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What is an Immigration Waiver?
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Under the United States Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”), you may not be lawfully permitted into the country if you are applying for an immigration visa or traveling to enter the U.S. and fall under a certain category.
As stated in the act, certain categories for inadmissibility include:
- Health-related grounds
- Criminal-related grounds
- Fraud/Misrepresentation
- Unlawful presence and other visa violations
Although these are stated in the INA as disqualifying factors for admittance into the United States, under certain grounds you may be eligible to apply for a waiver. If you think you may fall under one of the categories for inadmissibility, you should speak with an experienced immigration attorney who can help you through the option of applying for a waiver.
Types of Immigration Waivers
If you or your loved one falls under the categories listed above for inadmissibility into the United States, there are several different types of waivers you may be able to apply for to avoid the inability to be permitted into the country.
Some of the main forms of immigration waivers include:
- Hardship Waiver, Form I-601
- Provisional Waiver, Form I-601A
- Criminal Conviction Waiver
- Fraud/Misrepresentation Waiver
- Unlawful Presence Waiver
What is a Hardship Waiver?
A United States hardship waiver, otherwise known as an “extreme hardship” waiver, grants you the ability to overturn your status as an otherwise inadmissible person by meeting certain qualifications. The immigration officer deciding your submitted request for a hardship waiver must consider all the elements of your case and evidence in a fair and unbiased manner.
The application for the extreme hardship waiver, Form I-601, not only encompasses that specific waiver, but also covers the criminal conviction, misrepresentation/fraud and unlawful presence waivers.
You may be eligible to apply for extreme hardship if you and your sponsor can provide substantial evidence proving your inadmissibility into the United States will result in extreme hardship (suffering or harm) for your sponsor (spouse, parent, or child) if they remain in the U.S. or if they have to accompany you to your country of origin. Your sponsor must be an immediate relative, otherwise known as a “qualifying relative.”
Factors for Consideration for Extreme Hardship
Several factors go into consideration for granting you an extreme hardship waiver. These factors include family ties and direct impact, social/cultural, economic, healthcare, and country conditions.
Family Ties and Direct Impact
Considerations:
- Qualifying relative’s age
- Length of qualifying relative’s residence in the U.S.
- Any facts about the relationship between you and your qualifying relative that would further a hardship resulting in separation
Social and Cultural Impact
This pertains to:
- Qualifying relative’s extent of integration into the United States and if they need to relocate from the U.S. to unite with you in another country, how difficult it would be to integrate into that country (language, customs, etc.)
- Loss of access to U.S. courts, criminal justice system, and civil proceedings
Economic Impact
Prove economic impacts would cause extreme hardship to your qualifying relative by:
- Proving your inadmissibility to the U.S. would result in extreme economic duress for your qualifying relative
- Cost of care for elderly, children, or disabled family members
Healthcare Conditions
Healthcare conditions include:
- Healthcare quality of the country in which you would have to return to
- Mental impact on your qualifying relative due to your separation
Country Conditions
Country conditions include:
- Conditions of the country you will be returned to – civil war, violence, natural disasters, etc.
What is a Provisional Waiver?
An Application for Provisional Unlawful Presence Waiver, Form I-601A, otherwise more simply known as a “provisional waiver,” may be submitted for consideration if you’re a qualifying immigration visa applicant who is the relative of a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident.
If you were residing here unlawfully, the form allows you to seek a waiver of the 3 and/or 10 year bar of entering into the U.S. before physically leaving the country to attend your immigration visa interview at the consulate or embassy of your country of origin.
It’s important to note that if you’re approved for the provisional waiver, it does not additionally provide any other types of benefits such as employment authorization. You are additionally not granted official lawful residency in the United States – you must go through filing the required application, fees, and process for seeking lawful immigration status.
Eligibility for a Provisional Waiver
If you were residing in the United States unlawfully, and you think you may be eligible to apply for a provisional waiver, consult an experienced immigration attorney before submitting the I-601A application.
Eligibility may depend on several factors in your case. These factors may include:
- Physical presence in the U.S.
- 17 years of age or older
- Pending immigration visa with the Department of State
- Unlawful presence exceeding 180 days but not more than a year (during a continuous stay) or unlawful presence exceeding more than a year (during a continuous stay)
- You are not in current removal proceedings
- You do not have a pending Application to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status, Form I-485
Remember, upon acceptance of your provisional waiver, you are still required to depart the U.S. to attend your immigrant visa interview at the U.S. embassy or consulate in your country of origin. Staying in the United States will result in revocation of the waiver and the Department of Homeland Security will initiate removal (deportation) proceedings.
What is a Criminal Conviction Waiver?
If you’ve been convicted of a crime and you’re going through the process of obtaining immigration status in the United States, you may be deemed as “inadmissible.” In other words, you may not be able to obtain lawful immigration status in the U.S. based on your criminal conviction even though everything else in your application proves you to be eligible.
If this is your situation, you may be eligible to apply for a criminal conviction waiver of inadmissibility if you can provide evidence that your denial of entry into the U.S. would cause extreme hardship to your sponsor (an immediate family member), otherwise known as a qualifying relative, if they remain in the U.S. or if they have to accompany you to your country of origin. You must file an Application for Waiver of Grounds of Inadmissibility, Form I-601, in addition to the filing fee and supporting documents.
It’s important to note that not all crimes are eligible for the waiver and determining the level of extreme hardship that may be imposed on your qualifying relative will play a pivotal role in establishing whether or not this may be granted.
Eligibility for the Criminal Conviction Waiver
Eligibility is provided to individuals who committed the following crimes:
- Committed or were involved in a crime of moral turpitude
- Have more than one criminal conviction
- Were convicted on a drug trafficking charge (such as possessing a certain amount of marijuana)
- Were convicted of prostitution or commercialized vice
- Nonimmigrants or non-U.S. citizens who were given immunity from a serious criminal offense
In addition to the crimes listed above, you must provide evidence in how your inadmissibility will provide extreme hardship to your qualifying relative. You must prove that your absence would cause a severe impact on economic status, social/cultural status, family ties, and other potential factors.
What is a Fraud or Misrepresentation Waiver?
If you’re in the process of obtaining your immigration visa or Lawful Permanent Residence status and have been found to misrepresent or commit fraud in relation to your applications for lawful immigration status, you may be found inadmissible under the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) Section 212.
If you’re in this situation, you may be able to apply for a fraud or misrepresentation waiver of inadmissibility if you can provide evidence that your denial of entry into the U.S. would cause extreme hardship to your sponsor (otherwise known as a qualifying relative) if they remain in the U.S. or if they have to accompany you to your country of origin. Your qualifying relative must be an immediate family relative such as your parent, spouse, or child.
What Constitutes as an Act of Fraud?
If you knowingly relay false information with the intent to deceive, you’re committing an act of fraud.
Considerations for an act of fraud under immigration laws include:
- Intent to obtain immigration benefits
- Relaying false information
- Intent to deceive
- False information was material
- False information was material and relayed to the U.S. government
What Constitutes as an Act of Misrepresentation?
If you willfully misrepresented information in any way, you are committing an act of misrepresentation. The difference between this and committing an act of fraud is that misrepresentation does not require the intent to deceive.
Considerations for an act of misrepresentation under immigration laws include:
- Sought to obtain immigration benefits
- Relayed false representation
- False representation was willfully made
- False representation was material
- False representation was material and relayed to the U.S. government
Eligibility for the Fraud or Misrepresentation Waiver
To be eligible to submit the waiver application, you must:
- Prove that your denial into the United States (or removal) would result in extreme hardship to your qualifying relative: State impact on family ties, extent of the economic impact, whether or not your qualifying relative must return with you to your country of origin, and the resulting social/cultural impact.
- Prove the waiver should be admissible as a matter of discretion (positive factors outweigh the negative factors): Facts surrounding the fraud or misrepresentation must be analyzed as well as the motivation, mental capacity, and if there is a history of similar acts committed in the past.
What is an Unlawful Presence Waiver?
If you’re in the process of obtaining your immigration visa or Lawful Permanent Residence status and it’s been discovered that you were unlawfully present or residing in the United States, you may be found inadmissible under the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) Section 212 and barred from reentering for a specified number of years.
The number of years you can be barred from entering the U.S. are:
- 3 years: If you overstayed your visa more than 180 days but less than a year during a single continuous stay
- 10 years: If you overstayed your visa more than a year during a single continuous stay
- Indefinitely: Reentering or attempting to reenter repeatedly after acquiring more than a year during a single stay or multiple stays
If you’re in this situation, you may be able to apply for an unlawful presence waiver of inadmissibility if you can provide evidence that your denial of entry into the U.S. (or removal) would cause extreme hardship to your sponsor (otherwise known as a qualifying relative) if they remain in the U.S. or if they have to accompany you to your country of origin. Your qualifying relative must be an immediate family relative such as your parent, spouse, or child.
Factors for Consideration for the Unlawful Presence Waiver
Several factors go into the consideration of granting you an unlawful presence waiver.
The factors include:
- Proof that your denial into the United States (or removal) would result in extreme hardship to your qualifying relative: State impact on family ties, extent of the economic impact, whether or not your qualifying relative must return with you to your country of origin, and the resulting social/cultural impact.
- Whether you are 18 years or older: Minors cannot be unlawfully present.
- Whether you have asylum status: With an application pending, you are not unlawfully present.
- Whether you are a victim of a form of trafficking: If you were a victim of sex trafficking, you may not be unlawfully present.