DACA 3 min read · Jun 11, 2026

DACA in 2026: what you can still do, what you should know before you file

Renewals, advance parole, and the state of new initial filings — current as of June 2026.

Written or reviewed by LegalGuides Editorial

Where we are in June 2026

DACA — Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals — remains in effect for current recipients, but the program has been in legal limbo since the 2023 district court decisions. As of June 2026:

  • Renewals: Being processed normally. USCIS is accepting and approving renewal requests.
  • First-time initials: Subject to court injunctions. USCIS continues to accept new initial requests but is not adjudicating them. Plan accordingly.
  • Advance Parole: Available for current recipients, but the legal status of AP for DACA can shift. Always get a current-week consultation before booking travel.

If you're already a DACA recipient

Renew early — 150 days out is the sweet spot

USCIS recommends filing renewals 120 to 150 days before your DACA expires. Filing earlier sometimes triggers a reject ("filed too soon"). Filing later risks a work-permit gap.

You will need:

  1. Form I-821D (the DACA renewal request)
  2. Form I-765 (the work permit)
  3. Form I-765WS (worksheet)
  4. $605 in filing fees ($555 I-765 + $85 biometrics, refer to USCIS for the current fee schedule)
  5. Proof of continued residence since your last approval
  6. Documentation of any new arrests or convictions (or a clean statement that there are none)

Late renewals are still accepted

If you missed the window, file as soon as possible. USCIS continues to accept late renewals. The risk is a work-permit gap — your employer will be legally required to stop your employment once your EAD expires, until USCIS approves the renewal and issues a new card.

Practical advice: build a 4–6 week financial buffer in case of a gap.

Travel on Advance Parole — proceed carefully

DACA recipients can apply for Advance Parole for humanitarian, employment, or educational reasons. With approved AP, lawful re-entry into the U.S. is permitted (and re-entry on AP can actually unlock adjustment of status pathways).

But AP for DACA has political volatility. We recommend:

  • Don't book non-refundable travel before AP is approved.
  • Get a same-week consultation before departure — DACA travel rules can change in days.
  • Always return through an airport with significant CBP staffing rather than a small land port.

If you don't have DACA yet

This is the hard part. As of June 2026, USCIS is accepting new initial DACA filings but is not adjudicating them due to court injunctions. Your filing sits in receipt status indefinitely.

If you have a strong DACA-eligible profile (arrival before age 16, continuous residence since June 2007, etc.), an experienced attorney can:

  • File the initial request to preserve your place in line.
  • Document your eligibility now in case the program is reopened or expanded.
  • Identify alternative pathways: Special Immigrant Juvenile Status, U-visa, T-visa, asylum, family-based petitions, employer sponsorship.

For most DACA-aged adults, the most productive path in 2026 is not waiting on the program but actively exploring alternatives.

Get a flat-fee DACA consultation with a verified attorney →

Frequently asked questions

  • Can I renew DACA in 2026?
    Yes. USCIS is processing DACA renewals for existing recipients. File 150 days before your DACA expires; late renewals are accepted but risk a work-permit gap.
  • Can I get DACA for the first time in 2026?
    New first-time DACA applications are currently subject to court restrictions. Speak with a verified immigration attorney before submitting a brand-new application.
  • Is advance parole on DACA still safe to use?
    For most cases yes, but the legal landscape can change quickly. Get a same-week consultation before any international travel on DACA AP.

Need this answered for your specific case?

Get a flat-fee consultation with a verified U.S. immigration attorney. Engagement letter on every paid consult.

This guide provides general legal information and does not create an attorney–client relationship. Information accurate as of June 2026. Always verify current USCIS guidance before acting.