INS Fee Waiver Request Policy Information Courtesy of United States Immigration
and Naturalization Service. You may also see the INS
Version.
INS Fee Waiver Guidance
As part of the August 14, 1998, regulation
increasing filing fees for most immigration benefits, the Immigration and Naturalization
Service (INS) pledged to review its current fee waiver policy to ensure that it would be
fair to the applicant, promote consistency, and be reasonable for INS to administer.
Because federal guidelines require the processing of immigration benefits to be
self-supported by filing fees, the policy also must ensure that adequate fee revenue is
collected by INS to fund application processing.
Generally, the INS has discretion to waive
any application or petition filing fees if the applicant establishes that he/she is unable
to pay the fee. The guidance maintains INS' discretionary authority to grant fee waivers,
but provides direction on what constitutes "inability to pay."
Implementation of Fee Waiver
Guidance
In conjunction with the first fee increases on October 13,
1998, INS issued fee waiver guidance to field offices, which will be effective until a
final regulation amending the current fee waiver regulation is published in the Federal
Register.
Before proceeding with a regulation, INS
will conduct a field assessment to obtain data that will help build on the existing
guidance and formulate a fee waiver regulation. INS expects to have an interim rule by
summer 1999, and a final rule by the end of that year.
What is the Fee Waiver
Field Guidance?
INS Service Officers currently
have broad discretion in granting fee waivers. The field guidance, outlined below, will
provide Service Officers with guidelines which should be considered when determining if a
fee waiver is justified. However, the field guidance is not exhaustive. INS Service
Officers will evaluate all factors, circumstances, and evidence supplied by
the applicant before making a determination.
In all fee waiver requests applicants are
required to demonstrate an "inability to pay." In determining
"inability to pay," INS Service Officers may consider the following situations
and criteria regarding the applicant:
Within the last 180 days, he/she
qualified for or received a "federal means tested public benefit,"such
as Food Stamps, Medicaid, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), and Temporary Assistance to
Needy Families (TANF), or
His/her household income on which taxes
were paid for the most recent tax year is at or belowthe poverty level contained
in the most recent poverty guidelines revised annually by the Secretary of Health and
Human Services.
He/she is elderly (age 65 or older at
the time the fee waiver request is submitted.)
He/she is disabled. Applicant should
submit verification of disability (see below, How To Apply for a Fee Waiver.)
The age and number of dependents who
are seeking derivative status or benefits concurrently with the principal applicant.
Humanitarian and compassionate
situations, such as: the applicant is temporarily destitute; the applicant does not own,
possess, or control assets sufficient to pay the fee without a showing of substantial
hardship; or an applicant is on a fixed income and confined to a nursing home.
Any other evidence or factors that
the INS Service Officer believes establishes an applicant's "inability to pay"
the required filing fees.
Applicants should be aware that certain
immigration benefits have income requirements or require evidence that the applicant or
beneficiary is not likely to become a public charge (for example: nonimmigrant visa
petitions, family-based visa petitions, classifying an orphan as an immediate relative,
employment-based visa petitions, employment authorizations, travel documents, and advance
parole.)
Documentation Documentation, such as the
suggested examples listed below, may be submitted to provide proof of the "inability
to pay:"
Evidence that an applicant has,
within the last 180 days, qualified for or received a "federal means tested public
benefit;"
In case of disability, documentation
showing that the disability has been previously determined by the Social Security
Administration, Health and Human Services, Veteran's Administration, the Department of
Defense or other appropriate federal agencies;
Employment records, pay stubs, W2
forms, letter(s) from employer(s), and income tax returns (proof of filing of a tax
return) for the applicant. These documents may also be submitted for his/her dependents in
the United States;
Rent receipts, utility bills (such as gas,
electricity, telephone, water), food, medical expenses, child care, and receipts for other
essential expenditures;
Documentation to show all assets
owned, possessed, or controlled by the applicant or by his/her dependents;
Evidence of applicant's living arrangements
in the United States (living with relative, living in his/her own house apartment, etc.),
and evidence of whether his/her spouse, children, or other dependents are living in
his/her household in the United States;
Evidence of essential, unexpected
expenditures made by the applicant or his/her dependents living in the United States.
How To Apply for a Fee Waiver
To apply for a fee waiver, an
applicant must submit an affidavit-or unsworn declaration that is signed and dated and
includes the statement: "I declare under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is
true and correct"-requesting a fee waiver and stating the reasons why he/she is
unable to pay the filing fee.
The affidavit and supporting
documentation (see above, Documentation) must be submitted along with the benefit
application or petition.
To facilitate the processing of fee
waiver requests, applicants should write in large print "Fee Waiver Request" on the outside of the mailing envelope containing their
application or petition and fee waiver request, as well as at the top of their affidavit
and each page of their supporting information.
If a fee waiver request is denied,
the entire application package will be returned to the applicant, who must then begin the
application process again by re-filing for the benefit with the appropriate fee.