Employer & Applicant Advisory: In-Depth Analysis and FAQs of USCIS Policy Memorandum on I-485 Adjustment of Status Discretion and Consular Processing (PM-602-0199)
On May 21, 2026, USCIS issued Policy Memorandum (“PM-602-0199”), which lays out the agency’s view that Adjustment of Status (Form I-485) under INA § 245(a) is an “extraordinary” form of relief and a matter of “discretion and administrative grace”. The memorandum emphasizes that the adjustment process is not designed to supersede regular consular processing of immigrant visas at a U.S. consulate abroad.
While the memo does not explicitly create new statutory eligibility requirements, it signals a dramatic shift toward heightened discretionary scrutiny for both employment-based and family-based applicants. At this time, we simply do not know for sure exactly how this change and discretion will be applied by individual officers on the ground. We also expect legal challenges and additional guidance.
The Practical Significance of PM-602-0199
At its core, this memorandum attempts to rewrite the adjudicatory landscape by focusing on the concept of “discretion.” Practically, the directive instructs USCIS officers to view an applicant’s perfectly legal choice to file for adjustment of status—rather than departing the U.S. for consular processing—as a potentially adverse discretionary factor if it seems to contradict the original intent of their temporary visa or parole.
The significance of this policy shift is unsettling: it effectively gives adjudicators a broad, subjective mandate to deny applications even when foreign nationals successfully meet all statutory and technical eligibility requirements. For employers and individual applicants, this means that satisfying baseline eligibility criteria may no longer be sufficient; those with even minor perceived negative factors might now be forced to prove “unusual or even outstanding equities” just to secure an approval.
The Hidden Threat to Family-Based Adjustment Applicants
While the memo has caused immediate alarm in the employment-based sector, its most harmful impact may fall on family-based applicants—specifically those adjusting status based on marriage to a U.S. citizen or LPR after entering the U.S. on a single-intent nonimmigrant visa (such as a B-1/B-2 visitor or F-1 student).
Historically, Immediate Relatives of U.S. citizens have enjoyed statutory exemptions under INA § 245(c), which forgives unauthorized employment and visa overstays. However, PM-602-0199 explicitly directs officers to look beyond statutory eligibility and evaluate discretionary factors, specifically targeting “conduct of the alien after admission as a nonimmigrant… inconsistent with the purpose of that nonimmigrant status… or with representations made to consular or DHS officers when applying for a visa”.
If a foreign national enters as a B-1/B-2 tourist or an F-1 student (which require nonimmigrant intent) and subsequently marries a U.S. citizen or LPR to file for adjustment of status, USCIS adjudicators are now heavily encouraged to view this as an attempt to “avoid the ordinary consular immigrant visa process”. The memo warns that an applicant’s failure to depart as expected is “highly relevant” to the discretionary analysis, “particularly true when the failure is connected to the alien’s intention to reside permanently in the United States”. This effectively resurrects intense scrutiny over “preconceived immigrant intent,” threatening a discretionary denial even against spouses of U.S. citizens who are otherwise statutorily eligible.
Categories Potentially Facing Increased Scrutiny
Under this new directive, USCIS adjudicators are instructed to weigh an applicant’s failure to depart after their temporary admission as a highly relevant adverse factor. Consequently, certain groups are expected to face elevated scrutiny:
- B-1/B-2 Visitors and F-1 Students Marrying USCs/LPRs: Individuals entering on temporary visas who transition to permanent residence through marriage. USCIS may aggressively investigate preconceived intent, examining how soon after entry the marriage or AOS filing occurred.
- F-1 Students in Employment Categories: Individuals with a rapid transition to permanent residence, history of Day-1 CPT, or issues indicating preconceived immigrant intent at entry.
- Parole-Based Applicants: Humanitarian parole populations where the agency may suspect the applicant is improperly bypassing standard consular processing.
- Applicants with Status Violations: Those with unauthorized employment, overstays, or failure to maintain nonimmigrant status prior to filing.
Categories Likely Less Impacted
The memo explicitly acknowledges that applying for adjustment of status is not inconsistent with maintaining nonimmigrant status in a category with dual intent. Therefore, the following categories are comparatively safer:
- H-1B and L-1 Nonimmigrants: Dual-intent classifications remain compatible with pursuing adjustment of status, whether the AOS is employment-based or family-based.
- Immediate Relatives of U.S. Citizens (with caveats): While existing statutory exemptions for status violations remain unaffected, these applicants must now be rigorously prepared to defend against discretionary denials based on preconceived intent.
- Humanitarian Categories: Asylees, Refugees, and VAWA-based applicants.
How Would USCIS Determine if an Applicants Warrants “Favorable Exercise of Discretion” for I-485 Approval?
USCIS Policy Manual (Volume 7, Part A, Chapter 10) provides the broad framework adjudicators are instructed to use when evaluating whether an applicant warrants a “favorable exercise of discretion”. The manual explicitly instructs officers to weigh positive versus negative factors in the “totality of the circumstances,” balancing these discretionary elements to determine if an approval is in the best interest of the United States.
Note: as of the date of this article this section of the Policy Manual has not been updated with the revised guidance. We will continue to monitor for changes and will update. But the current guidance is helpful to understand the approach USCIS may take.
But we must be absolutely clear: we simply do not know for sure exactly how this discretion will be applied by individual officers on the ground. The directive provides broad authority, meaning adjudication trends will likely remain unpredictable until we see a sustained pattern of Requests for Evidence (RFEs) and decisions.
Under the current guidance, officers are directed to evaluate several broad categories, which include:
- Immigration Status and History: Compliance with immigration laws and conditions of status is a positive factor, whereas violations—such as overstays, unauthorized employment, or conduct inconsistent with a visa’s original purpose—are explicitly listed as negative factors.
- Business, Employment, and Skills: Property ties, stable employment history, and specialized U.S. education are positive factors. A history of unemployment, underemployment, or unauthorized employment serves as a negative factor.
- Family and Community Ties: Close family ties to the U.S., community standing, and potential hardship to relatives if the application is denied are weighed as positive factors, whereas a lack of such ties is a negative factor.
Disparate Impact: POSSIBLE Outcomes for Employment and Family-Based Adjustment
Because employment-based and family-based applicants inherently possess different characteristics, adjudicators might weigh these discretionary criteria very differently. The new policy opens the door for USCIS to use discretionary factors to penalize applicants for violations that are otherwise statutorily forgiven under the Immigration and Nationality Act.
Below are POSSIBLE ways these factors might be weighed under the new policy guidance.
Employment-Based I-485 Applicants
For employment-based applicants, it is POSSIBLE that the discretionary analysis will pivot heavily on the “Business, Employment, and Skills” and “Immigration Status” factors.
- POSSIBLE Favorable Scenario: An applicant who has maintained continuous H-1B (dual-intent) status for several years, possesses a specialized degree from a U.S. university, has a long and stable employment history, and has purchased a home in the U.S. might present overwhelming positive factors under this framework.
- POSSIBLE Unfavorable Scenario: Consider an applicant adjusting through an employer who previously had brief periods of unauthorized employment or utilized a questionable Day-1 CPT program. Statutorily, INA § 245(k) forgives up to 180 days of status violations. However, it is entirely POSSIBLE under the new guidance that an officer could use those exact same forgiven violations as negative discretionary factors. If an adjudicator decides the negative factors outweigh the positive, they could theoretically deny the application entirely on discretionary grounds.
Family-Based I-485 Applicants
For family-based applicants, particularly Immediate Relatives (e.g., spouses of U.S. citizens), it is POSSIBLE the analysis will center heavily on “Family and Community Ties” versus “Immigration Status and History”.
- POSSIBLE Favorable Scenario: An applicant with extensive family ties, community involvement, and a clean immigration history who entered on a dual-intent visa (like an L-1) before marrying a U.S. citizen will likely pass the discretionary test easily. Demonstrated hardship to the U.S. citizen spouse would further weigh heavily in their favor.
- POSSIBLE Unfavorable Scenario: Consider a B-2 visitor or F-1 student who marries a U.S. citizen shortly after entry and subsequently overstays their visa. Statutorily, Immediate Relatives are forgiven for overstays and unauthorized employment under INA § 245(c). However, it is POSSIBLE that adjudicators could now use the Policy Manual to heavily penalize the applicant for “conduct inconsistent with the purpose of admission” (i.e., preconceived immigrant intent). If the applicant lacks overwhelming offsetting positive equities, the officer might attempt to deny the application on discretionary grounds, despite their statutory eligibility.
Practical Employer & Applicant Considerations
I-485 applications can still be filed if the eligibility requirements are met. Unfortunately, even I-485 applicants who meet every single eligibility factor may face higher scrutiny at the time their I-485 application is adjudicated.
As a result, employers and family-based sponsors must exercise extreme diligence. It is crucial to evaluate the timing of permanent residence filings for employees or spouses in non-dual-intent classifications. For family-based applicants, documenting true nonimmigrant intent at the time of entry and demonstrating that life circumstances organically changed after entering the U.S. will be paramount. Employers should also prepare for an uptick in Requests for Evidence (RFEs) and Notices of Intent to Deny (NOIDs) for their sponsored workers.
Anticipated Litigation and Next Steps
Given the stark disconnect between this memorandum and the established regulatory framework of § 245.1, litigation is extremely likely. If USCIS uses this memorandum to systematically deny legitimate I-485 applications under the subjective guise of “discretion,” these denials will be highly susceptible to legal attack. Should routine discretionary denials begin to occur based on statutorily forgiven criteria, class action lawsuits will inevitably follow.
Because this adjudicatory landscape is now highly volatile, significant changes to the interpretation or the legal applicability of this policy are likely to emerge as a result of court challenges. We strongly urge employers, family-based sponsors, and applicants to stay closely tuned for updates, ongoing legal guidance, and new developments. We will continue to aggressively monitor these adjudicatory trends and provide strategic updates as this critical situation evolves.
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The Capitol Immigration Law Group has been serving the business community for over 15 years and is one of the most widely respected immigration law firms focused solely on U.S. employment-based immigration. Disclaimer: we make all efforts to provide timely and accurate information; however, the information in this article may become outdated or may not be applicable to a specific set of facts. It is not to be construed as legal advice.
