TPS Guide
Free · Confidential · Updated approach for 2026

Do you have — or qualify for — Temporary Protected Status?

TPS protects people from certain countries from deportation and lets them work. In 2026, designations are changing constantly, so the safest thing is to check the official list and your deadlines carefully.

⚠ Many TPS countries are in litigation in 2026 — status can change fast, so re-register on time
2-question check

Where do you stand?

Because designations change so often, this points you to the right next step rather than guessing. Answers stay on this device.

1Do you already have TPS now?
2Is your home country currently on the official USCIS TPS list? (If unsure, that's okay — check the link below.)

Check the official, live TPS country list

Because countries are added and removed often in 2026, always confirm against the U.S. government's own page — it's the only list that's always current.

🔗 Open the official USCIS TPS page
What TPS does

What it gives you — and what it doesn't

TPS is real protection, but it's important to understand its limits.

The 2026 reality

Why timing matters so much now

TPS has never been more in flux. Keep these in mind.

Protect your status

What to do now

A few concrete steps to avoid losing protection.

Worried about your TPS or what comes next? Ask us — free.

A free consultation can confirm your status, your deadlines, and whether you qualify for a more permanent path before TPS changes.

📞 Request a free consultation
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