Practice Area
I-601 Hardship Waiver
Overcome Certain Grounds of Inadmissibility Through a Strong Hard
At the Law Offices of Shawn S. Sedaghat, we help clients identify the correct waiver strategy, gather persuasive hardship evidence, and present a complete application to USCIS.
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Overview
When You May Need an I-601 Waiver
Eligibility Requirements
Our Process
Document Checklist
Key Benefits
Related Practice Areas
Frequently Asked Questions
Form I-601 is used to request a waiver of certain grounds of inadmissibility. It may be available when a person is otherwise eligible for an immigration benefit but is blocked because of a specific inadmissibility issue, such as unlawful presence, fraud or misrepresentation, certain criminal grounds, or certain health-related grounds.
No. The I-601A provisional waiver is generally limited to certain unlawful presence cases and is filed before the applicant departs the United States for consular processing. The I-601 is broader and may apply to different grounds of inadmissibility, but it is usually filed after an inadmissibility issue has been identified or in connection with certain immigration applications.
The qualifying relative depends on the waiver category. In many cases, the qualifying relative is a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident spouse or parent. In some waiver categories, a child, son, or daughter may also qualify. Children’s hardship may also be relevant when it affects the qualifying spouse or parent.
Extreme hardship is hardship beyond the ordinary consequences of family separation or relocation. USCIS reviews the totality of the circumstances, including medical, emotional, financial, educational, family, and country-condition factors.
Possibly, but not every criminal ground is waivable. The exact conviction, statute, sentence, date, immigration history, and hardship evidence must be reviewed before determining whether an I-601 waiver is available.
Certain fraud or willful misrepresentation findings may be waivable if the applicant meets the legal requirements and can prove the required hardship to a qualifying relative. These cases require careful preparation because USCIS will review both the misrepresentation and the hardship evidence.
After approval, the underlying immigration case may continue. For consular cases, the consulate may resume processing the immigrant visa application. For adjustment cases, USCIS may continue reviewing the green card application. Approval of the waiver does not guarantee final approval of the visa or green card.
Depending on the case, options may include filing a motion, appeal, or a new waiver with stronger evidence. The best option depends on the reason for denial, the available evidence, and the applicant’s overall immigration history.
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