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Public Charge Rule 2026 - What It Means for Your Green Card

Quick answer

Public charge is a ground of inadmissibility under INA Section 212(a)(4). USCIS officers must determine whether an applicant for a green card is likely to become 'primarily dependent on government benefits for subsistence'. Officers look at age, health, family status, financial resources, education, skills, and whether the applicant has used certain cash benefits or long-term institutional care.

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.

Related tools and guides

Frequently asked questions

Does using SNAP make me a public charge?

Under the 2022 rule, SNAP is not counted toward public charge. Officers do not penalize past SNAP use.

Is the I-864 affidavit related to public charge?

Yes. For most family-based green card cases the sponsor's I-864 affidavit of support is the primary evidence rebutting a public charge concern. It is a binding contract for income support.

Are H-1B holders subject to public charge?

Not for the H-1B itself. Public charge applies at the green card or visa stage. Most employment-based applicants easily clear the test based on their salary and education.

Can my green card be denied for a relative's benefit use?

No. Public charge is assessed only on the applicant's own likely future dependency. Benefits used by US citizen children, for example, never count against the parent applicant.