The Department of Homeland Security said on December 12, 2025, that it is ending all categorical family reunification parole (FRP) programs for people from Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, and Honduras, including their immediate family members. DHS called the programs an “abuse” of humanitarian parole and said it will return parole decisions to “a case-by-case basis as intended by Congress.”
In its announcement, DHS framed the move as a shift back to what it called “common-sense policies” and “a return to America First,” arguing that parole “was never intended to be used in this way.” The department said the government’s duty to prevent fraud and protect national security outweighs the goal of reuniting families through these programs.

DHS reasoning and stated risks
DHS said the FRP programs had “security gaps caused by insufficient vetting” that “malicious and fraudulent actors could exploit to enter the United States 🇺🇸,” which the department said created “an unacceptable level of risk” to national security and public safety.
The agency also emphasized prioritizing “the safety, security, and financial and economic well-being of Americans,” language signaling the administration’s broader view that parole programs can create incentives for migration and strain government resources.
“If we deny their Form I-485, their period of parole will be terminated, and they should depart the United States immediately.”
This blunt statement underscores that parole is temporary and is distinct from an immigrant visa or lawful permanent residence. Parole can be ended, leaving people without a lawful basis to remain if they do not have another status.
Key dates and the narrow exception tied to Form I-485
- January 14, 2026 — the key termination date for many people already in the United States on FRP parole. DHS said: if their parole has not yet expired on that day, it “will terminate on that date” unless they meet a narrow exception tied to a pending green card application.
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The exception depends on Form I-485 (Application to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status). DHS said parole will not terminate on January 14, 2026 if:
- The person has a pending Form I-485, Application to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status that is postmarked or electronically filed on or before December 15, 2025, and
- That Form I-485 is still pending on January 14, 2026.
For those who qualify under this exception, DHS said their parole “will remain valid until either their period of parole expires or we make a final decision on their pending Form I-485, whichever is sooner.”
Employment authorization and departure requirements
DHS said it will also revoke work authorization tied to FRP parole:
- “When we terminate an alien’s period of parole under the FRP programs, we also will revoke their employment authorization based on that parole,” the department said.
- DHS added it will notify each person “individually” that their parole is being terminated and their employment authorization is being revoked.
For people who built budgets around wages earned under those permits, this revocation can come before other options are ready — especially if a person is still waiting on an immigration filing or cannot file at all.
For those with no other lawful basis to stay after parole ends, DHS said they must depart the United States before their parole termination date. The department directed people to use the CBP Home app to report their intent to depart and said “incentives such as an exit bonus, financial and travel document assistance, and forgiveness of civil fines are available to qualifying aliens.” DHS pointed people to official information on CBP’s site, including the app and departure process: CBP Home.
How FRP worked (what’s being ended)
The terminated FRP programs were built around the idea of letting some people with approved family petitions enter earlier, on temporary parole, instead of waiting abroad for an immigrant visa to become available.
Key procedural points from the source material:
- FRP allowed beneficiaries of approved Form I-130, Petition for Alien Relative petitions—described as “family-based preference categories, not immediate relatives”—from the listed countries to come to the United States while awaiting immigrant visas.
- Parole was granted under INA section 212(d)(5) for “urgent humanitarian reasons or public benefit.”
- In practice, the process involved invitations to petitioners and the filing of Form I-134A within 12 months per beneficiary.
DHS did not provide a new alternative route in its December 12 announcement. Ending the categorical programs means people who were counting on FRP may now face longer waits abroad for visa availability and the risk that family separation will extend if there is no other legal path to join relatives sooner.
Timeline and program history
The rollback ends programs that were built and expanded over many years. The source material provides the following timeline:
| Program / Action | Date / Period |
|---|---|
| Cuban FRP began | 2007 |
| Haitian FRP began | 2014 |
| FRP expanded to Colombia, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras | July 2023 |
| FRP “modernized” for Cuba and Haiti | August 2023 |
| Ecuador added to FRP | November 2023 |
| Notices sent for CHNV parole terminations | June 12, 2025 |
| Employment authorization revocations began (some) | April 30, 2025 |
| First Circuit upheld CHNV legality | September 12, 2025 |
| DHS ends all categorical FRP programs | December 12, 2025 |
Ending all of these categorical programs at once will affect people both already in the United States on parole and those abroad waiting to apply through FRP.
Enforcement implications and expedited removal
The source material says DHS “plans expedited removal for terminated parolees, including those with pending applications, potentially leading to detention.” This highlights how quickly a parole-based stay can convert from permission to enforcement when parole ends.
- Categorical, country-based programs for family-preference beneficiaries from Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras.
- Approved I-130 family-preference beneficiaries could enter on parole while waiting for an immigrant visa.
- Invitations + Form I-134A (12 months per beneficiary); parole under INA §212(d)(5).
- Work authorization tied to parole was routinely issued.
- Dec 12, 2025: DHS ends all categorical FRP; returns to case-by-case parole decisions.
- Jan 14, 2026 ↑ Many parole grants terminate (unless narrow exception applies).
- Employment authorization based solely on FRP will be revoked when parole is terminated ↑
- Narrow I‑485 exception may preserve parole in limited cases.
Check I‑485 eligibility & file before Dec 15 if eligible; consult counsel.
At the same time, not all parole efforts moved in lockstep. The source material notes U4U (Uniting for Ukraine) terminations “were sent in error and not yet implemented en masse,” illustrating uneven policy application across different populations.
Practical consequences and the December 15, 2025 filing window
Analysis by VisaVerge.com highlighted the narrow filing window as the most immediate pressure point in DHS’s FRP termination plan. The structure conditions continued parole past January 14, 2026 on having a pending Form I-485 filed on or before December 15, 2025, and still pending on January 14, 2026.
This creates a rapid separation into two groups:
- Those with a filed adjustment application in the system (and potentially protected past January 14, 2026, depending on the filing and pendency).
- Those who may not be eligible to file
Form I-485yet, even if they have long-standing family ties in the United States.
DHS framing of humanitarian parole
DHS’s announcement reframed humanitarian parole away from a flexible tool to support orderly migration. Instead, the department described FRP as allowing “poorly vetted aliens to circumvent the traditional parole process.”
For families who used FRP to reunite with relatives while waiting in the family-preference visa line, DHS’s message is clear: family unity alone is not sufficient to justify a broad, country-based parole program when the department cites fraud and security risks.
What affected people should consider next
Next steps will depend on each person’s situation on January 14, 2026:
- Whether their parole is set to expire earlier anyway.
- Whether they have a timely filed
Form I-485that remains pending (filed on or before December 15, 2025 and still pending on January 14, 2026). - Whether they have any other lawful basis to stay.
- How quickly DHS moves to revoke work authorization tied to FRP parole.
DHS said it will send individual notices and told those who must leave to report departure plans through the CBP Home app, with possible incentives for those who qualify. But the core message was not softened: the categorical family reunification parole programs for these seven countries are ending, and DHS intends parole decisions to return to case-by-case adjudication.
The Department of Homeland Security announced the end of categorical family reunification parole programs for Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, and Honduras, citing fraud and security concerns. Parole decisions will revert to case-by-case reviews. Most FRP parole will terminate on January 14, 2026, unless the individual has a Form I-485 filed by December 15, 2025, that remains pending. DHS will revoke work authorization tied to FRP and may require departure, directing affected people to the CBP Home app for exit reporting.
