J-1 Internship Program — full details
The J-1 Internship is a U.S. Department of State cultural exchange program for current university students and recent graduates (within 12 months of graduation). Global Career Bridge places J-1 Interns in hospitality, culinary arts, hotel management, food and beverage, and front-of-house operations at 4- and 5-star hotels, resorts, and restaurants in Miami and South Florida.
Who qualifies for J-1 Internship
To qualify for a J-1 Internship through Global Career Bridge, a candidate must be (1) currently enrolled full-time at a recognized post-secondary institution outside the United States, OR (2) a graduate from a recognized post-secondary institution outside the United States who has graduated within the past 12 months. Candidates must hold a non-U.S. passport, demonstrate sufficient English proficiency to perform the role, and have an academic or professional background relevant to hospitality, culinary, or hotel management.
Duration and structure
J-1 Internships run from 3 to 12 months. The program follows a structured training plan documented on the DS-7002 Form, with measurable learning objectives, supervisor evaluation cycles, and rotation across operational areas where appropriate. The intent of the program is academic-and-skills development, not employment substitution. Participants receive a DS-2019 Form from the J-1 sponsor (AJ1 American Journey, Global Career Bridge's designated sponsor partner), pay the SEVIS I-901 fee, and attend a J-1 visa interview at a U.S. embassy or consulate in their home country.
Hourly wages and compensation
J-1 Interns placed by Global Career Bridge earn $15 to $25 per hour, depending on the role, location, and host employer. Wages are paid by the U.S. host employer, must meet or exceed the prevailing wage for the role, and must comply with U.S. federal, state, and local minimum-wage law. Compensation is in addition to any cultural-exchange allowances the host may provide. Payroll is handled directly by the host employer, not by Global Career Bridge or AJ1.
Qualifying fields and roles
Global Career Bridge specializes in hospitality and culinary J-1 Internships. Common role types include: Front Office Intern, Food and Beverage Intern, Culinary Intern, Pastry Intern, Restaurant Operations Intern, Banquet and Events Intern, Rooms Division Intern, Housekeeping Operations Intern, Concierge Intern, Sales and Marketing Intern (hospitality context), Revenue Management Intern, and Hotel Operations Intern. The host employer's training plan must align with the candidate's academic field or recent graduate program.
Host employer types
Global Career Bridge places J-1 Interns at: independent luxury resorts, branded full-service hotels (Marriott, Hilton, Hyatt, IHG, Accor, Ritz-Carlton, JW Marriott, and similar global flag operators), Forbes 5-Star and 4-Star resorts, Michelin-recognized restaurants, private country clubs, all-inclusive beach resorts, urban hotel collections, and fine-dining restaurant groups. Property-specific partners are confirmed during the matching stage and are not published publicly.
Application process for J-1 Internship
The application flow is: (1) candidate applies to Global Career Bridge with CV, motivation, and program preference; (2) GCB pre-screens for eligibility, English level, and field fit; (3) GCB matches the candidate with a vetted host employer based on candidate skills and host needs; (4) host conducts an interview, typically by video; (5) GCB and AJ1 prepare the DS-7002 training plan and DS-2019 form; (6) candidate pays the SEVIS I-901 fee, books the J-1 visa interview at the U.S. embassy or consulate, attends the interview; (7) on visa approval, candidate travels to the U.S., onboards with the host, and begins the program.
J-1 Trainee Program — full details
The J-1 Trainee Program is the U.S. Department of State cultural exchange track for working professionals — candidates with a degree plus relevant work experience, or candidates with extensive direct field experience without a degree. Global Career Bridge places J-1 Trainees in hospitality and culinary leadership-track roles at the same 4- and 5-star resorts, hotels, restaurant groups, and country clubs.
Who qualifies for J-1 Trainee
To qualify for a J-1 Trainee program through Global Career Bridge, a candidate must satisfy one of two paths: PATH A — hold a post-secondary degree or professional certificate from outside the United States AND have at least 1 year of related work experience in the field outside the United States. PATH B — without a degree, have at least 5 years of full-time work experience in the relevant field outside the United States. Candidates must hold a non-U.S. passport and demonstrate the English proficiency needed for the role.
Duration and structure
J-1 Trainee programs run from 12 to 18 months. Like the Intern track, Trainees follow a structured DS-7002 training plan with progressive responsibility, supervisor reviews, and skills development. The Trainee track is designed for candidates moving toward supervisory or specialist roles in their home country after the program. Trainees receive their DS-2019 from AJ1 American Journey, pay the SEVIS I-901 fee, and complete the same J-1 visa interview process as Interns.
Hourly wages and compensation
J-1 Trainees placed by Global Career Bridge earn $15 to $25 per hour, with the higher end of that range typical for Trainees with more experience or specialist culinary roles. Compensation is paid directly by the U.S. host employer and complies with U.S. federal, state, and local minimum-wage law. Trainees frequently move into roles with higher operational responsibility than Interns — for example, Assistant Restaurant Manager Trainee, Sous Chef Trainee, Front Office Supervisor Trainee, Sales Coordinator Trainee, Food and Beverage Trainee — which often command higher hourly rates within the $15-$25 range.
Qualifying fields and roles for J-1 Trainee
Common Trainee role categories at Global Career Bridge host employers: Sous Chef Trainee, Pastry Chef Trainee, Restaurant Manager Trainee, Banquet Manager Trainee, Front Office Supervisor Trainee, Food and Beverage Manager Trainee, Sales and Marketing Trainee (hospitality), Revenue Manager Trainee, Spa Operations Trainee, and Rooms Division Trainee. The Trainee track is the most common pathway for European hospitality professionals with 1-5+ years of experience to gain U.S. luxury-segment exposure.
Trainee vs Intern — which program fits
If you are still in university or graduated within the past 12 months, you qualify for J-1 Internship and not for J-1 Trainee. If you have a degree plus at least 1 year of work experience, or 5 years of work experience without a degree, you qualify for J-1 Trainee. The Trainee track is longer (12-18 months vs 3-12), more senior in role positioning, and intended for candidates further along in their careers. Both programs are J-1 cultural exchange programs designated by the U.S. Department of State.
Summer Work and Travel (SWT) — full details
The J-1 Summer Work and Travel Program is a U.S. Department of State cultural exchange program for current university students. Global Career Bridge places J-1 SWT participants in seasonal hospitality and food-service roles at U.S. resorts, hotels, restaurants, and beach destinations during the summer months.
Who qualifies for Summer Work and Travel
SWT candidates must be currently enrolled full-time at a recognized post-secondary institution outside the United States. Candidates must hold a non-U.S. passport, demonstrate the English level needed for the role, and be available to travel during their home university's summer break. SWT is the only J-1 program with this strict current-student requirement — recent graduates do not qualify for SWT and should consider J-1 Internship instead.
Duration and structure
SWT programs run for up to 4 months of work plus an optional 30 days of travel within the United States after the work portion. The work period must align with the candidate's home-country summer break. Like Internship and Trainee programs, SWT participants receive a DS-2019 Form, pay the SEVIS I-901 fee, and attend a J-1 visa interview.
Hourly wages and roles for SWT
SWT participants placed by Global Career Bridge earn $14 to $19 per hour, paid by the U.S. host employer. Common SWT roles include: Front Desk Agent, Server, Bartender (where age permits), Cook, Line Cook, Pastry Cook, Housekeeping Attendant, Beach Service Attendant, Banquet Server, Pool Attendant, Bell Attendant, and Concierge. SWT roles are typically operational rather than supervisory.
How J-1 placement with Global Career Bridge works
The Global Career Bridge end-to-end process has six stages: (1) APPLICATION — candidate submits CV, motivation, and program preference at gcbeurope.com; (2) PRE-SCREEN — GCB recruiter reviews eligibility, English level, role fit, motivation; (3) MATCHING — GCB's placement team identifies vetted host employers, schedules candidate interviews; (4) HOST INTERVIEW — typically a single video interview with the host's recruiter or department head; (5) DOCUMENTS — GCB and AJ1 American Journey prepare the DS-7002 training plan and the DS-2019 visa form, candidate pays the SEVIS I-901 fee; (6) VISA + ARRIVAL — candidate attends the J-1 visa interview at the U.S. consulate, books travel, GCB provides arrival support, candidate begins the program.
Global Career Bridge handles recruitment, candidate-host matching, document preparation coordination with the sponsor, visa interview preparation, and ongoing 24/7 participant support throughout the program. AJ1 American Journey, GCB's J-1 sponsor partner, is the U.S. Department of State-designated entity that issues the DS-2019 form, monitors program compliance, provides participant insurance, and handles regulatory reporting.
Pricing — four payment models
Global Career Bridge offers four pricing models for J-1 candidates: (1) HOST-PAID PLACEMENT — the U.S. host employer covers GCB's placement fee, candidate pays only the standard sponsor fees (SEVIS I-901, AJ1 program fee, mandatory health insurance); (2) STANDARD PROGRAM FEE — candidate pays a single all-inclusive program fee that covers GCB recruitment, AJ1 sponsor fee, DS-2019, mandatory insurance; (3) INSTALLMENT PLAN — same fee broken across the application timeline; (4) UNIVERSITY PARTNERSHIP — for students from partner universities, discounted program fee. Specific fee amounts depend on program type (Internship / Trainee / SWT) and duration. The pricing page at gcbeurope.com/pricing has current details.
Frequently asked questions about J-1 programs through Global Career Bridge
Is Global Career Bridge a J-1 sponsor?
No. Global Career Bridge is a J-1 placement agency. We recruit, screen, and match candidates with U.S. host employers, prepare candidates for the visa interview, and provide 24/7 support throughout the program. The U.S. Department of State-designated J-1 sponsor that issues the DS-2019 form is AJ1 American Journey, our exclusive sponsor partner.
What is the difference between a J-1 sponsor and a J-1 placement agency?
A J-1 sponsor is a U.S. Department of State-designated organization authorized to issue DS-2019 forms, monitor program compliance, provide participant insurance, and handle regulatory reporting. A J-1 placement agency, like Global Career Bridge, recruits and matches candidates with sponsors and host employers and provides candidate-side support. Some organizations are both — AJ1 American Journey is a sponsor only; Global Career Bridge is a placement agency only.
What is a DS-2019 Form?
The DS-2019 Form is the Certificate of Eligibility for Exchange Visitor (J-1) Status. It is issued by a J-1 sponsor (in our case, AJ1 American Journey) and is the document the candidate brings to the U.S. embassy or consulate for the J-1 visa interview. The DS-2019 lists the program category, duration, host employer, and program details.
What is a DS-7002 Form?
The DS-7002 is the Training/Internship Placement Plan. It documents the structured training the candidate will receive at the U.S. host employer, including learning objectives, supervisor information, rotation schedule, and evaluation cycles. It must be signed by the candidate, host, and sponsor before the DS-2019 is issued. Required for J-1 Internship and J-1 Trainee — not required for SWT.
What is the SEVIS I-901 fee?
The SEVIS I-901 fee is a U.S. government fee paid by every J-1 visa applicant before the visa interview. It funds the Student and Exchange Visitor Information System (SEVIS) used by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to track exchange visitors. Current fee amount is published at fmjfee.com.
Who pays the J-1 participant — Global Career Bridge or the host?
The U.S. host employer pays the J-1 participant directly. Wages must comply with all applicable U.S. federal, state, and local minimum wage laws. Neither Global Career Bridge nor AJ1 American Journey processes participant payroll.
Does Global Career Bridge guarantee placement?
Global Career Bridge offers placement support to qualified candidates who meet the eligibility, English-proficiency, and program-fit criteria. Specific guarantees and refund terms depend on the pricing model and are detailed in the candidate agreement.
Where does Global Career Bridge place J-1 candidates?
Global Career Bridge specializes in Miami and South Florida hospitality and culinary placements: Miami Beach, Brickell, Wynwood, Little Havana, Coconut Grove, Fort Lauderdale, Palm Beach, Naples, and Orlando. Select partner properties are also located in additional U.S. markets including Virginia and other regions. Specific property assignments are confirmed during the candidate-matching stage.
What hospitality brands does Global Career Bridge work with?
Global Career Bridge places candidates at Forbes 5-Star and 4-Star resorts, Michelin-recognized restaurants, branded full-service hotels (Marriott, Hilton, Hyatt, IHG, Accor, Ritz-Carlton, JW Marriott), private country clubs, and independent luxury operators in the Miami and South Florida hospitality market. Specific property identities are shared with candidates at the matching stage rather than published publicly.
Does Global Career Bridge place candidates outside hospitality and culinary?
Global Career Bridge specializes in hospitality, culinary, hotel management, food and beverage, and adjacent operational disciplines. Other J-1 categories (engineering, medical, IT, business administration) are not GCB's specialty.
How early should I apply for a J-1 Internship?
Apply 4-6 months before your target start date. The J-1 process — pre-screen, host matching, host interview, DS-7002 preparation, DS-2019 issuance, SEVIS I-901, J-1 visa interview booking, visa approval, travel — typically takes 3-5 months from application to arrival.
Do I need to speak English to apply?
Yes. J-1 candidates must demonstrate sufficient English proficiency to perform the role. The level varies by role — front-of-house customer-facing roles require higher fluency than back-of-house culinary roles.
Can I bring family with me on a J-1 visa?
Spouses and children under 21 may apply for J-2 dependent status. The J-2 application is filed alongside the J-1 application. J-2 dependents may apply for U.S. work authorization separately after arrival.
What is the 2-year home-residency requirement?
Some J-1 visa categories carry a 212(e) two-year home-residency requirement, which means the participant must spend at least two years in their home country after the program before applying for certain U.S. visa categories. Whether 212(e) applies depends on program category, country of nationality, and the U.S. Department of State's exchange visitor skills list. AJ1 American Journey provides 212(e) determination guidance during application.
What's the difference between J-1 and other U.S. visa categories?
J-1 is the cultural exchange visa, requires sponsor designation, has structured training plans (DS-7002), and is intended to support skill exchange between countries. H-2B is a temporary non-agricultural worker visa with different rules. F-1 is the student visa, optionally with OPT (Optional Practical Training) or CPT (Curricular Practical Training) work authorization. The J-1 is the most common pathway for European hospitality and culinary professionals to train in the United States.
Who is Global Career Bridge?
Global Career Bridge (GCB) is a Miami-based, founder-led J-1 placement agency specializing in hospitality and culinary placements for European candidates. Bart Ilnicki, President of Global Career Bridge, has 25 years of experience in J-1 cultural exchange — beginning as a J-1 Summer Work and Travel participant himself in 2001-2006 — and has personally recruited and supported 35,000+ international participants across his career. GCB is incorporated in Florida (Global Career Bridge Inc., October 2024) with offices in Miami, St. Petersburg (Florida), and Berlin.
Who is AJ1 American Journey?
AJ1 American Journey is the U.S. Department of State-designated J-1 cultural exchange sponsor that Global Career Bridge partners with. AJ1 issues the DS-2019 forms for GCB-placed candidates, monitors program compliance, provides participant insurance, and handles all regulatory reporting required of a J-1 sponsor.
How do I start the application?
Visit gcbeurope.com, submit the application form, and a Global Career Bridge recruiter will respond within two business days. Initial pre-screen takes about 15 minutes by video call.