I-131, Application for Travel Documents, Parole Documents, and Arrival/Departure Records
Use this form to apply for travel documents, parole documents, or arrival/departure records.
Travel Documents
You may use this form to apply for a reentry permit, refugee travel document, TPS travel authorization document, advance parole document, or advance permission to travel for Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI) long-term residents.
If we approve your Form I-131 and you are a Temporary Protected Status (TPS) beneficiary in the United States who wishes to travel outside the United States, we will issue you Form I-512T, Authorization for Travel by a Noncitizen to the United States.
If we approve your Form I-131 and your initial application for TPS (Form I-821) is still pending, we will issue you a Form I-512L, Advance Parole Document.
If you are a TPS beneficiary or have a pending initial TPS application, you should carefully read the Form I-131 Instructions. These instructions explain certain risks you may face if you are outside the United States while we are considering your TPS re-registration or initial application, such as missing important requests for evidence or other notices or being denied TPS while you are outside the United States.
For information on travel documents, including potential immigration-related consequences of traveling outside the United States, see our Travel Documents page. If you are in the United States and you have an urgent need to travel outside the United States, see our Expedite Requests page and Emergency Travel page.
DHS will determine at inspection whether you may be admitted into TPS. If you travel and return in accordance with your TPS travel authorization, you will be admitted into TPS if your TPS remains valid and you are not inadmissible for certain criminal or security grounds that are mandatory ineligibility grounds for TPS. Note that if you were previously granted parole, this admission will render you ineligible for a new period of parole (re-parole).
If you file this form to request advance permission to travel for CNMI long-term residents, and you leave the CNMI without having an advance permission to travel document, your status will automatically terminate.
Initial Parole Documents
You may use this form to apply for parole into the United States for yourself or someone else who is a noncitizen and who is currently outside the United States based on urgent humanitarian reasons or significant public benefit. A parole request from outside the United States may fall under an existing program or process, such as the Filipino World War II Veterans Parole Program, parole under the Immigrant Military Members and Veterans Initiative, or the Family Reunification Task Force (FRTF) process. Your initial parole document may be a boarding foil that is placed in your passport, or it may be a Form I-512L travel document.
Arrival/Departure Records for Parole in Place
If you are a noncitizen who is currently inside the United States and you are present without having been admitted, you may use this form to apply for parole in place based on urgent humanitarian reasons or a significant public benefit, including requests for military parole in place and the FRTF process.
Arrival/Departure Records for Re-Parole
If you are a noncitizen who is inside the United States, who was previously granted parole, and who needs an additional period of parole, then you may use this form to apply for re-parole based on urgent humanitarian reasons or a significant public benefit. If we authorize your re-parole, you will be issued a Form I-94 Arrival/Departure Record with a new Admit Until Date or Parole Until Date.
Generally, the DHS component that initially authorized parole has jurisdiction over any request for re-parole, unless DHS or USCIS provides alternate filing instructions. Please see the Memorandum of Agreement between USCIS, ICE, and CBP for more information about each agency’s jurisdiction over re-parole requests. Form I-131 includes filing instructions for specific types of re-parole requests processed by USCIS.
Your re-parole request may fall under an existing program or process, such as for those who were initially paroled under the family reunification parole processes, certain Afghans paroled into the United States after July 31, 2021, certain Ukrainians paroled into the United States after Feb. 24, 2022, the Filipino World War II Veterans Parole Program, Immigrant Military Members and Veterans Initiative, Central American Minors Program, FRTF Process, or military parole in place.
Form Details
Dates are listed in mm/dd/yy format.
If you complete and print this form to mail it, make sure that the form edition date and page numbers are visible at the bottom of all pages and that all pages are from the same form edition. If any of the form’s pages are missing or are from a different form edition, we may reject your form.
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You have 2 options for filing your Form I-131 application with USCIS:
- Online (only available for certain application types); or
- By mail (on paper).
Filing Your Form I-131 Online
The first step is to create an account. To learn more, visit our How to Create a USCIS Online Account page. After you submit your Form I-131 online, we will send you a receipt notice to your USCIS online account.
You cannot file your Form I-131 online if you are applying for a fee waiver.
Filing Your Form I-131 By Mail
Please check our Filing Addresses for Form I-131 page for information on where to mail your application, if you are not filing online via myUSCIS.gov. If you do not send your application to the appropriate direct filing address, it may take longer to process.
You can find the filing fee for Form I-131 by visiting our Fee Schedule page.
You can pay the fee with a money order, personal check, or cashier’s check, or pay by credit card or debit card using Form G-1450, Authorization for Credit Card Transactions. If you pay by check, you must make your check payable to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
When you send a payment, you agree to pay for a government service. Filing fees are final and non-refundable, regardless of any action we take on your application, petition, or request, or if you withdraw your request. If you pay by credit card or debit card, you cannot later dispute the payment. Use our Fee Calculator to help determine your fee.
If you are submitting multiple forms, or if you are requesting re-parole and you check the box in Part 9 to request a separate Employment Authorization Document (EAD), pay each filing fee separately. We are transitioning to electronic processing of immigration benefit requests, which requires us to use multiple systems to process your package. We may reject your entire package if you submit a single, combined payment for multiple forms.
Payment if you file at a field office: You cannot pay fees with a money order or cashier’s check when filing at a field office. You can only pay with a personal check, debit card, credit card, or prepaid credit or debit card.
You do not need to pay an additional fee for Form I-131 if:
- You are filing Form I-131 Application Type 2 or 5A;
- You filed Form I-485 with a fee on or after July 30, 2007, and before April 1, 2024; and
- Your Form I-485 is still pending.
For refugee travel document applications filed from outside of the United States, you must pay the applicable fees to the cashier at the USCIS international field office or U.S. embassy or consulate with jurisdiction over your location. Please see the website of the appropriate embassy or consulate to confirm acceptable forms of payment. Include the fee receipt from the U.S. embassy or consulate when you file your application package.
Please do not mail cash, personal checks or traveler’s checks. If you do not include a fee receipt with your filing, we will reject your application.
Employment Authorization
Individuals granted parole under INA section 212(d)(5)(A) may generally apply for employment authorization during their period of parole by filing Form I-765, Application for Employment Authorization, under eligibility category (c)(11). Employment authorization may only be granted after parole is approved. If you file Form I-765 while your Form I-131 parole request remains pending, USCIS may reject or deny your Form I-765.
Form I-131 applicants who were previously paroled into the United States and are requesting a new period of parole (re-parole) may request an Employment Authorization Document (EAD) by checking the box in Part 9 of Form I-131. Re-parole applicants who check the box in Part 9 will not need to file a separate Form I-765 to request an EAD if the request for re-parole is approved. Note: In order to utilize the EAD checkbox in Part 9 of Form I-131, the individual requesting the EAD in Part 9 must be listed as the requestor in Part 2 (“Information About You”) and must sign the certification in Part 10.
Please do not submit this checklist with your Form I-131. The checklist is an optional tool to use as you prepare your form, but does not replace statutory, regulatory, and form instruction requirements. We recommend that you review these requirements before completing and submitting your form. Do not send original documents unless specifically requested in the form instructions or applicable regulations.
If you submit any documents (copies or original documents, if requested) in a foreign language, you must include a full English translation along with a certification from the translator verifying that the translation is complete and accurate, and that they are competent to translate from the foreign language into English.
If you are applying for: | Then you must submit: |
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A refugee travel document |
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A reentry permit |
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Travel authorization document for TPS beneficiaries who are inside the United States |
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An advance parole document if you are currently in the United States |
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A parole document for someone outside the United States (for urgent humanitarian reasons or significant public benefit) |
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Arrival/departure records for parole in place for a service member or family of service member |
OR
Family members of a service member should submit the above documentation, plus:
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Arrival/departure records for parole in place for Family Reunification Task Force |
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Arrival/departure records for parole in place for other situations Note: To file a request for parole in place under the Keep Families Together process, please use Form I-131F. |
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Arrival/departure records for someone inside the United States requesting a new period of parole (re-parole) for urgent humanitarian reasons or significant public benefit |
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Read more information about the types of evidence that may be relevant to specific parole requests on our Humanitarian Parole page.
Complete all sections of the form. We will reject the form if these fields are missing:
- Part 1 – Application Type
- 1. - 11. You must select only one application type.
- Part 2 – Information About You
- Your Full Name
- Current Mailing Address or Safe Address (if applicable)
- Date of Birth
Filing Tips: Review our Tips for Filing Forms by Mail page for information on how to ensure we will accept your form.
Don’t forget to sign your form. We will reject any unsigned form.
E-Notification: If you want to receive an e-mail and/or text message that we have accepted your form at a USCIS lockbox, complete Form G-1145, E-Notification of Application/Petition Acceptance, and clip it to the first page of your form.
- Humanitarian or Significant Public Benefit Parole for Individuals Outside the United States
- Guidance on Evidence for Certain Types of Humanitarian or Significant Public Benefit Requests
- Re-Parole Process for Certain Ukrainian Citizens and Their Immediate Family Members
- Re-Parole Process for Certain Afghans
- Card Delivery Tracking
- Department of State: Photo Specifications
- Travel Documents