What Is TPS
Temporary Protected Status is a federal immigration status the government can grant to people already in the United States whose home countries are too dangerous to return to. It protects them from deportation and gives them a work permit, usually for 6, 12, or 18 months at a time, renewable while the danger lasts. It is not a green card and not a path to citizenship on its own.
A shield, not a status upgrade. TPS pauses deportation and grants a work permit for nationals of a designated country. It does not lead to a green card or citizenship by itself.
Key facts
- TPS gives protection from deportation and a work permit to nationals of countries hit by armed conflict, disaster, or other extraordinary conditions (USCIS).
- About 1.3 million people held TPS as of March 31, 2025, from 17 designated countries (American Immigration Council).
- The largest groups are from Venezuela, Haiti, and El Salvador, three countries facing collapse, gang control, or both (KFF).
- The Supreme Court let the Venezuela termination proceed in October 2025, clearing the way to strip status from hundreds of thousands (SCOTUSblog).
- Many TPS holders have lived here 20 or more years, including over 180,000 Salvadorans, raising U.S.-citizen children (American Immigration Council).
If you or someone you know holds TPS or could lose it, the Immigration Advocates Network legal directory lists free and low-cost immigration help by state. Talk to a lawyer about your options well before any deadline, because timelines change fast when a designation is challenged in court.
To qualify, a person must be a national of a designated country, have been continuously present in the U.S. since the designation date, register during the window, and pass background checks. A felony or two or more misdemeanors disqualifies an applicant. TPS never covers people who arrive after a country is designated, which is the answer to a common misconception that it is an open door.
TPS vs Asylum vs DACA
People mix up the three main protections for immigrants without permanent status, and the differences matter. TPS turns on country-wide conditions, asylum turns on individual persecution, and our DACA explainer covers the program for people brought here as children. None of the three is a green card by itself.
| Question | TPS | Asylum | DACA |
|---|---|---|---|
| What it is based on | Dangerous conditions in the home country | Individual persecution on a protected ground | Being brought to the U.S. as a child |
| Who it covers | Nationals of designated countries already here | Anyone who can prove a well-founded fear | People who arrived young before 2007 |
| Work permit | Yes, while the designation lasts | Yes, after a waiting period | Yes, two years at a time |
| Path to a green card | No, not by itself | Yes, after one year | No, not by itself |
The practical gap is the green-card column. Asylum can lead to permanent residence, but it requires proving that a specific person was targeted, which most people fleeing a collapsing economy or a hurricane cannot do. TPS fills that gap by protecting whole groups based on what is happening in their country, but it leaves them with no permanent place to land.
The 2025 Terminations
TPS spent 2025 being dismantled. Congress created it in 1990, several countries were designated during recent crises, and then DHS Secretary Kristi Noem moved to end protections for more than a million people, starting with Venezuela. The courts have split, with the Supreme Court clearing the Venezuela termination and a lower court pausing the one for Haiti.
- Congress creates TPS The Immigration Act of 1990 lets DHS shield nationals of countries in crisis from deportation.
- Crisis-era designations Venezuela, Haiti, and Ukraine are designated as conflict and collapse drive people out.
- DHS moves to end Venezuela TPS Secretary Noem acts to terminate protection for the largest TPS group.
- Supreme Court lets termination proceed The Court allows the Venezuela termination to take effect while litigation continues.
- Judge pauses Haiti termination A federal judge halts the Haiti termination, calling it arbitrary and capricious.
Sources: USCIS; SCOTUSblog; Federal Register.
TPS from creation to termination, 1990 to 2026: 1990 — Congress creates TPS (The Immigration Act of 1990 lets DHS shield nationals of countries in crisis from deportation.). 2021-2023 — Crisis-era designations (Venezuela, Haiti, and Ukraine are designated as conflict and collapse drive people out.). Feb 2025 — DHS moves to end Venezuela TPS (Secretary Noem acts to terminate protection for the largest TPS group.). Oct 2025 — Supreme Court lets termination proceed (The Court allows the Venezuela termination to take effect while litigation continues.). Feb 2026 — Judge pauses Haiti termination (A federal judge halts the Haiti termination, calling it arbitrary and capricious.).
1990: Congress created TPS in the Immigration Act of 1990, giving the executive branch a way to pause deportations for nationals of countries hit by war, disaster, or other extraordinary conditions.
2021 to 2023: Venezuela, Haiti, and Ukraine were designated for TPS as armed conflict, gang violence, and economic collapse pushed hundreds of thousands of people to seek safety in the United States.
February 2025: DHS Secretary Kristi Noem moved to terminate TPS for Venezuela, the largest group, and signaled an end to protections for more than a million people across multiple countries.
October 2025: In National TPS Alliance v. Noem, the Supreme Court allowed the Venezuela termination to proceed, after a May 19, 2025 stay was followed by an October 3, 2025 order letting the 2023 designation’s termination take effect.
February 2026: A federal judge paused the Haiti termination, finding it “arbitrary and capricious” under federal administrative law, which left Haiti’s protection in place while the case continues.
As of June 2026, TPS is being unwound country by country in the courts. The Venezuela termination has been cleared to proceed. The Haiti termination is paused. Other designations face renewed scrutiny, and the people who hold them do not know from one ruling to the next whether they can stay.
TPS by the Numbers
TPS holders are not recent arrivals waiting at the border. They are workers and parents, many of them rooted here for two decades, who lose everything if a single designation ends.
- 1.3 million
- people held TPS as of March 2025
- 17
- designated countries whose nationals qualified
- 600,000
- Venezuelans, the single largest TPS group
- 20+ years
- many holders have lived in the United States
The largest groups show how much is at stake in each termination. Venezuela accounts for roughly 600,000 holders, Haiti about 296,000, El Salvador around 170,000, with Ukraine near 100,000 and Honduras about 52,000. Each of those countries faces conditions, from a collapsed economy to gang-controlled territory, that the original designations were written to address.
The length of time many holders have been here is the part that cuts against the word “temporary.” Over 180,000 Salvadorans have held TPS for 20 years or more, building careers, paying taxes, and raising children who are U.S. citizens. For them, ending TPS does not return them to a recent home. It removes them from the only one they have.
Why It Matters
TPS matters because ending it sends people back to danger the law already recognized as real. The designations exist because the State Department and DHS determined that Venezuela, Haiti, and other countries could not safely receive their own nationals. Stripping the status does not change those conditions. It returns people to a collapsed economy in Venezuela or gang-controlled regions in Haiti, and pulls working parents out of homes with U.S.-citizen children.
The threat is large, but the fix is within reach. Courts have already paused some terminations as arbitrary and capricious, which buys time. The durable answer is Congress, which can give long-settled holders a permanent path instead of leaving a million people to live and work two years at a time, never sure they can stay.
The Honest Disagreement
Serious people disagree about TPS, and the disagreement is real. We lay out both cases and let you weigh them.
The case for ending some designations starts with the word “temporary.” The administration and supporters at groups like the Center for Immigration Studies argue that TPS was built for short emergencies, that some designations have now run more than 20 years, far beyond any acute crisis, and that the law never defined “temporary” or set a cap. On that reading, an open-ended renewal turns an emergency tool into a back-door immigration program that only Congress should authorize.
The case for protecting holders comes from the American Immigration Council, immigrant advocates, and several federal courts. They argue that the underlying dangers have not ended, that many holders have lived here 20 years or more and are raising U.S.-citizen children, and that ending TPS returns people to collapse in Venezuela or gang control in Haiti. Courts have agreed with part of this, calling some 2025 terminations arbitrary and capricious.
Where the two sides actually meet is the durable fix. A program that can be switched off by one official, or saved by one judge, is no way to treat people who have built decades of life here. Whether you think TPS ran too long or ended too fast, the stable answer runs through Congress, not another round of litigation. We do not declare a winner on whether any single designation should have ended.
Frequently asked questions
Is TPS a green card? No. TPS pauses deportation and grants a work permit while a country’s designation lasts. It is not lawful permanent residence and does not lead to a green card or citizenship on its own.
How is TPS different from asylum? TPS is based on dangerous conditions across an entire country and covers only nationals of designated countries already in the U.S. Asylum requires proving that a specific person faces persecution on a protected ground, and it can lead to a green card.
Can TPS be taken away? Yes. The DHS Secretary can terminate a designation, as happened with Venezuela in 2025. Terminations can be challenged in court, and a judge paused the Haiti termination in February 2026.
Who has TPS now? As of March 2025, about 1.3 million people from 17 countries, with the largest groups from Venezuela, Haiti, and El Salvador. Several of those designations are being terminated or litigated.
What you can do
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Ask your members of Congress to give long-term TPS holders permanent status. The American Dream and Promise Act (H.R. 1589) would let people who have held TPS for years earn lawful permanent residency. Ask each of your representatives, on the record, whether they will co-sponsor it.
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Tell them to back the SECURE Act in the Senate. Senator Chris Van Hollen’s SECURE Act would create a similar path for long-settled TPS holders. Ask your senators to support it, because the House and Senate both have to act for a fix to become law.
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Say that a court deadline is no way to live. A status that can be ended by one official and saved by one judge keeps a million people in limbo. Ask for a permanent legislative fix, not another short renewal.
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Support legal-aid organizations. Holders facing termination need help fast. Groups like the Immigration Advocates Network connect people to free and low-cost immigration legal services by state.
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Write your representative using the letter below and ask for a clear, on-the-record commitment to protect TPS holders and pass a permanent path for those who have been here for years.