(UNITED STATES) The federal income rules that decide who can sponsor a family member for a green card were updated for 2025 and now apply to every Affidavit of Support filed on or after March 1, 2025. Under the 2025 HHS Poverty Guidelines, a sponsor must show income at or above 125% of the federal poverty level for their household size to submit a valid Affidavit of Support on Form I-864. Active-duty military who sponsor a spouse or child need to meet 100% of the poverty level.
These thresholds, updated each year by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, are central to family-based immigration cases because they aim to protect the immigrant from becoming a public charge and make clear who is financially responsible during the first years in the United States 🇺🇸.

Key 2025 Numbers and Examples
- For a sponsor and one immigrant (household of two) in the contiguous United States, the minimum is $26,437 annually under the 2025 guidelines.
- A household of four in the contiguous U.S. needs about $40,187.
- Alaska and Hawaii have higher cutoffs; for example, a household of four in Alaska must show at least $50,237.
USCIS and the Department of State apply these specific numbers when they review an Affidavit of Support, whether the case is processed by USCIS domestically or at a consulate through the National Visa Center (NVC).
Important: Sponsors who do not meet the income requirement risk a request for more evidence, long delays, or denial. The 2025 update is effective and not flexible — officers will use the 2025 figures for any Form I-864 filed on or after March 1, 2025.
Household Size: Who to Count
USCIS defines household size precisely. Include:
– The sponsor.
– The immigrant(s) you are sponsoring.
– Your dependents.
– Any household members whose income or assets you plan to include (they must meet USCIS criteria).
Household members counted must generally meet one of these conditions:
– Related by birth, marriage, or adoption.
– Listed as dependents on your tax return.
– Lived with you for at least six months.
If you count a household member’s income, that person must sign Form I-864A (the contract between sponsor and household member).
What Counts as Income and Documentation Needed
Income must be real, current, and documented. Common documents include:
– Recent pay stubs
– Federal tax returns and W-2s
– 1099s where applicable
– Bank statements
– Employer letters (start date, position, pay, and status)
Officers look for steady income likely to continue. Seasonal or new employment requires clearer documentation.
Using Assets to Make Up a Shortfall
If income is below the required threshold, assets may fill the gap — but the math is specific:
– Value of assets must equal at least 5 times the difference between actual income and the required 125% figure.
– If a U.S. citizen sponsors a spouse or child, assets must equal 3 times the shortfall.
Accepted assets may include savings, stocks, and sometimes home equity — but you must show:
– Fair market value
– Proof of ownership
– How assets can be converted to cash within one year without major loss
Note: A small income shortfall can require a large asset cushion once multiplied by three or five.
Active-Duty Military Exception
- Active-duty military sponsors petitioning for a spouse or child need only meet 100% of the poverty level (not 125%).
- This exception applies only for active-duty sponsors and only for spouses or children.
Legal Nature of the Affidavit of Support
USCIS stresses that Form I-864 is a binding contract, not a casual promise. When you sign:
– You agree to support the immigrant financially until a legal end point arrives.
– The obligation ends only when the immigrant: becomes a U.S. citizen; works 40 qualifying quarters (~10 years); or permanently leaves the U.S.
– Divorce does not terminate the obligation.
– If the immigrant receives means-tested public benefits during the obligation period, the government may seek repayment from the sponsor.
Forms and Where the Numbers Come From
- Form I-864 — core Affidavit of Support.
- Form I-864P — publishes the current HHS Poverty Guidelines for immigration use (the 2025 chart is binding for filings on/after March 1, 2025).
- Form I-864A — contract to include a household member’s income/ assets.
Each form includes instructions, definitions, and required documents. Official USCIS pages host the forms, instructions, and income charts so sponsors can match household size to the correct 2025 figure.
Preserve the original official links when you check forms:
– Form I-864
Affidavit of Support
– Form I-864P
Poverty Guidelines for Affidavit of Support
– Form I-864A
Contract Between Sponsor and Household Member
Common Pitfalls and Practical Advice
- Using an outdated poverty chart or miscounting household size can lead to a mismatch and trigger requests for evidence or refusal.
- Foreign income and assets usually do not count if the sponsor still lives overseas. U.S. citizens living abroad often need:
- A U.S. job offer, or
- A U.S.-based joint sponsor.
- Joint sponsors file a separate
Form I-864
and must independently meet 125% for their household size. Their obligation is equally enforceable.
Attorney and community group observations:
– The 125% standard is unchanged in 2025; only the dollar figures rise slowly each year to track inflation.
– Joint sponsors and household member income remain common and acceptable tools to meet requirements when one sponsor falls short.
Step-by-Step Checklist for Sponsors (2025)
- Define your household size correctly.
- Match that number to the correct line on Form I-864P (2025).
- Add up all eligible income sources and collect supporting documents.
- If income falls short, calculate asset need:
- 5x the shortfall (general rule).
- 3x the shortfall (U.S. citizen sponsoring spouse/child).
- Gather strong proof of assets (ownership, market value, liquidity).
- If necessary, find a joint sponsor and have them file a separate
Form I-864
with full documentation. - Send a clean, complete packet to USCIS or upload to the NVC and monitor for follow-up requests.
Impact on Case Processing and Examples
- Mismatched or insufficient income/asset evidence can cause RFE, delays, or refusal, which may add months to processing.
- Example 1: Sponsor makes $24,000, household of two (2025 floor $26,437). Gap = $2,437.
- If U.S. citizen sponsoring spouse: need assets of $7,311 (3 x gap).
- Or add a joint sponsor who meets 125% for their household.
- Example 2: Permanent resident in Alaska sponsoring spouse + 2 children (household of four, floor $50,237). If income = $46,000, gap = $4,237.
- Asset requirement = $21,185 (5 x gap) for a permanent resident sponsor.
- If assets unavailable, a joint sponsor is practical.
For NVC cases, uploaded forms and evidence must match 2025 benchmarks for the case to be “documentarily qualified.” If not, the NVC will request more proof or a new affidavit.
Records and Long-Term Considerations
- Keep copies of
Form I-864
, tax returns, and related records. - If a joint sponsor was used, retain their records too.
- To show an immigrant reached 40 quarters, save proof from the Social Security Administration.
Final Takeaway
The 2025 HHS Poverty Guidelines set new numerical floors but leave the underlying mechanics intact. The Affidavit of Support on Form I-864
is the government’s test of whether a sponsor can support a newcomer without immediate reliance on public benefits. Tools exist — assets, Form I-864A household income, and joint sponsors — to fill solvable gaps.
For official information and to download current forms and instructions, review USCIS’s Affidavit of Support page and the specific form pages:
– Form I-864
Affidavit of Support
– Form I-864P
Poverty Guidelines for Affidavit of Support
– Form I-864A
Contract Between Sponsor and Household Member
Families with consular-stage questions can contact the National Visa Center, which applies the same 2025 standards when checking document packages. With careful planning, accurate household counts, current documents, and, if needed, a joint sponsor, most families can meet the requirement and avoid preventable delays.
Frequently Asked Questions
This Article in a Nutshell
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services updated the poverty guidelines for 2025, which now govern all Affidavits of Support (Form I-864) filed on or after March 1, 2025. Sponsors must meet 125% of the federal poverty level for their household size, except active-duty military sponsoring a spouse or child who must meet 100%. USCIS and the National Visa Center use these figures when reviewing cases. If a sponsor’s income is insufficient, assets may cover the shortfall—generally five times the gap, or three times for U.S. citizens sponsoring a spouse or child—or a joint sponsor can be used. Accurate household counts, proper documentation (pay stubs, tax returns, bank statements), and adherence to the 2025 chart are essential to avoid RFEs, delays, or denials. The Form I-864 is a binding obligation that ends only when statutorily specified events occur, such as naturalization or 40 qualifying work quarters.