The U.S. hosts 1,096 foreign diplomatic offices from 175+ countries. The largest network in the world.
Below: every country with at least one consular office in the United States, with verified counts and direct access to each location.
Use the A-Z filter to find your country fast. Cards show the total number of offices each country maintains.
Click any country to see all its consulates and embassies across the U.S.
Why so many consulates in the U.S.?
Three reasons: economic weight, immigrant communities, and volume of travel.
Mexico tops the list with 52 offices. Behind: Guatemala (29), Italy (29), El Salvador (26), Germany (25).
Small nations? Usually just one embassy in D.C. plus a few honorary consulates spread across the country.
Embassy, Consulate General, Honorary Consulate — which one do you need?
Embassy → Washington D.C. only. Government-to-government affairs, diplomatic passports. Not for routine citizen services.
Consulate General → major metros (NYC, LA, Houston, Chicago, Miami). Full-service: passport, visa, civil registration, notary, emergencies. This is what you usually need.
Career consulate → secondary cities. Same services as a consulate general but smaller scale.
Honorary consulate → almost any U.S. city. Run by a local citizen, part-time. Document intake and community outreach, but typically no visa processing.
One rule above all: jurisdiction matters more than proximity. Always check which office covers your state of residence.