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Adjustment of Status Navigator is not a law firm. Content on this site is not legal advice. We are not affiliated with USCIS, DHS, or the Department of Justice EOIR. We are not a notario, notario público, asesor legal, consultor de inmigración, or immigration consultant. Information on this site is general educational content. It is not, and cannot be, advice about your specific case. For advice, consult a licensed immigration attorney or a DOJ EOIR-recognized representative. Read our full Terms, Privacy Policy, and Disclaimer.

Updated May 23, 2026.

How PM-602-0199 Affects Marriage-Based Green Card Applications

If you or your spouse is going through a marriage-based green card, a new policy memo may have you worried. Here is what actually changed and what it means for your case.

PM-602-0199 does not bar marriage-based green cards. The May 21, 2026 USCIS policy memorandum keeps Form I-130 and Form I-485 concurrent filing fully available for spouses of U.S. citizens (USC) and lawful permanent residents (LPR). What changes is the discretionary lens at the I-485 stage. That means a documented bona fide marriage and a complete equity record matter more than before.

This page is general educational information from a software tool. It is not a substitute for individualized review by a licensed immigration attorney who can examine a specific marriage, prior immigration history, and the supporting documentation.

Did PM-602-0199 Change the Rules for Marriage-Based Green Cards?

No statute changed. Form I-130 eligibility for spouses of U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents is unchanged. Form I-485 eligibility under INA section 245 is unchanged. Concurrent filing for immediate relatives of U.S. citizens still works the same way procedurally. What changed is the adjudicator instruction set: officers are now directed to weigh discretion explicitly even after eligibility is established, per the memorandum PDF on USCIS.gov.

For a deeper walkthrough of the memorandum itself, see the canonical explainer at /policy/pm-602-0199. For the broader question of whether anyone can still file an I-485 at all, see /learn/can-i-still-file-adjustment-of-status-2026.

The practical translation for marriage cases is simple: your I-485 file should now present the bona fide marriage record and the foreign-national spouse's equities together. Do not rely on the I-130 approval alone to carry the discretionary analysis at the I-485 stage. The Boundless analysis published May 2026 makes this same point: family-based applicants should expect officers to apply the new discretionary framing at the next adjudication touchpoint, including interview and any Request for Evidence response.

How Does the New Discretionary Framing Apply to a Textbook Concurrent Filing?

A textbook concurrent filing involves a U.S. citizen spouse, a foreign-national spouse who was inspected and admitted to the United States, current valid status (or immediate-relative status that excuses certain overstays), and a bona fide marriage. Under PM-602-0199, the I-130 approval still establishes the qualifying family relationship. The I-485 adjudication still requires statutory eligibility. What is new is that officers are now directed to weigh the equity record on the I-485 even in these straightforward cases.

In practice, officers may look more closely at the full marriage record:

Per the Wolfsdorf Rosenthal May 2026 advisory, the strongest files will present the equity record as part of the initial filing, not in response to a Request for Evidence.

What If My Spouse Has a Period of Overstay or Unauthorized Presence?

Immediate-relative spouses of U.S. citizens benefit from a specific statutory treatment that excuses certain overstays for purposes of adjustment of status eligibility. That statutory treatment is unchanged by PM-602-0199. What changes is that the period of unauthorized presence is now explicitly part of the discretionary analysis even if it does not bar eligibility.

Per the Murthy Law Firm analysis dated May 22, 2026, the operative memorandum text directs officers to consider negative factors such as prior immigration violations and unauthorized employment as part of the equity-balancing exercise. The Board of Immigration Appeals framework cited in the memorandum allows these negative factors to be "offset by a showing of unusual or even outstanding equities." The historical equity categories that can offset negatives include:

Topics worth discussing with a licensed immigration attorney about a specific situation include the exact timeline of any unauthorized status, whether the immediate-relative treatment applies, how unauthorized employment (if any) interacts with section 245(c) bars, and how the equity record can be presented to address negative factors in context.

What About Prior Immigration History: Denials, Visa Overstays, or Prior Filings?

Prior immigration history is now squarely inside the discretionary frame. PM-602-0199 directs officers to consider the following as part of the discretionary analysis:

None of these are new statutory bars. They are factors the equity record needs to address directly.

Per the Harris Beach Murtha May 2026 analysis, the strongest files present negative factors with context rather than hoping officers will overlook them. A prior visa overstay offset by ten years of stable U.S. residence, tax compliance, and a bona fide marriage looks different from the same overstay with no equity record behind it. A prior denial that was procedural looks different from a prior denial on credibility grounds.

For applicants with pending I-485 cases filed before May 21, 2026, the Ballard Spahr May 2026 analysis notes that the new framing will apply at the next adjudication step. That is a window to supplement the equity record before the interview or before any Request for Evidence response.

Adjustment of Status vs. Consular Processing for a Marriage Case

Both routes lead to the same lawful permanent resident status. The structural choice depends on facts a licensed immigration attorney can assess. The table below summarizes the historical procedural differences. It is descriptive, not predictive of any particular outcome.

DimensionAdjustment of Status (I-485 in U.S.)Consular Processing (immigrant visa abroad)
Where the foreign spouse isInside the United StatesOutside, or required to depart
Interview locationUSCIS field officeU.S. embassy or consulate abroad
Work authorization while pendingEAD typically available via I-765Generally none until visa issued
Travel while pendingAdvance parole required (I-131)N/A (spouse is already abroad)
Discretionary framing under PM-602-0199Reframed as "extraordinary discretionary relief"Treated as the regular immigrant-visa pathway
Unlawful-presence trigger on departureNone (no departure required)Possible 3- or 10-year bar if applicable

For a spouse currently in the United States with any documented unauthorized presence, departing to consular-process can trigger inadmissibility bars under INA section 212(a)(9)(B). For a spouse currently abroad, consular processing may be the only structural option. A licensed immigration attorney can advise whether the I-485 route or the consular route is appropriate for a specific situation.

What Does "Good-Faith Marriage" Evidence Look Like?

USCIS has historically evaluated bona fide marriage through documentary patterns that show two lives actually joined over time. The categories below are the evidence types that have historically appeared in successful I-485 files. The strength of any specific category depends on the marriage's facts.

Joint financial life:

Joint housing:

Shared insurance and benefits:

Documented life together:

Third-party validation:

This is the historical evidence pattern. It is general educational information, not a complete checklist. A licensed immigration attorney can review which categories of evidence are strongest for a specific marriage and which may need additional documentation before filing.

What Should Marriage-Based Applicants Do Now?

Decisions about filing strategy belong with a licensed immigration attorney. What an applicant couple can do before the consultation is arrive with a complete factual record. With that record organized, the consultation becomes substantive instead of exploratory.

Here is what to gather before you meet with an attorney:


Get your marriage-based situation organized before meeting with an immigration attorney. Start the intake walkthrough to build a complete record, or find an AILA attorney to review your case.

Frequently asked questions

Does PM-602-0199 block marriage-based green cards?
No. The memorandum does not change Form I-130 or Form I-485 eligibility for spouses of U.S. citizens or lawful permanent residents. Concurrent filing rules, fees, and supporting-document lists are unchanged. What changes is how an officer is instructed to weigh discretion at the I-485 stage, per the May 2026 Boundless and Murthy Law Firm analyses of the memorandum text published on USCIS.gov.
Can a U.S. citizen still file Form I-130 and Form I-485 concurrently for a spouse?
Yes. Concurrent filing remains available where the foreign-national spouse is in the United States, was inspected and admitted or paroled, and is the immediate relative of a U.S. citizen. The procedural channel is unchanged. The discretionary lens at adjudication is new, which means equity documentation and a bona fide marriage record matter more than they did before May 21, 2026.
What evidence shows a 'good-faith' or 'bona fide' marriage to USCIS?
Historically, USCIS has reviewed evidence such as joint bank and credit-card statements, a joint lease or deed, shared health or auto insurance, joint tax returns, dated photographs across time and locations, travel records together, birth certificates of any shared children, and sworn declarations from family and friends with personal knowledge of the relationship. An attorney can review which categories of evidence are strongest given specific facts.
What if my spouse had a period of overstay or unauthorized employment?
Immediate-relative spouses of U.S. citizens have specific statutory treatment for certain overstays that does not change under PM-602-0199. However, the discretionary framing means these facts are now explicitly part of the equity-balancing exercise at the I-485 stage. Topics worth discussing with a licensed immigration attorney about a specific situation include the timeline of any unauthorized status and how to contextualize it in the record.
Is consular processing safer than adjustment of status for a marriage case?
It depends on facts an attorney can assess. Consular processing involves an immigrant-visa interview at a U.S. embassy abroad and requires the foreign-national spouse to depart the United States. Departure can trigger separate unlawful-presence bars in some situations. An attorney can advise whether the I-485 in the United States or the consular route is appropriate given the spouse's location, prior immigration history, and any inadmissibility concerns.
How PM-602-0199 Affects Marriage-Based Green Card Applications — Adjustment of Status Navigator