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Career Training USA
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Intern & Trainee
Career Training USA
Special Requirements for Hospitality Hosts
Special Requirements for Hospitality Hosts

Eligibility

Special Requirements for Hospitality Hosts

Special Requirements for Hospitality Hosts

The following requirements apply to hotel/hospitality management, hotel food and beverage management, restaurant management, and culinary arts.

  • InterExchange does not permit business-only or non-hospitality programs at hotels, resorts, inns, or restaurants.
  • Interns and Trainees wishing to train in hospitality or restaurant management positions must have hospitality or restaurant management education (interns) or work experience (trainees) in order to be able to rotate through various departments.
  • At least three rotations for programs six months or longer is required by the regulations. No rotation may be more than three or four months long, and each department must have sufficient, qualified staff to offer adequate training.
    • NOTE: InterExchange will not be able to sponsor Hospitality programs with Housekeeping Management phases.
  • Per the U.S. Department of State regulations, all Hospitality Management, Restaurant Management and Culinary programs are limited to 12 months regardless of whether the individual is an Intern or Trainee.
  • Hospitality Interns and Trainees may not return to properties at which they have previously worked on a Work and Travel program or other work visa.
    Education or work experience only in Tourism Management does not qualify Interns or Trainees for programs in Hospitality Management, as those fields are not interchangeable.
Eligible Locations
  • Hotels should be rated 3-Diamond or higher by AAA, or rated 4-Star and above by Forbes. All unrated properties will be considered on a case-by-case basis.
  • Restaurants must be high-end, fine dining, sit-down restaurants OR full-service banquet halls. All properties will be considered on a case-by-case basis.
  • Hotels that do not meet the above requirements
  • Motels
  • Hostels
  • National chains restaurants, casual dining restaurants, pubs, pizza parlors
  • Fast food, delivery/takeout restaurants, bakeries
  • Kiosks, stands, food trucks

Remember that participants must rotate through departments and roles. Therefore, they may train in any given category for only one phase.

Hotel/Hospitality Management

  • Front Desk
  • Concierge
  • Hotel or Restaurant Inventory/Buying
  • Back Office/Business Management
  • Food and Beverage Management

Restaurant/Food and Beverage Management

  • Restaurant Inventory or Management/Buying
  • Catering/Event Planning
  • Staff Training and Development
  • Restaurant Business Areas

Culinary Arts

  • Kitchen equipment and food-handling safety training
  • Recipe development
  • Inventory/food sourcing
  • Different stations/food styles
  • Menu planning

For questions about other types of tasks, please contact InterExchange.

  • Bartending
  • Bellhop
  • Bussing Tables
  • Cashier
  • Delivery
  • Dishwashing
  • Housekeeping
  • Laundry
  • Maintenance
  • Night audit or any training that occurs in the overnight hours
  • Running Food
  • Serving/Hosting
  • Valet

As part of an overall management training, participants may briefly train in hosting, waiting tables, food preparation, etc. to learn basic skills needed to pursue management-level training within a department. However, the combination of such basic tasks may NOT exceed 20% of the entire training program. For culinary participants, food preparation may constitute a larger percentage of their program but only for high-skill tasks contributing to their training.

Host employers who require wait staff, housekeepers, bellhops, short order cooks, etc., are encouraged to learn more about our InterExchange Work & Travel USA program.