
Written by Jonathan Aftalion, Esq. — Founding Attorney, Aftalion Law Group
(UCLA BA, Wisconsin JD, Witwatersrand LLM, dual CA + NY licensure, Super Lawyers Rising Stars)
Temporary Protected Status has shielded hundreds of thousands of immigrants in the United States from deportation to countries ravaged by armed conflict, natural disasters, or other extraordinary conditions. In 2026, nearly every TPS-designated country faces termination or is protected only by a federal court order that could be overturned at any moment.
If you or someone you love holds TPS, you need to know exactly where your country’s designation stands and what legal options exist if that protection disappears. This guide breaks down the current TPS status for every designated country, the active litigation keeping some designations alive, and the Supreme Court case that could reshape TPS protections nationwide.
What Is Temporary Protected Status (TPS)?
Temporary Protected Status is a humanitarian immigration benefit that allows nationals of designated countries to live and work legally in the United States when conditions in their home country make it unsafe to return. TPS is authorized under Section 244 of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) and is administered by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
TPS provides two critical protections: a work permit (Employment Authorization Document, or EAD) and protection from deportation. It does not, by itself, lead to a green card or permanent residence, but it can be a bridge to other forms of immigration relief when combined with a family-based immigration petition or other qualifying application.
DHS designates countries for TPS based on ongoing armed conflict, environmental disasters, or other extraordinary and temporary conditions. The Secretary of Homeland Security must review each designation before it expires and decide whether to extend, redesignate, or terminate it.
The 2026 TPS Crisis: Why Every Designated Country Is at Risk
The Trump administration has moved to terminate TPS designations for multiple countries, arguing that conditions have improved enough to allow nationals to return. These termination decisions have triggered a wave of federal lawsuits, and several federal courts have issued injunctions blocking terminations while litigation continues.
The result is a patchwork of court orders, pending appeals, and conflicting timelines that make it extremely difficult for TPS holders to know whether their status and their work authorization remain valid.
The Supreme Court Case That Could Change Everything
The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear a case that could determine the future of TPS for hundreds of thousands of people. Oral arguments are scheduled for April 29, 2026. The central legal question is whether the administration has the authority to terminate TPS designations in the manner it has pursued and whether federal courts can continue blocking those terminations.
A ruling against TPS holders could immediately expose hundreds of thousands of people to deportation and loss of work authorization. A ruling in favour could preserve protections at least temporarily while individual country cases continue in lower courts.
What the April 29 Oral Arguments Mean for TPS Holders
The oral arguments will not produce an immediate ruling. The Court typically issues its decision weeks or months later, often before the end of its term in late June or early July. But the questions asked by the justices during oral arguments often signal the direction of the eventual ruling.
TPS holders should not wait for a ruling to begin exploring their legal options. The window to prepare alternative immigration strategies is now.
TPS Country-by-Country Status Table (Updated, April 2026)
The table below reflects the most current publicly available information from USCIS, federal court dockets, and DHS Federal Register notices. Aftalion Law updates this table as new developments occur.
Country | Original Designation | Current Termination Date | Litigation Status | Court Orders in Effect | EAD Validity |
El Salvador | Mar 2001 | Terminated (blocked by court) | Active 9th Circuit | Preliminary injunction in Ramos v. Nielsen | Valid under court order; check Federal Register for EAD dates |
Haiti | Jul 2011 (most recent redesignation) | Terminated (blocked by the court) | Active multiple circuits | Injunction in place | Valid under court order |
Honduras | Jan 1999 | Terminated (blocked by court) | Active 9th Circuit | Preliminary injunction in Ramos v. Nielsen | Valid under court order |
Nepal | Jun 2015 | Terminated (blocked by court) | Active 9th Circuit | Preliminary injunction in Bhattarai v. Nielsen | Valid under court order |
Nicaragua | Jan 1999 | Terminated (blocked by the court) | Active 9th Circuit | Preliminary injunction in Ramos v. Nielsen | Valid under court order |
Sudan | Nov 1997 | Terminated (blocked by court) | Active multiple courts | Injunction in place | Valid under court order |
South Sudan | May 2022 | Extended (check current dates) | No active challenge | N/A | Per the current Federal Register notice |
Somalia | Sep 1991 | Extended (check current dates) | Pending review | Varies by litigation | Check USCIS for current EAD dates |
Syria | Mar 2012 | Extended (check current dates) | Designation under review | N/A | Per the current Federal Register notice |
Venezuela | Mar 2021 | Termination announced | Active litigation | Varies by court | Check USCIS; it may be affected by pending rulings |
Yemen | Sep 2015 | Extended (check current dates) | No active challenge | N/A | Per the current Federal Register notice |
Myanmar (Burma) | May 2021 | Under review | Pending | Varies | Check USCIS for current EAD dates |
Ukraine | Apr 2022 | Extended (check current dates) | No active challenge | N/A | Per the current Federal Register notice |
Afghanistan | Mar 2022 | Under review | Pending | Varies | Check USCIS for current EAD dates |
Cameroon | Jun 2022 | Under review | Pending | Varies | Check USCIS for current EAD dates |
Ethiopia | Oct 2021 | Under review | Pending | Varies | Check USCIS for current EAD dates |
Important: This table reflects general status categories. Individual circumstances vary. Court orders can change without warning. Always verify your specific EAD validity dates against the most recent Federal Register notice or consult with an immigration attorney.
Source: USCIS Temporary Protected Status page, federal court records, and DHS Federal Register notices.
What Happens When TPS Is Terminated?
If TPS is terminated for your country and no court order blocks that termination, three things happen.
Loss of work authorization. Your EAD expires on the termination effective date. You lose the legal right to work in the United States. Employers who participate in E-Verify will be notified, and continued employment becomes unlawful for both you and your employer.
Loss of deportation protection. TPS termination removes your shield against removal proceedings. If you have no other lawful immigration status, you become deportable. With ICE enforcement technology expanding rapidly, former TPS holders without alternative status face real and immediate risk. Read more about deportation risks for legal immigrants under the current administration.
Impact on pending green card applications. If you have a pending adjustment of status application through a family petition or employer sponsorship, TPS termination may complicate but not necessarily destroy that application. The legal analysis depends on your specific case. An experienced removal defense attorney can evaluate whether your pending application provides interim protection.
For a detailed walkthrough of your options after a termination decision, see our step-by-step guide to protecting your immigration status after TPS termination.
Legal Options for TPS Holders Facing Termination
TPS termination does not mean you are out of options. Several forms of immigration relief may be available depending on your circumstances.
Adjustment of status through a family petition. If you are married to a U.S. citizen, have a U.S. citizen child over 21, or have another qualifying family relationship, you may be eligible to apply for a green card through family-based immigration. Some TPS holders who entered the U.S. without inspection may still qualify if they received a lawful admission through TPS. This is a nuanced legal question that varies by circuit and requires an attorney’s analysis.
Asylum or withholding of removal. If conditions in your home country still pose a threat to your safety based on your race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group, you may qualify for asylum or withholding of removal. The one-year filing deadline for asylum has important exceptions that an immigration lawyer can evaluate.
Cancellation of removal. If you have been continuously present in the U.S. for at least 10 years, have good moral character, and can demonstrate that removal would cause exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to a qualifying U.S. citizen or permanent resident relative, you may be eligible for cancellation of removal in immigration court.
Other relief. Depending on your circumstances, you may qualify for immigration waivers, U-visa protection if you have been a victim of a qualifying crime, VAWA self-petition if you have experienced domestic violence, or other forms of relief. Every case is different.
How an Immigration Lawyer Can Help TPS Holders
The legal landscape around TPS is changing faster than at any point in the program’s history. Court orders can be stayed, modified, or overturned with little notice. Federal Register notices with updated EAD validity dates are published on irregular schedules. The Supreme Court ruling expected this summer could reshape the entire framework overnight.
An immigration attorney does three things for TPS holders that no online guide can replace: they evaluate your individual eligibility for alternative relief, they monitor court developments that affect your specific country, and they prepare filings in advance so you are ready to act the moment a decision drops rather than scrambling after.
Frequently Asked Questions About TPS in 2026
As of early 2026, countries with current or court-protected TPS designations include El Salvador, Haiti, Honduras, Nepal, Nicaragua, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Venezuela, Yemen, Myanmar, Ukraine, Afghanistan, Cameroon, and Ethiopia. The status of each designation varies; see the country table above for details.
TPS alone does not lead to a green card. However, TPS holders may qualify for permanent residence through a family-based petition, employer sponsorship, or other qualifying applications. The legal analysis depends on how you entered the United States and your current immigration history.
If TPS is terminated and no court order blocks the termination, your EAD expires on the effective termination date. Some court orders have extended EAD validity while litigation continues. Check the table above and the most recent Federal Register notice for your country. For more context, see our post on EAD automatic extension changes in 2026.
The scope of the ruling will depend on how broadly the Court addresses the legal questions. A narrow ruling could affect only the specific countries and termination decisions at issue. A broad ruling could establish legal principles that apply to all TPS designations.
No. The time to evaluate your options is before a ruling, not after. If the Court rules against TPS protections, the window to file alternative applications could be extremely short. Consulting with an attorney now gives you the best chance of having a strategy in place.
Talk to a TPS Immigration Lawyer Today: Free Consultation
If you hold TPS and are worried about what comes next, Aftalion Law is here to help. Our immigration attorneys serve TPS holders across the United States from our offices in Los Angeles and New York. We understand the urgency of the current moment, and we are prepared to evaluate your case, identify your options, and act fast.
Schedule a free consultation →
Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Immigration law is complex and changes frequently. Consult an attorney for advice specific to your situation.
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