose this number, you cannot check your results.

Immediate Action Plan:

  1. PRINT the confirmation page. Right now. Keep the paper in a plastic sleeve with your passport.
  2. Take a SCREENSHOT on your phone. Save it to a "Favorites" album.
  3. EMAIL the screenshot to yourself. Send it to the same email address you used on the form.
  4. WRITE the number in a physical notebook you keep with your most important documents.

🔗 Related Reading: Once you've successfully applied, learn exactly how to track your status with our How to Check DV Lottery Results Guide.


Chapter Five: How to Legally Double Your Family's Chance (The Married Couple Strategy)

There is no "wasta." There is no secret website. The selection is a random computer draw. However, there is one and only one legal mechanism to increase the odds for your family, and it is exclusively for married couples.

♥️ The Dual-Entry Strategy: A Step-by-Step Guide

If you are legally married, both you and your spouse are entitled to submit your own, separate, independent entries.

Here is the exact, safe way to do it:

Step Action
Entry 1 (Husband) The husband goes to the official website and submits an application as the Principal Applicant. In the "Spouse" section, he lists his wife's full details and uploads her photo. In the "Children" section, he lists all of their children.
Entry 2 (Wife) The wife goes to the official website separately. She submits her own application as the Principal Applicant. In the "Spouse" section, she lists her husband's full details and uploads his photo. In the "Children" section, she lists all of their children.

The Result: Your family now has two independent entries in the global lottery pool. If the husband's entry is selected, the whole family (husband, wife, and all listed children) wins. If the wife's entry is selected, the whole family wins.

Why This is Legal and Safe: The U.S. government explicitly allows this. Each spouse is a separate individual with their own eligibility. You are not submitting two entries under the same name, which is illegal and leads to disqualification.

📈 Real Egyptian Story #3: Omar and Zeinab (Cairo)

Omar and Zeinab, a young couple from Maadi, told me: "We read about this strategy and decided to try it. Omar applied. Zeinab applied. We made duaa and forgot about it. In May 2025, Omar checked his number first: 'Not Selected.' We were disappointed but accepted it. An hour later, Zeinab checked hers just out of curiosity: 'Congratulations! You have been randomly selected...' We screamed. We cried. If Omar had applied alone, we would have missed our chance. This strategy saved our dream."

Hussein's Take: If you are married, this is not optional. It is the single smartest thing you can do to increase your probability. Both of you must apply. Five extra minutes of work could alter your family's destiny for generations.


Chapter Six: The Egyptian Scam Ecosystem—Protect Yourself

Where there is hope, there are predators. In Egypt, an entire shadow industry has grown around the DV Lottery. Be aware of these specific scams.

The Scam How It Works How to Protect Yourself
The "Service Office" (Maktab Khidmat) A storefront in your neighborhood offers to "fill out the form professionally" for a fee. They often keep a copy of your confirmation number. If you win, they demand thousands of dollars to give it to you. Apply yourself. The form is in simple English. If you can read this guide, you can fill out the form.
The "Cyber Cafe" (Cyber) The employee offers to help you apply quickly. They fill out the form, but they misspell your name or enter the wrong birth date in their haste. Or, they keep the confirmation number and sell it to someone else if you win. If you must use a cyber, sit next to the employee. Watch every keystroke. Do not leave the chair until you have the printed confirmation page in your hand.
The Fake Winning Email You receive an official-looking email from "U.S. Department of State" congratulating you on winning and asking for a "processing fee." The U.S. government NEVER emails winners. The only way to check is to log in yourself at dvprogram.state.gov.
The "We Can Guarantee Your Win" Agent Someone claims they have a "connection" or a "special system" to increase your chances of winning. They charge a large fee. The selection is random. Anyone who claims they can influence it is lying.

Additional Egyptian Context: The Issue of Transliteration A very common Egyptian mistake is inconsistent transliteration of Arabic names into English. Is it "Mohamed," "Muhammad," "Mohammed," or "Muhammed"? Is it "Abdullah" or "Abd Allah"? The spelling you use on your DS-5501 MUST match the Latin spelling on your official passport or national ID. If you don't have a passport yet, decide on one spelling and use it consistently for your passport and your DV application. Inconsistency is a red flag.


Chapter Seven: The Long Wait—Checking Your Results and Interpreting Your Case Number

After you submit in October/November, the waiting period extends until the following May. Here is the projected timeline for the upcoming DV-2028 cycle.

Milestone Expected Date
Registration Opens Early October 2026
Registration Closes Early November 2026
Results Available Online First Week of May 2027
First Interviews Scheduled October 2027

How to Check Your Status (The Only Way)

  1. Go to dvprogram.state.gov.
  2. Click Entrant Status Check.
  3. Enter your Confirmation Number (exactly as it appears on your printed page).
  4. Enter your Last/Family Name.
  5. Enter your Year of Birth.
  6. Complete the CAPTCHA. Click Submit.

Interpreting the Messages

  • NOT SELECTED: You were not chosen this year. It is not personal. It is a random draw with millions of entries. You can—and should—try again next year.
  • SELECTED: You will see a letter beginning with "You have been randomly selected for further processing..."

If You See "SELECTED": Understanding Your Case Number

Your selection letter will include a Case Number (e.g., 2028AF00012345). This number is critical.

  • Format: Year + Region Code (AF for Africa) + A numeric sequence.
  • What it means: The numeric sequence determines your place in the queue for an interview. Lower numbers get interviews first.
  • The Risk for High Case Numbers: The numeric sequence goes from 1 to over 100,000. However, only 55,000 visas are available globally. If your case number is very high (e.g., 2028AF00065000), there is a significant risk that the visas will run out before your number is reached. Winning does not guarantee an interview.

🔗 Critical Next Steps If You Win:

  1. Do not celebrate by posting your confirmation number online. Keep it private.
  2. Immediately read our Ultimate US Embassy Interview Guide for DV Winners. This will tell you exactly what documents to gather and how to prepare for the medical exam.
  3. Start gathering your official documents: Birth certificate, military service status certificate, police certificate, and educational diplomas.

Chapter Eight: The Egyptian DV Lottery FAQ—Real Questions from Real Applicants

Q1: I finished a 3-year "Diplom Sanaye'" (Industrial Technical Diploma). Am I really eligible? A: Yes, absolutely. Your diploma represents 12 years of formal education (6 primary + 3 preparatory + 3 secondary). Select "High School Diploma."

Q2: I am in my final year of university. I haven't graduated yet. What do I select? A: Select "High School Diploma." Your eligibility is based on the education you have already completed on the day you apply.

Q3: I was born in Saudi Arabia, but my father is Egyptian and I hold an Egyptian passport. Can I apply? A: Not as the principal applicant. Your only path is if your spouse was born in Egypt.

Q4: Do I need a valid passport to submit the online entry? A: No. You can apply with your national ID information. However, if you win, you will need a valid Egyptian passport for the interview.

Q5: My name in Arabic is long and has "Abd El" in it. How should I write it in English? A: Write it exactly as it appears in the Latin script of your national ID or passport. If your ID says "Abd El Rahman," write it with the spaces. Consistency is key.

Q6: The photographer gave me a photo on a CD. The file size is 350 KB. What do I do? A: You must resize it. Do not upload a 350 KB file. Use a free online tool like "TinyPNG" or "Compress JPEG" to reduce the file size to under 240 KB without changing the 600x600 pixel dimensions.

Q7: I am married, but my husband and I are currently separated (not legally divorced). Do I have to list him? A: Yes. If you are still legally married, you MUST list him.

Q8: I have a son from a previous marriage who lives with his mother. He is 15. Do I have to list him? A: Yes, absolutely. You must list all of your biological children, regardless of where they live or who has custody.

Q9: I lost my confirmation number! Can I get it back? A: Go to the Entrant Status Check page and click "Forgot Confirmation Number." You will need your email address. This only works if you entered a valid email on your DS-5501. If you didn't, the number is lost forever.

Q10: Can I apply using my smartphone? A: Yes, the website is mobile-friendly. However, using a computer is strongly recommended because you can more easily manage the photo upload and see the entire form on one screen.

Q11: I applied last year and used a certain photo. Can I use the same photo this year? A: No. The photo must be taken within the last 6 months. The system can detect reused photos and will disqualify you.

Q12: I am 17 years old and in my final year of Thanaweya Amma. Can I apply? A: You can apply only if your birthday is before the application deadline and you will have graduated by then. You must have the diploma in hand by the time of your interview.

Q13: What is the "Public Charge" rule, and does it apply to DV winners? A: Yes. At your interview, you must demonstrate that you are not likely to become dependent on U.S. government benefits. This is usually done with a bank statement, a U.S. job offer, or an Affidavit of Support (Form I-134) from a U.S. sponsor.

Q14: If I win, can my parents or siblings come with me? A: No. The DV visa only covers the principal applicant, their spouse, and their unmarried children under 21. Parents and siblings must immigrate through other family-based visa categories, which take much longer.

Q15: I have a Master's degree in Engineering. Should I select "University Degree"? A: Yes. Always select the highest level of education you have fully completed.

Q16: How much money do I need to show at the interview? A: There is no fixed number, but you should have enough liquid assets to support yourself (and your family) for at least 3-6 months in the U.S. A good benchmark is $10,000-$15,000 for a single person, and more for a family.

Q17: Where is the U.S. Embassy in Cairo located? A: The Consular Section for immigrant visas is located in Garden City, Cairo. Do not go to the main embassy in New Cairo.

Q18: How long is the visa valid once issued? A: It is valid for 6 months from the date of your medical exam. You must enter the U.S. before it expires.

Q19: Do I need to translate my Egyptian documents into English? A: Yes. All documents not in English (birth certificate, marriage certificate, military certificate, etc.) must be translated by a certified translation service.

Q20: Can I check my results on my phone? A: Yes, the Entrant Status Check page works on mobile browsers.


Conclusion: From Dream to Action Plan

The U.S. Diversity Visa Lottery is one of the few truly democratic opportunities in the world. It does not care about your family name, your bank account, or your connections. It cares about two things: your eligibility and your ability to follow precise instructions.

Thousands of Egyptians have successfully navigated this path. They now live in New Jersey, California, Texas, Michigan, and across the United States. They are engineers, doctors, business owners, and students. Their journey began exactly where you are right now: reading a guide, trying to understand the rules.

You now have the most detailed, Egypt-specific guide available anywhere online. You have no more excuses. You know the exact photo specs. You know how to fill out the form. You know the scams to avoid.

A final word from Hussein Abdullah: I have seen the determination in the eyes of Egyptians who want to build a better future. I know the economic pressures and the dreams you carry. This lottery is a genuine, tangible opportunity. Don't treat it casually. Treat it with the respect and precision it deserves. Get the professional photo. Double-check the spelling of your name. Print your confirmation number and guard it like gold.

Your American dream is not a fantasy. It's a process. And you now have the manual.

🔗 Explore More DV Lottery Guides for the Region:

We want to hear your story. Have you applied from Egypt before? Did you win? Did you face a disqualification you didn't understand? Share your experience in the comments below. Your story could be the warning or the inspiration that another Egyptian dreamer desperately needs.

Author photo

Author: حسين عبد الله

Hussein Abdullah is a web developer and specialized content writer with more than eight years of experience enriching Arabic digital content. He combines an analytical programming mindset with a deep passion for writing to deliver accurate, reference-quality guides. On Arabian in USA (عرب في أمريكا), he focuses on simplifying complex steps for new immigrants and sharing reliable information on housing, work, and financial setup—so every newcomer has a trustworthy path toward stable life in the United States.

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