TPS for South Sudan citizens — current status, eligibility, deadlines
Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for South Sudan citizens in the US. Current designation status, eligibility requirements, registration deadlines.
TPS for South Sudan citizens
Temporary Protected Status (TPS) is a humanitarian immigration status granted by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to nationals of countries experiencing ongoing armed conflict, environmental disaster, or other extraordinary conditions. TPS provides protection from removal and authorization to work — but does NOT directly lead to a green card.
⚠️ TPS for South Sudan was TERMINATED
- Termination action: Termination of TPS Designation
- Publication date: 2025-11-06
- Source: Federal Register
What this means:
- TPS holders from South Sudan who do not have another immigration status may face removal proceedings once their work authorization expires.
- Termination notices often face litigation that may delay implementation. Verify current status at USCIS before relying.
- Affected individuals should consult an immigration attorney immediately to explore alternative pathways (asylum, U-visa, family-based, cancellation of removal).
How TPS works
- Initial designation — DHS designates a country for TPS for 6-18 months based on conditions
- Extensions — DHS reviews and decides to extend, redesignate (covers new arrivals), or terminate
- Re-registration — Each cycle, current TPS holders must re-register during a published window (usually 60 days)
- Forms used: Form I-821 (TPS application), Form I-765 (work authorization), Form I-131 (travel)
- Fees: Form I-821 (initial TPS application) is approximately $50 — a figure capped by INA § 244(c)(1)(B) and set in the 2024 USCIS fee rule, not by H.R.1 / OBBBA. Re-registration carries no Form I-821 fee. H.R.1 / OBBBA (effective 2026-05-29) did not change the I-821 fee — it only capped TPS EAD validity at 1 year. Verify current amounts at uscis.gov/g-1055 before applying.
Related procedural information
- USCIS Form I-821 — TPS application — the actual application form
- USCIS Form I-765 — Employment Authorization (EAD) — work authorization
- Federal Register immigration rules — recent TPS terminations + extensions
- Find an immigration attorney — for alternative-status analysis
- BIA-recognized legal help by state — free representation
Last verified: 2026-05-27. General procedural information — not legal advice. TPS status changes frequently; always verify at uscis.gov/humanitarian/temporary-protected-status before relying.
Recent fee, deadline, and contact context (2025-2026)
DHS terminated TPS designations for 8 countries between 2025-09-08 and 2026-03-03: Yemen, Somalia, Ethiopia, Haiti, Burma (Myanmar), South Sudan, Syria, and Venezuela 2021 designation. The Haitian TPS termination alone affects approximately 500,000+ TPS holders. Termination notices typically take effect 6-18 months after Federal Register publication; some face litigation that delays implementation.
TPS filing requirements: Form I-821 (TPS Application — fee approximately $50 + biometric services fee where applicable) and Form I-765 (Employment Authorization — fee approximately $410 with biometrics, $470 paper filing). The approximately $50 Form I-821 fee is set by the 2024 USCIS fee rule and capped by INA § 244(c)(1)(B), and re-registration carries no Form I-821 fee; H.R.1 / OBBBA (effective 2026-05-29) did not change this fee — it only capped TPS EAD validity at 1 year. Verify current amounts at uscis.gov/g-1055 (Form G-1055 Fee Schedule) before filing.
Re-registration windows are published in the Federal Register; typically 60 days from publication. Missing the window requires a “good cause” explanation. Travel abroad: Form I-131 (Advance Parole) required BEFORE departure; fee approximately $660. Returning without Advance Parole abandons TPS protection. Sanchez v. Mayorkas (594 U.S. ___, 2021) held that TPS holders who entered without inspection cannot adjust status to LPR in the US without prior lawful admission — requires consular processing abroad which triggers 3-year/10-year unlawful-presence bars in many cases.
USCIS Form I-821 instructions and current designation status: uscis.gov/humanitarian/temporary-protected-status. USCIS Contact Center: 1-800-375-5283 Monday-Friday 8:00am-8:00pm Eastern Time. For affected nationals, consult a BIA-recognized organization (free) or AILA-member immigration attorney within 30 days of any termination announcement to evaluate alternative pathways (asylum, U-visa, T-visa, VAWA, cancellation of removal).
Frequently asked questions
Is TPS for South Sudan still active as of 2026?
What if my South Sudan TPS expires? Can I extend it?
Can I apply for a green card while on TPS for South Sudan?
What happens if TPS for South Sudan ends and I have no other status?
The rules change. Hear about it first.
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General information, not legal advice. MigrantUSA is an independent publisher and is not a law firm; using this site does not create an attorney-client relationship, and this content is not a substitute for advice from a licensed attorney about your specific situation. US federal, state, and local government procedures, fees, and forms change. Always verify current details directly with the relevant agency before acting. For immigration, tax, or other legal matters specific to your situation, consult a licensed attorney or BIA-accredited representative.
