What public charge means in 2026
After litigation rolled back the Trump-era 2019 public charge rule, USCIS now applies the 1999 field guidance plus the 2022 final rule (Biden administration). The standard: an officer asks whether the applicant is likely to become primarily dependent on the government for subsistence. 'Primarily dependent' means cash benefits for income maintenance or long-term institutionalization at public expense.
Which benefits count
- Cash assistance - SSI, TANF, state and local cash assistance for income maintenance.
- Long-term institutional care funded by Medicaid (nursing home stays).
Which benefits do NOT count
- Emergency Medicaid.
- Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP).
- WIC (Women, Infants, and Children).
- School lunch programs.
- Disaster relief.
- Unemployment insurance (insurance, not assistance).
- Social Security retirement and disability (earned via work).
- SNAP / food stamps received before December 2022.
The totality of circumstances test
No single factor decides. An officer weighs everything together: financial resources, education, skills, sponsor's affidavit of support, health, family size, and age. A 50-year-old applicant with a Master's degree and a job offer above 250% of the federal poverty line will almost never be found a public charge - even if they have past benefit use.
Who is exempt
- Refugees and asylees.
- Special immigrant juveniles.
- VAWA self-petitioners.
- U and T visa applicants.
- Cuban Adjustment Act applicants.
- Some military service members and their families.
- Children automatically becoming US citizens.
2026 OBBBA changes
OBBBA 2026 restricts certain non-citizen access to benefits, not the public charge rule itself. Most cash assistance programs were already off-limits to most non-citizens. The bigger impact is on Medicaid eligibility for some lawfully present immigrants. As of 2026 OBBBA implementation, USCIS continues to apply the 2022 final rule to public charge determinations.