Adjustment Status Navigator is not a law firm. The information here is not legal advice. We are not affiliated with USCIS, DHS, or the Department of Justice. We are not a notario, notario público, or immigration consultant. The information here is general educational content only. For advice about your specific situation, consult a licensed immigration attorney or a DOJ EOIR-recognized representative.
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Updated for USCIS Policy Memo PM-602-0199 (May 21, 2026)

Prepare for Adjustment of Status with calm, organized facts.

A free workspace to organize your case, build a document checklist, and walk into an immigration attorney meeting prepared. We track recent USCIS guidance, including the May 2026 memo. We are a software tool. We are not a law firm.

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Navigating Adjustment of Status

Adjustment of Status (Form I-485) is how many people already in the United States become lawful permanent residents. The process has a few predictable stages, and one important recent shift.

  1. Filing. Most applicants file Form I-485, often alongside an underlying petition such as Form I-130 or Form I-140.
  2. Biometrics. USCIS schedules a fingerprint and photo appointment for identity and background checks.
  3. Interview. An officer reviews the file and asks questions about the basis for adjustment and the supporting record.
  4. Decision. USCIS approves, requests more evidence, or denies. Decisions can be appealed or revisited through other channels.
  5. What changed in May 2026. USCIS Policy Memo PM-602-0199 directs officers to weigh discretionary factors more heavily on pending I-485 applications. Documenting positive equities now matters more.

Read the full memo explainer

Updated for USCIS Policy Memo PM-602-0199 (May 21, 2026)

Most adjustment-of-status questions are decided one case at a time, by a licensed immigration attorney looking at the full record. This tool is built to make that conversation cheaper and clearer. You arrive with a timeline, a document checklist, and a short list of topics to raise. The attorney spends the meeting answering, not assembling.

When you are ready, AILA publishes a free public directory of immigration attorneys. EOIR also maintains a list of pro-bono legal-service providers for applicants who cannot afford counsel. We do not select, vet, or recommend specific attorneys; we point you to the directories the bar already publishes.

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When USCIS issues new guidance about adjustment of status, we send one short email summarizing what changed and what it means. No marketing. No sharing your address.

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