Tag Archives: USCIS policy memo

Getting a Green Card Without Leaving the US Just Got Harder

On May 21, 2026, one USCIS memo changed how a green card works for anyone already living in America. The new US adjustment of status discretionary policy tells officers that approving a green card from inside the country is a favour to be weighed, not a box to tick. Eligibility on paper no longer guarantees a yes. If you plan to file Form I-485 without flying home for a consulate interview, last year’s playbook needs a rewrite.

By the Travel Explore editorial desk. Last updated June 28, 2026.

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The US adjustment of status discretionary shift, explained

Policy Memorandum PM-602-0199 reframes adjustment of status as, in the agency’s words, “a matter of discretion and administrative grace.” In practice, an officer can now look at an applicant who meets every legal requirement and still deny the case on discretionary grounds, as long as they write down their reasoning. The memo applies to new and pending I-485 cases alike. It does not force anyone to withdraw, and it does not change who is eligible to file. What changes is the weight officers give to the full picture: immigration history, gaps in status, and how a person entered. Expect more Requests for Evidence. Expect slower decisions.

Who feels the squeeze first

Single-intent categories carry the most risk. A student or visitor who pivots quickly to a green card invites scrutiny over “preconceived intent.” Dual-intent holders sit in a safer spot, because the law already lets them pursue permanent residence while working. Consider a Pakistani IT specialist on an H-1B in Austin with an approved employment petition. Her dual intent is recognised, so her path is steadier than a classmate adjusting straight from an F-1. Steadier is not bulletproof. Every applicant now faces a discretionary review, and clean documentation is what tips a close call. Keep status current. Keep records tidy.

Protect your filing before you submit

Front-load the evidence. Show continuous lawful status, a clear entry record, and strong ties to your sponsoring employer or family petitioner. If you sit in a single-intent category and aim for an employment green card, talk to a licensed attorney about moving to a dual-intent visa such as H-1B or O-1 before filing. Respond to any RFE in full and on time. A June 5, 2026 federal court ruling in Rhode Island also unfroze benefit processing for nationals of dozens of restricted countries, so some stalled cases may now move. The headline line about “extraordinary circumstances” came from a press release, not the memo body, so read the actual guidance, not the soundbite.

Mapping your route to permanent residence? Start with the right checklist at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

What to hold onto

  • Eligibility is necessary but no longer sufficient for adjustment of status.
  • Dual-intent visa holders face lower discretionary exposure than single-intent filers.
  • Expect more RFEs and longer timelines on I-485 cases.
  • Document lawful status and clean entry before you file.

Fast answers

Does the memo stop me from filing Form I-485?
No. You can still file if eligible. Officers simply weigh discretion more heavily before approving.

Are H-1B and L-1 holders safer?
Generally yes, because dual intent is recognised in law, though a discretionary review still applies to everyone.

Will decisions take longer now?
Most likely. More written discretionary analysis tends to mean more RFEs and slower adjudication.

Should I leave for consular processing instead?
It depends on your category and history. Get personalised advice from a licensed immigration attorney first.

Related reads

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  • LinkedIn: Eligible is no longer enough for a US green card. Here is what changed.
  • Twitter: A US green card from inside the country is now discretionary. Read before you file.
  • Facebook: Filing Form I-485 in 2026? One memo just raised the bar. Here is your plan.

Your green card, your homework

Discretion rewards the prepared. Tighten your status record, choose the right visa category, and file with evidence that answers the officer’s questions before they ask. Build your personalised moving plan at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

Sources

  • USCIS, Policy Memorandum PM-602-0199, Adjustment of Status and Discretion (T0 official)
  • AILA, Featured Issue: Adjustment of Status as Extraordinary Discretion (T1 specialist)
  • Boundless, USCIS Issues New Policy Memo on Adjustment of Status (T1 specialist)




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America Now Wants Your Green Card Filed Abroad — Here’s Why

Washington has quietly redrawn the route to a green card, and the shift lands hardest on people already inside the United States. In a policy memo dated 21 May 2026, USCIS instructed officers to treat US adjustment of status 2026 applications as an “extraordinary” act of discretion rather than a routine entitlement. For African nationals on student, work and family routes, the practical warning is blunt: be ready to finish your green card at a US embassy back home rather than from your apartment in Houston or Atlanta.

Inside Travel Explore

What the memo actually changes

The memo, PM-602-0199, does not rewrite the law. Instead it reframes how officers read it. US adjustment of status under Section 245 is now described as “administrative grace” that exists alongside — not above — the ordinary consular visa process. In plain terms, an officer can ask why you chose to apply from within the country instead of returning to your consulate, and weigh that against you. Lawyers are already reporting more Requests for Evidence and pointed interview questions. Because the memo restates existing law rather than announcing a brand-new rule, it carries no effective date and applies to cases in the pipeline right now.

Who feels it first

The sharpest impact falls on people who entered on temporary visas and later sought a green card without a dual-intent cushion — many students, visitors and some family applicants. Take Chidinma, a Nigerian nurse who arrived on an F-1, married a US citizen, and filed her I-485 in March. Her case is still valid, but her lawyer now expects extra scrutiny over why she did not process at the Lagos consulate. By contrast, H-1B and L-1 workers and their dependents are partly shielded, because those categories legally allow dual intent. The takeaway for African applicants: your visa history now shapes your risk more than ever.

Three moves to protect your case

First, document your ties and your timeline — show why filing in-country is reasonable and lawful in your situation. Second, get a licensed US immigration attorney to review your route before you file; a weak discretionary narrative is now a real risk. Third, keep your home-country paperwork current — police certificates, civil documents and passport validity — so that if consular processing becomes the cleaner path, you are not scrambling. Africans who already weighed consular processing during last year’s visa suspensions are a step ahead.

Confused about whether to file in-country or process abroad? Get a clear, country-specific breakdown at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

The short version

  • USCIS now treats in-country green cards as discretionary, not automatic.
  • Students, visitors and some family applicants face the most scrutiny.
  • H-1B and L-1 holders are partly protected by dual intent.
  • Keep home-country documents ready in case consular processing wins.

Your questions, answered

Does the May 2026 memo cancel adjustment of status?

No. Adjustment of status still exists, but USCIS now treats it as discretionary and may push more applicants toward consular processing abroad.

Are H-1B holders affected the same way?

Less so. Because H-1B and L-1 carry dual intent, the memo signals they are lower-risk than visitors or students switching to a green card in-country.

What is consular processing?

It is finishing your immigrant visa at a US embassy or consulate in your home country instead of filing for the green card from inside the US.

Should African applicants stop filing I-485?

Not automatically. Speak to a licensed attorney first; eligibility has not changed, but officers are now demanding stronger discretionary justification.

Related reads

Share this story

  • LinkedIn: The US just made in-country green cards “extraordinary.” Here is what African applicants must do differently.
  • Twitter/X: USCIS now wants many green cards processed at the embassy, not inside the US. Africans, read this.
  • Facebook: If you planned to file your green card from inside America, the rules just shifted. Full breakdown inside.

Make your US move with people who read the fine print

The difference between a smooth green card and a costly delay is now the quality of your strategy before you file. Travel Explore tracks every USCIS memo so you do not have to. Start your plan today at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

Sources

  • USCIS Newsroom — “USCIS Will Grant Adjustment of Status Only in Extraordinary Circumstances,” 21 May 2026 (T0, official). https://www.uscis.gov/newsroom/news-releases
  • Boundless — “USCIS Issues New Policy Memo on Adjustment of Status,” May 2026 (T1). https://www.boundless.com/blog/
  • Holland & Knight — “USCIS Policy Memo Signals Major Shift in Adjustment of Status Processing,” May 2026 (T1). https://www.hklaw.com/en/insights/publications/2026/05/