INA 212a7a (212(a)(7)(A)) – Documentation Requirements Inadmissibility

INA 212a7a (INA 212(a)(7)(A)) — Documentation Requirements for Immigrants

Documentation Requirement for Immigrants

People often search for this issue as INA 212a7a or 212a7a. These are shorthand references to INA § 212(a)(7)(A) (documentation requirements for immigrants). In plain English, this ground can apply when a person is treated as an immigrant at the time they apply for admission but does not have the required, valid entry documents. For example, a valid immigrant visa or other qualifying immigrant entry document, plus required identity/travel documents.
212(a)(7)(A)(i)(I) & 212(a)(7)(A)(i)(II) Documentation Requirement for Immigrants

What is a grounds of inadmissibility?

In order for a foreign national to be admitted to the United States, he or she must be admissible.  A foreign national can be deemed inadmissible to the United States by USCIS, CBP and a Consulate.  If the foreign national is deemed inadmissible due to the United States, he or she cannot enter without a waiver of inadmissibility or a determination that the inadmissibility charge was made in error.

What INA 212a7a covers – 212(a)(7)(A)(i)(I) vs 212(a)(7)(A)(i)(II)

INA 212a7a / 212(a)(7)(A) is a documentation-based ground of inadmissibility for immigrants. It is commonly cited under two clauses:

  • 212(a)(7)(A)(i)(I): the person lacks a required valid, unexpired immigrant visa or other required immigrant entry document at the time of application for admission.

  • 212(a)(7)(A)(i)(II): the person has an immigrant visa that was issued without compliance with required statutory provisions (often raised when the visa is considered invalid/defective under the relevant immigrant visa rules).

212(a)(7)(A)(i)(I) & 212(a)(7)(A)(i)(II) Inadmissibility due to Documentation Requirement for Immigrants

Any immigrant at the time of application for admission who is not in possession of a valid unexpired immigrant visa, reentry permit, border crossing identification card, or other valid entry document required by this Act, and a valid unexpired passport, or other suitable travel document, or document of identity and nationality if such document is required under the regulations issued by the Attorney General or whose visa has been issued without compliance with the provisions of section 203, is inadmissible.

How to obtain a determination that the 212(a)(7)(A)(i)(I) & 212(a)(7)(A)(i)(II) ground of inadmissibility was incorrectly made.

No matter which US government agency made the inadmissibility determination, each provides a method to dispute the determination, though each has drastically different processing times.  We have achieved successful outcomes by petitioning the US Department of State where the determination was made by the Consulate in as little as 2 weeks.  CBP quotes turnaround times of as little as 30 days and USCIS will not offer a time frame.  In our experience, the more difficult the situation, the longer it will take to get resolved.

Waivers and remedies for INA 212a7a

Nonimmigrant waiver: INA 212a7a is an immigrant documentation ground, so the usual “nonimmigrant waiver” framing is often not the right fit for this page’s topic.

Immigrant documentation remedies: Depending on the fact pattern, solutions can include correcting the underlying documentation issue or, in limited scenarios, seeking relief under INA 212(k) (which can allow admission in discretion for certain immigrants who had an immigrant visa but could not have known of the inadmissibility despite reasonable diligence).

Port of entry context: The Department of State’s FAM explains immigrant travel/visa documentation rules and the general requirement that immigrants have a valid immigrant visa or other qualifying entry document, subject to exceptions.

Common examples of 212a7a inadmissibility findings

  • Arriving as an intending immigrant without a valid immigrant visa or other required immigrant entry document
  • Expired immigrant visa at the time of travel/admission attempt
  • Missing or unacceptable passport/identity/travel document required for admission processing
  • Immigrant visa considered invalid/defective because it was issued without required compliance (raised under 212(a)(7)(A)(i)(II))
  • Immigrant visa canceled/revoked before travel (or treated as no longer valid at inspection)
  • Significant name/DOB discrepancy between passport and immigrant visa that prevents admission processing
  • Visa category/documentation problem where the person is treated as an immigrant but does not present the right immigrant document for admission
  • Attempting admission after a long absence where the person is treated as needing a returning resident process instead of using prior documentation
  • Presenting documents that appear altered/inconsistent, leading CBP to treat the person as lacking valid documents (often paired with other allegations)
  • Lost/stolen passport/visa and arriving without acceptable replacement documentation

Nonimmigrant Waiver

There is no nonimmigrant waiver for 212(a)(7)(A).

Immigrant Waiver

211 and 212(k) allows the foreign national to ask CBP to waive 212(a)(7)(A) inadmissibility at the port of entry.

Frequently asked questions about INA 212a7a and 212a7a

What is INA 212a7a?

INA 212a7a (also written as INA § 212(a)(7)(A)) is a documentation-based ground of inadmissibility that generally applies to intending immigrants. In plain English, it can apply when a person is treated as an immigrant at the time they apply for admission but does not have the required, valid entry documents (for example, a valid immigrant visa or other qualifying immigrant entry document). People often search for this as 212a7a or Section 212a7a.

What does 212(a)(7)(A)(i)(I) mean?

212(a)(7)(A)(i)(I) generally means the person is applying for admission as an immigrant but does not have a valid, unexpired immigrant visa, reentry permit, border crossing identification card, or other required immigrant entry document, and does not have another valid admission document required by law. In practice, this is often cited when a traveler arrives without the correct immigrant documentation or the immigrant documentation is expired or otherwise not valid for admission.

What does 212(a)(7)(A)(i)(II) mean?

212(a)(7)(A)(i)(II) generally means the person has an immigrant visa that was issued without compliance with required legal provisions. In practice, this clause can come up where a visa is treated as invalid or defective because required legal steps were not properly satisfied (or are alleged not to have been satisfied). Cases are highly fact-specific and depend on what document was issued and what the government claims was not complied with.

Is 212a7a a permanent bar?

A 212a7a finding is not time-limited in the way a short-term overstay bar is, because it is based on documentation at the time of admission. However, many situations can be addressed by correcting the documentation problem, pursuing the proper immigrant documentation process, or (in limited situations) seeking relief that may apply to certain immigrant visa/documentation problems. The right approach depends on why the documentation was considered missing or invalid.

Can INA 212a7a be waived?

Sometimes, depending on the fact pattern. Because INA 212a7a is a documentation requirement for immigrants, the most common fix is often correcting the documentation issue and pursuing admission with proper, valid immigrant documentation. In limited circumstances, INA 212(k) may provide a discretionary remedy for certain immigrants who had an immigrant visa but could not have known of the inadmissibility despite reasonable diligence. Whether a waiver or remedy is available is a legal and fact-specific determination.

How does CBP apply Section 212a7a at the airport?

CBP applies Section 212a7a during inspection when a person seeks admission and is treated as an immigrant (or as someone requiring immigrant documentation). If CBP concludes the person lacks the required valid immigrant entry document(s), CBP may refuse admission and document the specific subsection cited. The details matter—what documents were presented, what CBP asked, what the traveler said, and whether the issue is correctable through documentation or a specific remedy.

How is INA 212a7a different from 212(a)(7)(B)?

INA 212a7a (212(a)(7)(A)) is focused on immigrant documentation requirements. 212(a)(7)(B) is generally discussed in connection with nonimmigrants and their required documentation for admission. While both fall under documentation-related grounds, the legal framework and typical fact patterns differ depending on whether the person is treated as an immigrant or a nonimmigrant at the time of admission.

News Related to INA § 212(a)(7)(A)(i)(I) & 212(a)(7)(A)(i)(II)
DateTitleDetails
May 31, 2024Department of State's Foreign Affairs Manual (FAM)The Department of State's FAM offers guidance on these inadmissibility grounds.
February 1, 2023USCIS Policy ManualU.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) updated its Policy Manual to provide detailed guidance on the inadmissibility of immigrants lacking valid entry documents.

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