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Public charge: What you need to know

Northwest Justice Project

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This helps you understand what the public charge test is and if the public charge test applies to your immigration status. It can also help you decide whether you and your family should apply for public benefits. 

Fast facts

  • The public charge test does not apply to all immigrants. It mainly affects people applying for Green Card status through a family visa petition.
  • If the public charge test does apply to you because of your immigration status, you can safely use many benefits, including food, housing, and medical assistance (except for long-term institutional care). Your family members can use all benefits safely too.

The public charge test applies to some immigrants when they apply for Green Card status or for a visa to enter the U.S. Under the test, immigration officials can turn down (deny) the Green Card or visa application if it appears likely that the applicant will become dependent on certain government benefits (will become a “public charge”) in the future. 

No. It mainly affects people applying for Green Card status through the family visa petition (I-130) process. 

Many immigrants are not subject to the public charge test. These include: 

  • Asylees
  • Refugees
  • Self-petitioners under the Violence Against Women Act (“VAWA”)
  • Most T and U visa holders and applicants
  • Special Immigrants from Iraq and Afghanistan
  • People applying for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA)
  • People applying for Temporary Protected Status (TPS)
  • Special Immigrant Juveniles

Under the immigration laws and regulations, immigration officials must consider the following factors in the public charge determination:

  • The applicant’s income and resources (things the applicant owns)
  • The applicant’s age and health
  • The applicant's education, training, and skills
  • The applicant’s family status
  • The affidavit of support filed for the applicant

Immigration officials can’t make a decision based on just one of these factors. They must consider all of the factors. 

Even if the public charge test applies to you, most programs are safe to use. Immigration officials will only consider the applicant’s use of:

  • Cash assistance received on an ongoing basis. This includes TANF, State Family Assistance (SFA), Aged Blind and Disabled (ABD) benefits, or Supplemental Security Income (SSI) 
  • Long-term institutionalization paid for by the government. This includes things like a long-term stay in a nursing home paid for by Medicaid. It does not include incarceration, short-term rehabilitation, or home- and community- based long-term care.

Try to get legal help before you apply for these specific programs if you think the public charge might apply to you.

Yes. Immigration officials will not consider your use of many benefits, including: 

The only medical assistance considered in the public charge test is long-term institutionalization paid for by the government, such as when Medicaid pays for a person to live long-term in a nursing home.

Not necessarily. The public charge test may not even apply to you. Remember many categories of immigrants are not affected by the public charge test.

Even if the public charge test does apply to you, immigration officials can’t deny your application just because you have used ongoing cash assistance or government-funded long-term institutionalization. Immigration officials should consider how long you used those benefits for, and how long ago. They must also consider all the other factors that are part of the public charge determination, including job skills or training you have, your age and health, and the affidavit of support that you filed with your application. 

No. Immigration officials will not consider your family members’ use of any benefits, including cash, food, and medical. Your family members can use benefits without hurting your immigration case.

No. There is no public charge test for Green Card holders when they apply for naturalization or renew their Green Cards. 

However, Green Card holders who use benefits should try to limit trips outside the U.S. to less than 6 months (in a single trip). Green Card holders who use benefits and who have taken a trip outside the U.S. of over 6 months should get legal advice before applying for U.S. citizenship.

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