“The right to marry is fundamental as a matter of history and tradition.” Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U. S. 644, 671 (2015). After U. S. citizen Sandra Muñoz and her SalvadoPage Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication ran husband spent fve years of married life in the United States, the Government told her that he could no longer reenter the country. If she wanted to live together with him and their child again, she would have to move to El Salvador. The reason? A consular offcer's bare assertion that her husband, who has no criminal record in the United States or El Salvador, planned to engage in “unlawful activity.” 8 U. S. C. § 1182(a)(3)(A)(ii). Muñoz argues that the Government, having burdened her fundamental right to marriage, owes her one thing: the factual basis for excluding her husband.
The majority could have resolved this case on narrow grounds under longstanding precedent. This Court has already recognized that excluding a noncitizen from the country can burden the constitutional rights of citizens who seek his presence. See Kleindienst v. Mandel, 408 U. S. 753, 765–770 (1972). Acknowledging the Government's power over admission and exclusion, the Mandel Court held that “a facially legitimate and bona fde reason” for the exclusion suffced to justify that burden. Id., at 770. In this case, after protracted litigation, the Government fnally explained that it denied Muñoz's husband a visa because of its belief that he had connections to the gang MS–13. Regardless of the validity of that belief, it is a “facially legitimate and bona fde reason.” Ibid.; see also ante, at 919–920 (Gorsuch, J., concurring in judgment). Under this Court's precedent, that is enough.
Instead, the majority today chooses a broad holding on marriage over a narrow one on procedure.1 It holds that 1The Government asked this Court to review three questions: “1. Whether a consular offcer's refusal of a visa to a U. S. citizen's noncitizen spouse impinges upon a constitutionally protected interest of the citizen.
“2. Whether, assuming that such a constitutional interest exists, notifying a visa applicant that he was deemed inadmissible under 8 U. S. C. 1182(a)(3)(A)(ii) suffces to provide any process that is due. “3. Whether, assuming that such a constitutional interest exists and that citing Section 1182(a)(3)(A)(ii) is insuffcient standing alone, due process requires the government to provide a further factual basis for the visa denial `within a reasonable time,' or else forfeit DEPARTMENT OF STATE v. MUÑOZ Muñoz's right to marry, live with, and raise children alongside her husband entitles her to nothing when the Government excludes him from the country. Despite the majority's assurance two Terms ago that its eradication of the right to abortion “does not undermine . . . in any way” other entrenched substantive due process rights such as “the right to marry,” “the right to reside with relatives,” and “the right to make decisions about the education of one's children,” the Court fails at the frst pass. Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, 597 U. S. 215, 256–257 (2022). Because, to me, there is no question that excluding a citizen's spouse burdens her right to marriage, and that burden requires the Government to provide at least a factual basis for its decision, I respectfully dissent.
I
A
Marriage is not an automatic ticket to a green card. A married citizen-noncitizen couple must jump through a series of administrative hoops to apply for the lawful permanent residency that marriage can confer. Noncitizen spouses coming from abroad must apply for a visa to enter the United States. In certain cases, however, the law requires even couples who meet and marry in the United States to send the noncitizen spouse back to his country of origin to do the same thing. In doing so, the couple must take an enormous risk to pursue the stability of lawful immigration status: the risk that when the noncitizen spouse tries to reenter the United States, he will face unexpected exile.
the ability to invoke consular nonreviewability in court.” Pet. for Cert. I.
This Court granted certiorari limited to the frst and second questions. 601 U. S. ––– (2024). The majority chooses to decide this case on the frst question presented rather than “assuming that such a constitutional interest exists” and determining what “process . . . is due” (the second question presented). Pet. for Cert. I.
Page Proof Pending Publication In technical immigration terms, a noncitizen spouse applying for a green card seeks to “[a]djus[t]” his immigration “status” from “nonimmigrant to that of [a] person admitted for permanent residence.” 8 U. S. C. § 1255. To do so, the citizen spouse must petition the Government on the noncitizen's behalf. The citizen spouse frst sends United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) a petition to classify the noncitizen spouse as an “immediate relative.” §§ 1151(b)(2)(A)(i), 1154(a)(1)(A). Once USCIS approves the petition, a noncitizen spouse who is already in the United States can then apply to adjust his status to lawful permanent resident without leaving the country. See § 1255(a). For a noncitizen spouse living outside of the United States, however, USCIS frst approves the immediate-relative petition, but then sends it to the consulate of the country where the noncitizen spouse lives for processing. See § 1154(b); 22 CFR §§ 42.42, 42.61 (2023). A consular offcer interviews the noncitizen spouse and makes the fnal admission decision. See 8 U. S. C. §§1201, 1202(f).
Because of idiosyncrasies in our immigration system, not all noncitizen spouses living in the United States can adjust their status with USCIS. Even when a couple meets, marries, and lives in the United States, the noncitizen spouse may instead have to travel back to his country of origin for consular processing if he was never formally “inspected and admitted or paroled” at the Border. § 1255(a). A noncitizen who entered without “inspect[ion]” in this way typically cannot adjust his status from within the United States based on an immediate-relative petition. See ibid. Once the citizen spouse submits the petition to USCIS, the noncitizen spouse must return to his country of origin and meet with a consular offcer, who will then adjudicate his application. See 22 CFR §§ 42.42, 42.61, 42.62.
Living in the United States after initially having entered without inspection is not unusual. In fact, the Government endorses the presence of many of these members of our naPage Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication DEPARTMENT OF STATE v. MUÑOZ tional community. Recipients under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, for instance, may have been brought across the border by their parents without inspection. Even though DACA status entitles them to work and live in the country without the immediate threat of removal, see 8 CFR § 236.21(c) (2023), it does not change their initial entry designation. As of the end of 2023, there were roughly 530,000 active DACA recipients in the United States. See Dept. of Homeland Security (DHS), USCIS, Count of Active DACA Recipients by Month of Current DACA Expiration (as of Dec. 31, 2023). The same is true of the approximately 680,000 holders of Temporary Protected Status (TPS), who have been designated temporarily unable to return to their home countries because of war, natural disasters, or other extraordinary circumstances. See DHS, Citizenship and Immigration Services Ombudsman, Ann.
Rep. 45 (June 30, 2023); Sanchez v. Mayorkas, 593 U. S. 409, 419 (2021) (holding that TPS status did not change an entry without inspection into a lawful admission that would allow adjustment to lawful permanent residency from within the United States). Even when married to a U. S. citizen, DACA recipients and TPS holders are barred from adjusting status within the United States if they entered without inspection. See 8 U. S. C. § 1255(a).
Ironically, the longer the noncitizen spouse has lived in the United States, the more diffcult and uncertain the process to adjust to lawful status can become. A noncitizen who initially entered without inspection will accrue “unlawful presence,” which can bar him from reentering the country if he leaves. § 1182(a)(9)(B). If a noncitizen who has lived in the United States between six months and one year leaves and tries to reenter, he will be subject to a 3-year reentry bar. § 1182(a)(9)(B)(i)(I). If he has lived in the United States for more than a year and tries to reenter, he faces a 10-year ban. § 1182(a)(9)(B)(i)(II).
This scheme places couples who meet and marry in the United States in a diffcult position if the noncitizen spouse entered without inspection. The couple can continue to live with one spouse in a precarious immigration status; or, they can seek the stability of permanent residency for the noncitizen spouse but face a potential multiyear exile when he leaves and applies for reentry.
Recognizing this diffcult choice, USCIS allows a noncitizen spouse to apply for a waiver of inadmissibility for any accrued unlawful presence before departing the United States for his consular interview. To obtain such a waiver, the noncitizen spouse must show that the citizen spouse will suffer “extreme hardship” if her noncitizen spouse is not admitted. § 1182(a)(9)(B)(v). Then, once the noncitizen spouse returns to his country of origin, if a consular offcer approves his visa application, he can reenter free from the inadmissibility bar.
Consular offcers fall under the State Department, see § 1104(a), not DHS, which oversees USCIS, see 6 U. S. C. § 271(a). Even though DHS offcers and consular offcers make admission determinations under the same substantive laws, see § 1182, in reality, a noncitizen seeking admission via consular processing faces a far higher risk of arbitrary denial with far less opportunity for review than a noncitizen seeking admission from DHS.
DHS offcers are constrained by a framework of required process that does not apply to consular processing. A non- citizen denied adjustment of status in the United States must receive notice and the reasons for a denial. See 8 CFR § 245.2(a)(5)(i); DHS, USCIS, Policy Manual, vol. 7, pt. A, ch. 11—Decision Procedures (June 14, 2024) (requiring that a denial notice either “[e]xplain what eligibility requirements are not met and why they are not met” or “[e]xplain the positive and negative factors considered, the relative weight given to each factor individually and collectively, and why the negaPage Proof Pending Publication DEPARTMENT OF STATE v. MUÑOZ tive factors outweigh the positive factors”). He can renew his application in removal proceedings before an immigration court, see 8 U. S. C. § 1229b(b)(1), where DHS must present any evidence against him in adversarial proceedings, see §§ 1229(a), 1229a(b)(4)(B), 1229a(c)(3). From those removal proceedings, a noncitizen can petition for review to the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA), see 8 CFR § 1003.1(b), and, ultimately, a federal court of appeals, see 8 U. S. C. § 1252(a). In contrast, a noncitizen denied admission via consular processing is entitled to nothing more than a cite to the statute under which the consular offcer decided to exclude him. § 1182(b)(1).2 He has no opportunity for administrative or judicial review, and can only submit more evidence and request reconsideration. 22 CFR § 42.81(e). Former consular offcers tell this Court that this lack of accountability, coupled with defcient information and inconsistent training, means decisions often “rely on stereotypes or tropes,” even “bias or bad faith.” Brief for Former Consular Offcers as Amici Curiae 8. Visa applicants may “experience disparate outcomes based on nothing more than the luck or misfortune of which diplomatic post and consular offcer . . . they happen to be assigned.” Id., at 8–9. The State Department's Offce of the Inspector General has documented numerous defciencies in consular processing across several continents. See, e. g., ISP–I–19–14, Inspection of Embassy Bogota, Colombia, p. 16 (Apr. 2019) (fnding consular managers in Bogota required visa adjudicators to maintain an average of 30 in-person interviews per hour). Supervisors are required by the State Department to review a certain percentage of visa denials but often fail to do so. See, e. g., Offce of Inspector General, ISP–I–19–17, Inspection of Embassy Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, p. 12 (July 2019) (fnding “man2As the majority notes, if the consular offcer denies admission based on “certain grounds related to crime and national security,” a noncitizen is entitled to “no explanation” at all. Ante, at 904 (citing 8 U. S. C. § 1182(b)(3)).
Page Proof Pending Publication agers did not review 284 (23 percent) of the refusals that should have been reviewed between April 1 and June 30, 2018”); Offce of Inspector General, ISP–I–16–24A, Inspection of Embassy Ankara, Turkey, p. 20 (Sept. 2016) (fnding visa adjudicator failed to review the required 10% of visa issuances and 20% of visa denials).
When the Government requires one spouse to leave the country to apply for immigration status based on his marriage, it therefore asks him to give up the process he would receive in the United States and subject himself to the black box of consular processing.
B
Muñoz, a celebrated workers' rights lawyer from Los Angeles, California, met Luis Asencio-Cordero in 2008, three years after he had arrived in the United States. They have been married since 2010 and have a child together. In 2013, Muñoz fled an immediate-relative petition for her husband, which USCIS approved. Because Asencio-Cordero had originally entered the United States without inspection, the Government required him to return to El Salvador, his country of origin, for consular processing to obtain his immigrant visa. Yet he also faced a bar to reentry if he left the country. DHS granted him a waiver of this bar upon his anticipated return to the United States because of the “extreme hardship” Muñoz would suffer if he were excluded.
8 U. S. C. § 1182(a)(9)(B)(v). In April 2015, Asencio-Cordero traveled from California to El Salvador. That was the last time he stood on American soil.
Asencio-Cordero attended the initial consular interview in San Salvador on May 28, 2015. In December 2015, a consular offcer denied his visa application. As justifcation, the denial cited only to § 1182(a)(3)(A)(ii). That statute provides that any noncitizen “who a consular offcer . . . knows, or has reasonable ground to believe, seeks to enter the United States to engage solely, principally, or incidentally in . . . any other unlawful activity . . . is inadmissible.” In other words, Page Proof Pending Publication DEPARTMENT OF STATE v. MUÑOZ the consular offcer excluded Asencio-Cordero based on a belief that he planned to engage in some unspecifed unlawful conduct upon return to the United States. “[U]nlawful activity” could mean anything from jaywalking to murder.
Asencio-Cordero has no criminal history in the United States or El Salvador. See 50 F. 4th 906, 911 (CA9 2022); Brief for Respondents 8, n. 5 (“It is uncontested that Asencio-Cordero has never been charged with any crime”).
With no obvious justifcation for the consular offcer's belief, Muñoz and Asencio-Cordero asked for reconsideration. Muñoz sought the help of Congresswoman Judy Chu, who sent a letter to the State Department on Muñoz's behalf.
The following day, the consulate responded to the letter again with only a citation to § 1182(a)(3)(A)(ii). In January and April 2016, Muñoz asked the State Department for the factual basis for her husband's inadmissibility. She and her husband provided evidence of her accolades at work and attestations of Asencio-Cordero's good moral character. A few days later, the consulate notifed Muñoz that the State Department had reviewed the denial and concurred with the consular offcer's decision. It denied reconsideration.
After the consulate denied reconsideration, Muñoz and her husband wrote to the State Department again requesting a factual basis for the inadmissibility decision.
Asencio- Cordero has no criminal record, but he does have several tattoos from his teenage years. App. 22. They depict a range of subjects, including “Our Lady of Guadalupe, Sigmund Freud, a `tribal' pattern with a paw print, and theatrical masks with dice and cards.” Brief for Respondents 2, n. 2. Some of these images have deep signifcance in Latin American culture. See, e. g., Brief for Professors and Scholars as Amici Curiae 8–10 (“Many Latin Americans view La Virgen de Guadalupe as a special protector, and as a symbol of pan-Latinx identity that transcends attachment to any one geography”). Some also happen to appear on gang members.
Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication See ibid. (noting that “law enforcement agencies and offcials often use tattoos of common Catholic imagery . . . as indicia of gang membership”). Speculating about potential bases for a visa denial, Muñoz and her husband included additional evidence from a court-approved gang expert in their letter to the State Department. The expert reviewed AsencioCordero's tattoos and concluded that none were “ `related to any gang or criminal organization in the United States or elsewhere.' ” 50 F. 4th, at 911. The State Department responded that it lacked authority to overturn consular decisions and “ `concurred in the fnding of ineligibility.' ” Ibid. The consulate followed up in May 2016, a year after AsencioCordero's initial interview, by listing all the entities that had reviewed the visa application and noting that “ `there is no appeal.' ” Ibid. It was only after Muñoz and her husband sued the Government in Federal District Court that they fnally received the factual basis for the denial. After almost two years of litigation, the Government submitted a declaration from a State Department attorney-adviser. Id., at 912. That declaration stated that the consular offcer denied Asencio-Cordero's visa application under § 1182(a)(3)(A)(ii) because “ `based on the in-person interview, a criminal review of Mr. Asencio Cordero and a review of . . . Mr. Asencio Cordero's tattoos, the consular offcer determined that Mr. Asencio Cordero was a member of a known criminal organization . . . specifcally MS-13.' ” Ibid. (alterations omitted).
The Court of Appeals ruled in Muñoz's favor. It held that the Government's reason was too little, too late. The denial of her husband's visa burdened Muñoz's right to marriage, and the Government had provided inadequate process.
Even though the Government provided a “facially legitimate and bona fde” reason, that reason was not “timely” enough to satisfy constitutional due process requirements. Id., at 919–921. This Court granted the Government's petition for a writ of certiorari. 601 U. S. ––– (2024).
DEPARTMENT OF STATE v. MUÑOZ
II
There was a simple way to resolve this case. I agree with Justice Gorsuch that “the United States has now revealed the factual basis for its decision to deny [Muñoz's] husband a visa,” and she has thus received whatever process she was due. Ante, at 920 (opinion concurring in judgment).3 That could and should have been the end of it. Instead, the majority swings for the fences. It seizes on the Government's invitation to abrogate the right to marriage in the immigration context and sharply limit this Court's longstanding precedent.
Muñoz has a constitutionally protected interest in her husband's visa application because its denial burdened her right to marriage. She petitioned USCIS to recognize their marriage so that her husband could remain lawfully beside her and their child in the United States. It was the extreme hardship Muñoz faced from her husband's exclusion that formed the basis for USCIS's waiver of his inadmissibility. For the majority, however, once Muñoz's husband left the country in reliance on those approvals, their marriage ceased to matter. Suddenly, the Government owed her no explanation at all.
The constitutional right to marriage is not so fimsy. The Government cannot banish a U. S. citizen's spouse and give 3Unlike Justice Gorsuch, I would vacate and remand the opinion below. The Court of Appeals and District Court correctly resolved the two questions on which this Court granted certiorari. The Ninth Circuit nevertheless vacated the District Court's judgment and remanded based on the answer to a third question, which is not before this Court. See n. 1, supra; 50 F. 4th 906, 923–924 (2022) (“Because no `fact in the record' justifying the denial of Asencio-Cordero's visa was made available to [Muñoz and her husband] until nearly three years had elapsed after the denial, and until after litigation had begun, we conclude that the government did not meet the notice requirements of due process when it denied Asencio-Cordero's visa”). I would let the Ninth Circuit decide in the frst instance the effect of a Court holding that Muñoz received all the process she was constitutionally due.
Page Proof Pending Publication only a bare statutory citation as an excuse. By denying Muñoz the right to a factual basis for her husband's exclusion, the majority departs from longstanding precedent and gravely undervalues the right to marriage in the immigration context.
A
The constitutional right to marriage has deep roots.
“[M]arriage,” this Court said over a century ago, “is something more than a mere contract.” Maynard v. Hill, 125 U. S. 190, 210–211 (1888). It is “the most important relation in life,” id., at 205, and “the foundation of the family,” id., at 211. This Court has described it in one breath as the right “to marry, establish a home and bring up children,” a right “long recognized at common law as essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men.” Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U. S. 390, 399 (1923). In upholding the right of Mildred and Richard Loving to have their marriage license from the District of Columbia recognized by Virginia, this Court emphasized that “[m]arriage is one of the `basic civil rights of man,' fundamental to our very existence and survival.” Loving v. Virginia, 388 U. S. 1, 12 (1967) (quoting Skinner v. Okla homa ex rel. Williamson, 316 U. S. 535, 541 (1942)). Indeed, the right to marriage was one of the frst building blocks of substantive due process. The right was so “ `fundamental' ” and “ `implicit in the concept of ordered liberty' ” that the Roe Court invoked it as part of the foundation underlying the right to abortion. Roe v. Wade, 410 U. S. 113, 152–153 (1973) (cataloguing existing substantive due process rights as extending to “marriage, procreation, contraception, family relationships, and child rearing and education” (citations omitted)), overruled, Dobbs, 597 U. S. 215.
Almost 10 years ago, this Court vindicated the expansiveness of the right to marriage. It upheld the right of James Obergefell and his terminally ill husband, John Arthur, to have their marriage from Maryland recognized in Ohio. Rejecting the idea that “Ohio can erase [Obergefell's] marriage Page Proof Pending Publication DEPARTMENT OF STATE v. MUÑOZ to John Arthur for all time” by declining to place Obergefell as the surviving spouse on Arthur's death certifcate, this Court reasoned that “marriage is a right `older than the Bill of Rights.' ” Obergefell, 576 U. S., at 666, 678. Marriage “ `fulfls yearnings for security, safe haven, and connection that express our common humanity.' ” Id., at 666. “Marriage responds to the universal fear that a lonely person might call out only to fnd no one there. It offers the hope of companionship and understanding and assurance that while both still live there will be someone to care for the other.” Id., at 667.
The majority, ignoring these precedents, makes the same fatal error it made in Dobbs: requiring too “ `careful [a] description of the asserted fundamental liberty interest.' ” Ante, at 910 (quoting Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U. S. 702, 721 (1997)); cf. Dobbs, 597 U. S., at 374–375 (Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kagan, JJ., dissenting). The majority faults Muñoz's invocation of the “ `fundamental right to marriage' ” as “diffcult to pin down.” Ante, at 910. Instead, it tries to characterize her asserted right as “an entitlement to bring [her husband] to the United States,” even though it acknowledges that Muñoz “disclaims that characterization.” Ante, at 910–911. Obergefell rejected what the majority does today as “inconsistent with the approach this Court has used in discussing [the] fundamental rights” of “marriage and intimacy.” 576 U. S., at 671. Cataloguing a half century of precedent on the right to marriage, the Court stressed that “Loving did not ask about a `right to interracial marriage'; Turner did not ask about a `right of inmates to marry'; and Zablocki did not ask about a `right of fathers with unpaid child support duties to marry.' ” Ibid. Instead, “each case inquired about the right to marry in its comprehensive sense” of “marriage and intimacy.” Ibid. Similarly, Muñoz does not argue that her marriage gives her the right to immigrate her husband. She instead advances the reasonable position that blocking her from living with her husband in the United Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication States burdens her right “to marry, establish a home and bring up children” with him. Meyer, 262 U. S., at 399.
This Court has never required that plaintiffs be fully prevented from exercising their right to marriage before invoking it. Instead, the question is whether a challenged government action burdens the right. For example, the Court in Zablocki v. Redhail, 434 U. S. 374 (1978), examined the “burde[n]” placed on fathers by a statute that required a hearing to “counsel” them “as to the necessity of fulflling” any outstanding child support obligations before being granted permission to marry. Id., at 387–388. The Court in Turner v. Safey, 482 U. S. 78 (1987), applied Zablocki to incarcerated people to hold that the particular prison marriage restriction at issue “impermissibly burden[ed] the right to marry.” 482 U. S., at 97. There can be no real question that excluding a citizen's spouse from the country “burdens” the citizen's right to marriage as this Court has repeatedly defned it. This Court has never held that a married couple's ability to move their home elsewhere removes the burden on their constitutional rights. It did not tell Richard and Mildred Loving to stay in the District of Columbia or James Obergefell and John Arthur to stay in Maryland. It upheld their ability to exercise their right to marriage wherever they sought to make their home.
Muñoz may be able to live in El Salvador alongside her husband or at least visit him there, but not everyone is so lucky. The majority's holding will also extend to those couples who, like the Lovings and the Obergefells, depend on American law for their marriages' validity. Same-sex couples may be forced to relocate to countries that do not recognize same-sex marriage, or even those that criminalize homosexuality. American husbands may be unable to follow their wives abroad if their wives' countries of origin do not recognize derivative immigration status from women (as was the case in this country for many years, see ante, at 913 (noting visa “quotas . . . for female citizens with noncitizen husbands” DEPARTMENT OF STATE v. MUÑOZ until 1952)). The majority's failure to respect the right to marriage in this country consigns U. S. citizens to rely on the fckle grace of other countries' immigration laws to vindicate one of the “ `basic civil rights of man' ” and live alongside their spouses. Loving, 388 U. S., at 12.
B
Given that the Government has burdened Muñoz's right to marriage by excluding her husband from the country, the question is the remedy for that burden. Muñoz argues that this burden triggers procedural due process protections in her husband's visa denial. Emphasizing that substantive due process rights like the right to marriage usually trigger strict scrutiny, the majority faults Muñoz for creating a right “in a category of one: a substantive due process right that gets only procedural due process protection.” Ante, at 911. Muñoz, however, did not create that category of rights.
This Court did. See Mandel, 408 U. S., at 768–770. This Court already set the ground rules for when the Government's exercise of its extensive power over the exclusion of noncitizens burdens a U. S. citizen's constitutional rights. See id., at 770. In short, a fundamental right may trigger procedural due process protections over a noncitizen's exclusion, but such protections are limited. See ibid.
Noncitizens who apply for visas from outside the United States have no constitutional entitlement to enter the country, and therefore typically have no constitutional process protections in the visa application themselves. See Landon v. Plasencia, 459 U. S. 21, 32 (1982). In contrast, noncitizens who already live in the United States whom the Government seeks to remove have procedural due process protections during that removal. See Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U. S. 356, 369 (1886); Zadvydas v. Davis, 533 U. S. 678, 693 (2001). Had the Government sought to remove Muñoz's husband when they were living together in the United States, he would have had his own constitutional protections in those Page Proof Pending Publication proceedings. Instead, because the Government forced him to leave the country and reenter in order to adjust his immigration status, he lost them.
Not only do noncitizens seeking to enter the United States lack constitutional process rights in their visa applications. This Court has further insulated the Government's visa determinations from review by declining to evaluate them at all. See ante, at 907–908. This judge-made “doctrine of consular nonreviewability” refects the Judicial Branch's recognition that the “ `admission and exclusion of foreign nationals' ” is an area of unusually heightened congressional and executive power. Ibid.4 When the denial of a noncitizen's visa burdens a U. S. citizen's constitutional rights, however, this Court has had to reconcile the importance of those rights with its recognition of Government authority over visa determinations. In Mandel, it set the remedy. The Mandel Court held that when a visa denial “implicate[s]” a citizen's rights, a court will not look behind a “facially legiti4Judges created this doctrine because of the otherwise “strong presumption that Congress intends judicial review of administrative action.” Bowen v. Michigan Academy of Family Physicians, 476 U. S. 667, 670 (1986). The majority emphasizes that the Government asked the Court for the holding it reaches today. See ante, at 907, n. 3. It is hardly unusual for the Government to ask this Court for less judicial review over its immigration decisions. See, e. g., Wilkinson v. Garland, 601 U. S. 209 (2024) (arguing that eligibility for cancellation of removal is unreviewable); Santos-Zacaria v. Garland, 598 U. S. 411 (2023) (arguing that noncitizens must request discretionary forms of administrative review before challenging a fnal order of removal in federal court); Patel v. Garland, 596 U. S. 328 (2022) (arguing that federal courts lack jurisdiction to review facts found as part of eligibility determination for discretionary relief); Garland v. Aleman Gonzalez, 596 U. S. 543 (2022) (arguing that district courts lack jurisdiction to entertain noncitizens' requests for class-wide injunctive relief). Unusually, in this case, the Government's argument against review is not based on any statutes passed by Congress but on a doctrine that this Court created itself. Rather than exercise the restraint counseled by Mandel, the majority instead chooses to exclude a fundamental right from Mandel's prudent exception. See infra, at 936–939. Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication DEPARTMENT OF STATE v. MUÑOZ mate and bona fde” reason for the denial. 408 U. S., at 765, 769.
In Mandel, a group of U. S. professors sued the Government over the visa denial of Dr. Ernest E. Mandel, a famous Belgian Marxist. See id., at 756, 759–760. The professors argued that excluding Mandel burdened their First Amendment right to hear and meet with him in person. See id., at 760. The Court agreed that the professors had a First Amendment “ `right to receive information' ” from Mandel. Id., at 762, 764. It also emphasized, as the majority does today, Congress's power over the admission and exclusion of noncitizens. See id., at 766–767; ante, at 907–908. To avoid the need to balance “the strength of the audience's interest against that of the Government in refusing a waiver to the particular [noncitizen] applicant, according to some as yet undetermined standard,” Mandel, 408 U. S., at 768–769, the Court instead noted that “the Attorney General did inform Mandel's counsel of the reason for refusing him a waiver. And that reason was facially legitimate and bona fde.”
Id., at 769 (emphasis added). Therefore, “when the Executive exercises [conditional power to exclude] negatively on the basis of a facially legitimate and bona fde reason, the courts will neither look behind the exercise of that discretion, nor test it by balancing its justifcation against the First Amendment interests of those who seek personal communication with the applicant.” Id., at 770. In other words, when a visa denial burdens a noncitizen's constitutional rights, rather than attempt to balance the competing interests under strict scrutiny, a court should accept the Government's “facially legitimate and bona fde reason.” Ibid. That minimal requirement ensures that courts do not unduly intrude on “the Government's sovereign authority to set the terms governing the admission and exclusion of noncitizens,” ante, at 911–912, while also ensuring that the Government does not arbitrarily burden citizens' constitutional rights. This Court has repeatedly relied on Mandel's test in the immigration context. See, e. g., Trump v. Hawaii, 585 U. S. Page Proof Pending Publication 667, 703 (2018) (noting that “this Court has engaged in a circumscribed judicial inquiry when the denial of a visa allegedly burdens the constitutional rights of a U. S. citizen”); Fi allo v. Bell, 430 U. S. 787, 794, 799 (1977) (relying on Mandel in declining to “probe and test the justifcations for [a] legislative” distinction between mothers and fathers because this Court has applied limited scrutiny to “resolv[e] similar challenges to immigration legislation based on other constitutional rights of citizens”).5 Indeed, less than a decade ago, six Justices ruling on the exact legal question the Court confronts today would have held that Mandel controlled or extended its protections even further in the marriage context. See Kerry v. Din, 576 U. S. 86, 103–104 (2015) (Kennedy, J., 5Despite the majority's claim that its decision is the majority rule in the Courts of Appeals, ante, at 909, and n. 5, lower courts have rarely reached the question the majority reaches today. That is because they have relied on Mandel to hold that the Government has in any case provided a “ `facially legitimate and bona fde' ” reason. See, e. g., Sesay v. United States, 984 F. 3d 312, 315–316, and n. 2 (CA4 2021); Del Valle v. U. S. Dept. of State, 16 F. 4th 832, 838–842 (CA11 2021); Yafai v. Pompeo, 912 F. 3d 1018, 1020–1021 (CA7 2019). One of the cases the majority cites pre-dates Mandel, Silverman v. Rogers, 437 F. 2d 102 (CA1 1970), and two others reached the majority's holding based only on conclusory assertions, see Burrafato v. U. S. Dept. of State, 523 F. 2d 554, 555–557 (CA2 1975); Bright v. Parra, 919 F. 2d 31, 34 (CA5 1990) (per curiam). Only two Circuits have used the majority's reasoning to hold that a U. S. citizen's right to marriage does not trigger the Mandel remedy. In one, the court had an alternative holding that “even if we take [the right to marriage] as a given, the argument fails because the consulate provided a facially legitimate reason for the visa denials.” Baaghil v. Miller, 1 F. 4th 427, 434 (CA6 2021). In the other, a concurring judge urged his colleagues to resolve this challenge on the same narrow holding that the majority could have followed today. See, e. g., Colindres v. U. S. Dept. of State, 71 F. 4th 1018, 1027 (CADC 2023) (opinion of Srinivasan, J.) (“There is no need for us to take up the merits of [the] constitutional question . . . and I would refrain from doing so. Rather, we can rest our decision solely on the ground . . . that even assuming [appellant's] fundamental right to marriage includes a protected interest in living in the country with her husband, such that at least some form of due process scrutiny applies, the government's denial of a visa to him afforded her adequate process”).
DEPARTMENT OF STATE v. MUÑOZ concurring in judgment) (“The reasoning and the holding in Mandel control here. . . . Like the professors who sought an audience with Dr. Mandel, [respondent] claims her constitutional rights were burdened by the denial of a visa to a non- citizen, namely, her husband”); id., at 107 (Breyer, J., dissenting) (reasoning that respondent's “liberty interest [in] her freedom to live together with her husband in the United States” is the kind “to which the Due Process Clause grants procedural protection”).
Outside the immigration context, this Court has endorsed similar tests in circumstances where there is a heightened underlying governmental power. For instance, in Turner, the Court evaluated the right to marriage in the prison context. Even though an incarcerated person “ `retains those [constitutional] rights that are not inconsistent with his status as a prisoner or with the legitimate penological objectives of the corrections system,' ” the Court emphasized that “[t]he right to marry, like many other rights, is subject to substantial restrictions as a result of incarceration.” 482 U. S., at 95 (quoting Pell v. Procunier, 417 U. S. 817, 822 (1974)). Only because the challenged prison regulation there was not “reasonably related” to the government's articulated penological interests, or “legitimate security and rehabilitation concerns,” did this Court hold it unconstitutional. Turner, 482 U. S., at 95; see id., at 99.
Just as Turner looked at burdens on the right to marriage through the narrow lens of “penological interests” to defer to the government's control over prisons, Mandel used a “facially legitimate and bona fde reason” to defer to the Government's power over the exclusion of noncitizens. Neither case erased the constitutional right at issue. The Court simply recognized that the right can be substantially limited in areas where the government exercises unusually heightened control.
Applying Mandel and Turner here, the remedy is clear.
The Government's exclusion of Muñoz's husband entitles her Page Proof Pending Publication at least to the remedy required in Mandel: a “facially legitimate and bona fde reason” for the exclusion. 408 U. S., at 770.
C
The majority resists this conclusion by worrying about its “unsettling collateral consequences.” Ante, at 916. The majority poses a series of hypotheticals that it fears will result from recognizing the limited right Muñoz proposes.
These fears are groundless.
First, the majority's concern that applying Mandel to Muñoz's right to marriage in this case will result in a slippery slope of constitutional challenges is unfounded. Muñoz's right triggers limited process protections in part because her husband lost his own procedural protections when the Government required him to leave the country. Muñoz's right to marriage raises that foor from zero process to some by requiring the Government to provide a “facially legitimate and bona fde reason” when her husband receives no process. In contrast, a citizen's liberty interest “in the removal proceeding of her spouse” in the United States, ante, at 917, would presumably be limited by the noncitizen's own due process rights in that same proceeding. Similarly, any challenge from a wife to her husband's “ `assignment to a remote prison,' ” ibid., would presumably be limited by the criminal procedural protections her husband already received.
Second, the majority's reliance on O'Bannon v. Town Court Nursing Center, 447 U. S. 773 (1980), is misplaced and highlights the speculative nature of its concerns. O'Ban non rejected a freestanding constitutional interest in avoiding “serious trauma.”
Id., at 788.
The residents of a government-funded nursing home sought relief from transfer to alternative housing because of the emotional harm they would suffer from the move. Id., at 777–781, 784. Muñoz, however, does not rely on a free-foating emotional harm that separation from her husband will cause. She invokes her Page Proof Pending Publication DEPARTMENT OF STATE v. MUÑOZ fundamental right to marry, live, and raise a family with her husband, the right recognized by this Court for centuries. See supra, at 931–934. Denying her husband entry to the country directly burdens that right.
In sum, the majority's concerns are unwarranted. There are few circumstances where the limited relief sought by Muñoz would be available.
III
A “facially legitimate and bona fde” reason may seem like a meager remedy for burdening a fundamental right. Yet even the barest explanation requirement can be powerful.
The majority relies heavily on United States ex rel. Knauff v. Shaughnessy, 338 U. S. 537 (1950). See ante, at 908, 914–915. A closer look at the story of Ellen Knauff, however, illustrates the importance of putting the Government to a minimal evidence requirement when a visa denial burdens a constitutional right.
Knauff's U. S. citizen husband sought to bring her to the United States after they married during his deployment to Germany. After this Court upheld her exclusion on undisclosed national security grounds, there was a public outcry. See C. Weisselberg, The Exclusion and Detention of Aliens: Lessons From the Lives of Ellen Knauff and Ignatz Mezei, 143 U. Pa. L. Rev. 933, 958–964 (1995). Both Houses of Congress introduced private bills for her relief and, after the Attorney General rushed to remove Knauff from Ellis Island before Congress could act, Justice Jackson (who had vigorously dissented in the case) issued a stay from this Court. See id., at 958, n. 127. After extensive advocacy, the Attorney General ordered immigration offcials to reopen the case. See id., at 961–962. Eventually, Knauff won her case before the BIA when the Government failed to prove up its national security concerns. Id., at 963–964. She was fnally admitted as a lawful permanent resident. Id., at 964.
The majority relies heavily on “[t]he rule of Knauff ”: that “the Attorney General has the unchallengeable power to Page Proof Pending Publication exclude” a noncitizen. Ibid.; ante, at 915 (emphasizing that “ `[n]o limits can be put by the courts upon' ” the exercise of the Government's power to “ `forbid aliens or classes of aliens from coming within their borders' ”). Yet, “the full story of Ellen Knauff shows a populace and a Congress unwilling to accept the exercise of this sort of raw power.” Weisselberg, 143 U. Pa. L. Rev., at 964. “Once the government was required to justify its exclusion decision with substantial and reliable evidence, in an open proceeding, Knauff gained admission into the United States.” Ibid. Knauff brought her own petition to challenge her exclusion. Knauff, 338 U. S., at 539–540. Her husband did not argue that her exclusion burdened his right to marriage.
Twenty-two years after Knauff, however, when faced with such a challenge, this Court limited the justifcation that the Government must provide in these circumstances to a “facially legitimate and bona fde reason.” Mandel, 408 U. S., at 770. The majority, not content to resolve this case on even those narrow grounds, instead relieves the Government of any need to justify itself at all. Knauff's story illustrates why the right to marriage deserves more. By leaving U. S. citizens without even a factual basis for their spouses' exclusion, the majority paves the way for arbitrary denials of a right this Court has repeatedly held among the most important to our Nation.
* * * A traveler to the United States two centuries ago reported that “ `[t]here is certainly no country in the world where the tie of marriage is so much respected as in America.' ” Ober gefell, 576 U. S., at 669 (quoting 1 A. de Tocqueville, Democracy in America 309 (H. Reeve transl., rev. ed. 1900)).
Today, the majority fails to live up to that centuries-old promise. Muñoz may be able to live with her husband in El Salvador, but it will mean raising her U. S.-citizen child outside the United States. Others will be less fortunate. The burden will fall most heavily on same-sex couples and others Page Proof Pending Publication DEPARTMENT OF STATE v. MUÑOZ who lack the ability, for legal or fnancial reasons, to make a home in the noncitizen spouse's country of origin. For those couples, this Court's vision of marriage as the “assurance that while both still live there will be someone to care for the other” rings hollow. Obergefell, 576 U. S., at 667. I respectfully dissent.
Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication Reporter’s Note The attached opinion has been revised to refect the usual publication and citation style of the United States Reports. The revised pagination makes available the offcial United States Reports citation in advance of publication. The syllabus has been prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader and constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court. A list of counsel who argued or fled briefs in this case, and who were members of the bar of this Court at the time this case was argued, has been inserted following the syllabus. Other revisions may include adjustments to formatting, captions, citation form, and any errant punctuation. The following additional edits were made: p. 941, line 11: “habeas” is deleted