Key Takeaways
- Most marriage-based green card denials come from weak bona fide marriage proof, inconsistent forms, unresolved prior marriages, low financial sponsorship, or past immigration violations.
- USCIS’s May 2026 policy treats adjustment of status as discretionary relief, which raises denial risk and exposure to 3- or 10-year reentry bars.
- Denials can cause immediate financial loss, trigger deportation proceedings, and create long-term bars even when the marriage is genuine.
- Post-denial options such as I-601 waivers, motions to reopen, or refiling only work when they match the exact denial grounds.
- Schedule a case evaluation with Jumpstart Immigration to identify your risk factors and choose a strong strategy before filing or responding to a denial.
The Problem: What Happens When a Marriage Green Card Petition Is Denied
Recent USCIS data shows a 12.59% denial rate for family-based adjustment-of-status applications in FY 2025, a category that includes marriage-based cases. That figure represents thousands of couples each year who lose filing fees, legal costs, and months of preparation with nothing to show for it.
The financial damage is compounded by a policy shift that took effect in May 2026. USCIS Policy Memorandum PM-602-0199 was issued May 21, 2026 and directs officers to treat adjustment of status as an extraordinary discretionary form of relief rather than a routine benefit. Under this framework, an otherwise eligible applicant can be denied if the totality of circumstances does not support a favorable exercise of discretion. The May 2026 USCIS memo on I-485 discretion is effective immediately and may be applied to both pending and future adjustment of status applications.
The emotional cost is equally significant. Couples face prolonged separation, uncertainty about work authorization, and the looming possibility of removal proceedings, all while trying to build a life together.
Get a professional risk review with Jumpstart Immigration to see how this policy and your history could affect your case before you file or respond to a denial.
Five Common Red Flags in Marriage-Based Green Card Cases
Each of the five primary denial triggers carries a distinct evidence profile. The table below maps denial-triggering evidence against approval-strengthening evidence for each red flag, showing what USCIS officers look for and giving you a checklist to spot gaps in your own documentation.
Consequences When Your Marriage Green Card Is Denied
A noncitizen spouse who departs the United States after accruing more than 180 days of unlawful presence triggers a three-year reentry bar, and departure after more than one year of unlawful presence triggers a ten-year bar, even when married to a U.S. citizen. These bars apply regardless of how genuine the marriage is.
Denial rates for waiver applications have increased in recent years. The recovery path itself is becoming harder to navigate without professional support.
Under the May 2026 USCIS policy, applicants in non-dual-intent temporary statuses, such as students or visitors, face a higher bar for in-country adjustment and are more likely to be directed to consular processing abroad, which is precisely the scenario that can trigger unlawful presence bars upon departure.
Can You Get Deported After a Green-Card Marriage Denial?
Beyond the unlawful presence bars that can trap you outside the United States, a denial can also expose you to active removal proceedings inside the country. A marriage-based green card denial does not necessarily stop removal proceedings, and ICE may still detain the immigrant spouse, and an immigration judge can issue a removal order even when the couple is married or has U.S. citizen children.
Deportation risk varies by entry history and prior records. A noncitizen who entered the United States with inspection remains eligible to adjust status inside the U.S. after marriage to a U.S. citizen, even if they later overstayed their visa. Those who entered without inspection face a different and more difficult path. If USCIS determines that a marriage was entered into solely for immigration benefits, the noncitizen spouse faces deportation and a permanent bar from future immigration benefits, while the U.S. citizen spouse can face criminal prosecution, fines, and up to five years in prison.
What to Do If Your Marriage Green Card Is Denied
An I-130 denial does not automatically mean USCIS has determined the marriage is fraudulent; the denial notice outlines specific grounds that determine whether the case may be appealed, reopened, or refiled. The correct path depends entirely on the denial reason.
For cases involving unlawful presence bars triggered by consular processing, a provisional unlawful presence waiver via Form I-601A may be available before departure, but it requires proving that the U.S. citizen spouse would suffer extreme hardship if the noncitizen were unable to return. That standard is deliberately high, and USCIS narrowly interprets extreme hardship and typically does not consider emotional distress, financial inconvenience, or family separation sufficient on their own. Instead, relevant factors include serious health conditions requiring unavailable treatment abroad and country conditions posing danger or lack of medical care.
For cases denied on evidentiary grounds, refiling with a strengthened evidence package is often the most direct path. Refiling an I-130 without addressing underlying issues such as evidentiary gaps or procedural deficiencies can result in repeated denials and more serious consequences. A second filing must directly resolve every ground cited in the original denial notice.
Talk with Jumpstart Immigration to decide whether you should appeal, refile, or pursue a waiver before unlawful presence or removal timelines cut off your options.
How Professional Support Strengthens a Marriage-Based Case
Professional immigration support in marriage-based cases typically addresses three failure points: documentation gaps identified before filing, procedural errors that trigger RFEs or denials, and post-denial strategy that matches the correct legal remedy to the specific denial ground.
Factors that support a favorable discretionary decision under the May 2026 USCIS policy include a long and genuine marriage to a U.S. citizen, U.S. citizen children with medical or educational needs, many years of U.S. residence, a clean criminal record, tax filing history, and strong evidence of hardship if required to pursue consular processing abroad. Building that record systematically before filing, rather than scrambling after a denial, is the core value of professional case preparation.
Timeline management matters equally. When the immigrant entered without inspection and cannot adjust status in the U.S., the typical path after denial is consular processing abroad, which exposes them to 3-year or 10-year reentry bars and typically takes 2–4 years with the individual required to remain outside the U.S. during much of that time. Identifying that risk before filing and structuring the case to minimize it is a concrete, measurable benefit of professional support.
Start with a consultation to see where your case stands and what documentation will make the biggest difference.
Frequently Asked Questions
What percentage of marriage green cards are denied?
USCIS does not publish a standalone denial rate for marriage-based green cards specifically, but family-based adjustment-of-status applications, the category that includes most marriage-based cases, carried a 12.59% denial rate in FY 2025. Immediate-relative I-130 petitions, which cover spouses of U.S. citizens, showed a 7.04% denial rate in the same period. These figures do not capture cases abandoned after an RFE or cases referred to immigration court, so the effective rate of cases that do not result in approval is higher. Under the discretionary policy introduced in May 2026, denial rates for adjustment applications are expected to increase further as officers move away from checklist-based review.
How long do you have to reapply after a marriage green card denial?
There is no universal statutory deadline for refiling an I-130 or I-485 after a denial, but timing is constrained by practical and legal factors. If the denial triggers unlawful presence accumulation, the clock toward a three-year or ten-year reentry bar begins running immediately. If the denial is appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals, the appeal must generally be filed within 30 days of the denial notice. A motion to reopen or reconsider must typically be filed within 30 days as well. For cases where refiling a new petition is the correct path, there is no hard deadline, but every day of delay while out of status increases the unlawful presence exposure. The right timeline depends entirely on the specific denial ground and the applicant’s current immigration status.
Who qualifies for an I-601 waiver after denial?
Form I-601 is an Application for Waiver of Grounds of Inadmissibility. It is available to applicants who are inadmissible on specific grounds, including unlawful presence, prior removal, certain criminal convictions, and misrepresentation, and who can demonstrate that denial of the waiver would cause extreme hardship to a qualifying U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident spouse or parent. The standard for extreme hardship is high. USCIS does not consider ordinary family separation, emotional distress, or financial inconvenience sufficient on their own. Qualifying factors typically include serious medical conditions requiring treatment unavailable in the applicant’s home country, financial dependency that cannot be maintained overseas, and documented dangerous country conditions. Form I-601A is a provisional version available before departure for consular processing, allowing the applicant to seek approval of the waiver while still in the United States. Both forms are discretionary, meaning USCIS can deny them even when the technical eligibility criteria are met.
What happens to dependents if a marriage-based petition is denied?
Derivative beneficiaries, typically children included on the same I-485 application, are directly affected by a principal applicant’s denial. If the I-485 is denied, derivative applications are denied as well. Children who are out of status as a result face the same unlawful presence accumulation risks as the principal applicant, though minors under 18 generally do not accrue unlawful presence. If the family pursues consular processing abroad after a denial, each derivative beneficiary must go through their own consular interview. Children who are U.S. citizens by birth are not affected in terms of their own status, but their presence can be a relevant factor in a hardship analysis for a waiver application. Families with mixed citizenship and immigration status should map out the impact on every family member before deciding on a post-denial strategy.
Conclusion: Plan Ahead to Avoid or Recover From Denial
A marriage-based green card denial in 2026 carries more legal and financial risk than it did even two years ago. The May 2026 USCIS discretionary policy, rising denial rates across waiver categories, and reinstated interview requirements have collectively raised the bar for what a successful application requires. The five denial triggers, insufficient bona fide marriage evidence, form inconsistencies, unresolved prior marriages, inadequate financial sponsorship, and prior immigration violations, are all preventable with the right preparation. The post-denial options, I-601 waivers, motions to reopen, refiling, and consular processing, are all navigable with the right strategy. Neither prevention nor recovery is straightforward without a clear-eyed assessment of the specific facts in your case.
Request a case review with Jumpstart Immigration today and move forward with a clear plan.