Use this form to apply for a re-entry permit, refugee travel document, advance parole travel document (including parole into the U.S. for humanitarian reasons), or advance permission to travel for CNMI long-term residents.
If you file this form to request an advance parole document and depart the United States without having an advance parole document that is valid for the entire time you are abroad, we will consider your Form I-131 abandoned.
If you file this form to request advance permission to travel for CNMI long-term residents document and depart the CNMI without having an advance permission travel document, your status will automatically terminate.
Humanitarian Parole
Parole allows an individual who may be inadmissible or otherwise ineligible for admission into the United States to be in the United States for a temporary period for urgent humanitarian reasons or significant public benefit.
Eligibility
You may apply for humanitarian parole if you have a compelling emergency and there is an urgent humanitarian reason or significant public benefit to allowing you to temporarily enter the United States. Anyone can file an application for humanitarian parole. If you do not have an urgent humanitarian reason for your visit, you must follow the normal visa-issuing procedures set by the Department of State.
You cannot use parole to avoid normal visa-issuing procedures or to bypass immigration procedures.
If you are currently in removal proceedings or have been previously removed from the United States, you must submit your request to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Please refer to Form I-131, Application for Travel Document, Instructions for details.
For more information, visit our Humanitarian or Significant Public Benefit Parole for Individuals Outside the United States page.
How to File
To apply for parole, you must:
- Read the instructions for Form I-131, Application for Travel Document, and Form I-134, Affidavit of Support;
- Complete and sign your Form I-131 and Form I-134;
- Pay the filing fee for each parole applicant, if applicable;
- Provide all required evidence and supporting documentation.
- To receive an email or text message when we accept your form, complete Form G-1145, E-Notification of Application/Petition Acceptance, and clip it to the front of the application.
Want status updates about your case? Learn how to create a USCIS online account to stay informed.
After You File
Once they receive your Form I-131 and Form I-134, you will receive a:
- Receipt notice confirming that we received your forms;
- Biometric services notice, if applicable
- Notice to appear for an interview, if required; and
- Notice of our decision.
Travel Outside the U.S. as a Permanent Resident
If you are in the United States as a lawful permanent resident or conditional permanent resident and you wish to travel outside the U.S., you may apply for a re-entry permit, refugee travel document, or advance parole travel document (including parole into the U.S. for humanitarian reasons). You must be physically present in the United States when you file the re-entry permit and complete the biometric services requirement, if applicable.
Eligibility
If you are a permanent resident, you can travel outside the United States. Temporary or brief travel usually does not affect your permanent resident status. However, if we determine that you did not intend to make the United States your permanent home, we will find that you have abandoned your permanent resident status. A general guide used is whether you have been absent from the United States for more than a year.
See our International Travel as a Permanent Resident and Maintaining Permanent Residence webpages for more information.
How to File
You must:
- Read the instruction for Form I-131, Application for Travel Document;
- Complete and sign your Form I-131;
- Pay the filing fee, if applicable; and
- Provide all required evidence and supporting documentation.
Want status updates about your case? Learn how to create a USCIS online account to stay informed.
After You File
Once they receive your Form I-131, you will receive a:
- Receipt notice confirming we received your application;
- Biometric services notice, if applicable;
- Notice to appear for an interview, if required; and
- Notice of our decision.
What Is the Purpose of This Form?
This form is for applying to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) for the following travel documents:
- Reentry Permit
- Refugee Travel Document
- Advance Parole Document for Individuals Who Are Currently in the United States
- An H-1 temporary worker, or H-4 spouse or child of an H-1;
- An L-1 intracompany transferee, or L-2 spouse or child of an L-1;
- A K-3 spouse or K-4 child of a U.S. citizen; or
- A V-1 spouse or V-2/V-3 child of a lawful permanent resident.
- Advance Parole Document for Individuals Outside the United States
- Advance Permission to Travel for CNMI Long-Term Residents
A Reentry Permit allows a lawful permanent resident or conditional permanent resident to apply for admission to the United States upon returning from abroad during the permit’s validity without the need to obtain a returning resident visa from a U.S. Embassy or U.S. Consulate.
A Refugee Travel Document is issued to an individual in valid refugee or asylee status, or to a lawful permanent resident who obtained such status as a refugee or asylee in the United States. Individuals who hold asylee or refugee status and are not lawful permanent residents must have a Refugee Travel Document to return to the United States after traveling abroad unless they possess an Advance Parole Document. A Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officer at the U.S. port of entry will determine your admissibility when you present your travel document.
Parole allows an alien to physically enter the United States for a specific purpose. An individual who has been “paroled” has not been admitted to the United States and remains an “applicant for admission” even while paroled.
DHS, as a matter of discretion, may issue an Advance Parole Document to authorize an alien to appear at a port of entry to seek parole into the United States. The document may be accepted by a transportation company in lieu of a visa as authorization for the holder to travel to the United States. An Advance Parole Document is not issued to serve in place of any required passport.
WARNING: The document does not entitle you to be paroled into the United States; a separate discretionary decision on a request for parole will be made when you arrive at a port of entry upon your return.
WARNING: DHS may revoke or terminate your Advance Parole Document at any time, including while you are outside the United States, in which event you may be unable to return to the United States unless you have a valid visa or other documents that permits you to travel to the United States and seek admission.
NOTE: Generally, if you are in the United States and have applied for adjustment of status to that of a lawful permanent resident, your application will be deemed abandoned if you leave the United States without first obtaining an Advance Parole Document. Your application for adjustment of status generally will not be deemed abandoned, even if you do not apply for an Advance Parole Document before traveling abroad while an adjustment application is pending, if you currently are in one of the following nonimmigrant classifications, and remain eligible for and would be admissible in one of the following categories upon applying for admission at a port-of-entry:
NOTE: Upon returning to the United States, most individuals must present a valid H, L, K, or V nonimmigrant visa and must continue to be otherwise admissible. If you do not have a valid or unexpired H, L, K, or V nonimmigrant visa, then you generally need to obtain an H, L, K, or V nonimmigrant visa at a U.S. Department of State (DOS) visa-issuing post. Individuals will need a valid nonimmigrant visa, advance parole, or other travel documents to present for reentry.
The granting of an Advance Parole Document for individuals outside the United States is an extraordinary measure used sparingly to allow an otherwise inadmissible alien to travel to the United States and to seek parole into the United States for a temporary period of time due to urgent humanitarian reasons or for significant public benefit (significant public benefit parole is typically limited to law enforcement or homeland security-related reasons). An Advance Parole Document cannot be used to circumvent normal visa-issuance procedures and is not a means to bypass delays in visa issuance.
A grant of Advance Permission to Travel for CNMI Long-Term Residents, who are otherwise not permitted to travel to the rest of the United States, allows them to travel to any other part of the United States for temporary and legitimate purposes without automatically terminating their CNMI long-term resident status. CNMI long-term residents must obtain advance permission before departing the CNMI to travel to any other part of the United States (including Guam). Any travel in violation of these restrictions will result in the automatic termination of status. Traveling to or from a foreign place through direct transit in Guam does not require advance permission.
Who May File Form I-131?
Each applicant must file a separate application for a travel document.
NOTE: Do not file Form I-131 if you are seeking release from immigration custody and you want to remain in the United States as a parolee. You should contact ICE about your request.
- Reentry Permit
- If you are in the United States as a lawful permanent resident or conditional permanent resident, you may apply for a Reentry Permit. You must be physically present in the United States when you file the Reentry Permit application and complete the biometrics services requirement. After filing your application for a Reentry Permit, USCIS will inform you in writing when to go to your local Application Support Center (ASC) for your biometrics services appointment. (See Item Number 3. Biometrics Services Requirement in the General Requirements section of these Instructions.)
- Validity of Reentry Permit
- Generally, a Reentry Permit issued to a lawful permanent resident is valid for 2 years from the date of issuance. See 8 CFR section 223.3(a)(1). However, if you have been outside the United States for more than 4 of the last 5 years since becoming a lawful permanent resident, the permit will be limited to 1 year, except that a permit with a validity of 2 years may be issued to the following:
- A lawful permanent resident whose travel is on the order of the U.S. Government, other than an exclusion, deportation, removal, or rescission order;
- A lawful permanent resident employed by a public international organization of which the United States is a member by treaty or statute; or
- A lawful permanent resident who is a professional athlete and regularly competes in the United States and worldwide.
- A Reentry Permit issued to a conditional permanent resident is valid for 2 years from the date of issuance or to the date the conditional permanent resident must apply for removal of the conditions on his or her status, whichever date comes first.
- A Reentry Permit may not be extended. c. A Reentry Permit may not be issued to you if:
- You have already been issued such a document, and it is still valid unless the prior document has been returned to USCIS or you can demonstrate that it was lost, or
- A notice was published in the Federal Register that precludes the issuance of such a document for travel to the area where you intend to go.
- Refugee Travel Document
- If you are in the United States in valid refugee or asylee status, or if you are a lawful permanent resident as a direct result of your refugee or asylee status in the United States, you may apply for a Refugee Travel Document. You should apply for a Refugee Travel Document BEFORE you leave the United States. If biometrics services are required, and you fail to appear to have the biometrics collected, the application may be denied.
- If you are outside of the United States and:
- Have valid refugee or asylee status, or
- You are a lawful permanent resident as a direct result of your refugee or asylee status in the United States, you may be permitted to file Form I-131 and apply for a Refugee Travel Document. The USCIS Overseas District Director with jurisdiction over your location makes this decision at his or her discretion.
- Validity of Refugee Travel Document
- A Refugee Travel Document is valid for 1 year.
- A Refugee Travel Document may not be extended.
- A Refugee Travel Document may not be issued to you if:
- You have already been issued such a document and it is still valid unless the prior document has been returned to USCIS or you can demonstrate that it was lost; or
- A notice was published in the Federal Register that precludes the issuance of such a document for travel to the area where you intend to go.
- Advance Parole Document for Individuals Who Are Currently in the United States
- If you are in the United States and seek an Advance Parole Document, you may apply if:
- You have a pending application to adjust status, Form I-485, and you seek to travel abroad temporarily for “urgent humanitarian reasons” or in furtherance of a “significant public benefit,” which may include a personal or family emergency or bona fide business reasons.
- You have a pending application for Temporary Protected Status (TPS) (Form I-821), have been granted TPS, or have been granted T or U nonimmigrant status. Whether you are permitted to retain TPS upon your return will depend on whether you continue to meet the requirements for TPS. If you have TPS and leave and reenter the United States during the validity period of your Advance Parole Document, you will not break the continuous physical presence requirement for maintaining your TPS.
- You have been granted parole pursuant to INA section 212(d)(5), AND you seek to travel abroad temporarily for urgent humanitarian reasons or in furtherance of a significant public benefit. Humanitarian reasons include travel to obtain medical treatment, attend funeral services for a family member, or visit an ailing relative.
- USCIS or U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has deferred action in your case as a childhood arrival based on the guidelines described in the Secretary of Homeland Security’s memorandum issued on June 15, 2012 (“Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals” (DACA)). USCIS may, at its discretion, grant advance parole if you are traveling outside the United States for educational purposes, employment purposes, or humanitarian purposes.
- Educational purposes include, but are not limited to, semester abroad programs or academic research;
- Employment purposes include, but are not limited to, overseas assignments, interviews, conferences, training, or meetings with clients; and
- Humanitarian purposes include, but are not limited to, travel to obtain medical treatment, attend funeral services for a family member, or visit an ailing relative.
- USCIS has granted you IMMACT 90 or LIFE Act Family Unity Program benefits, AND you seek to travel abroad temporarily for urgent humanitarian reasons or in furtherance of a significant public benefit, which may include a personal or family emergency or bona fide business reasons.
- You have a pending application for temporary resident status pursuant to INA section 245A, and you seek to travel abroad temporarily for urgent humanitarian reasons or in furtherance of a significant public benefit, which may include a personal or family emergency or bona fide business reasons.
- You have been granted V nonimmigrant status in the United States, AND you seek to travel abroad temporarily for urgent humanitarian reasons or in furtherance of a significant public benefit, which may include a personal or family emergency or bona fide business reasons.
- Travel Warning
- Leaving the United States, even with an Advance Parole Document, may impact your ability to return to the United States.
- If you use an Advance Parole Document to leave and return to a port-of-entry in the United States, you will, upon your return, be an “applicant for admission.”
- As an applicant for admission, you will be subject to inspection at a port-of-entry, and you may not be admitted if you are found to be inadmissible under any applicable provision of INA section 212(a) or 235 or any other provision of U.S. law regarding denial of admission to the United States. If DHS determines that you are inadmissible, you may be subject to expedited removal proceedings or to removal proceedings before an immigration judge, as authorized by law and regulations.
- As noted above, issuance of an Advance Parole Document does NOT entitle you to parole and does not guarantee that DHS will parole you into the United States upon your return.
- As noted above, DHS will make a separate discretionary decision on whether to parole you each time you use an Advance Parole Document to return to the United States.
- If, upon your return, you are paroled into the United States, you will remain an applicant for admission.
- As noted above, DHS may revoke or terminate your Advance Parole Document at any time, including while you are outside the United States. Even if you have already been paroled, upon your return to the United States, DHS may also revoke or terminate your parole in accordance with 8 CFR 212.5. If you are outside the United States, revocation or termination of your Advance Parole Document may preclude you from returning to the United States unless you have a valid visa or other documents that permits you to travel to the United States and seek admission.
- If you are in the United States when DHS revokes or terminates your parole, you will be an unparoled applicant for admission and may be subject to removal as an applicant for admission who is inadmissible under INA section 212, rather than as an admitted alien who is deportable under INA section 237. In addition to the above, if you received deferred action under DACA, you should also be aware of the following:
- Even after USCIS or ICE has deferred action in your case under DACA, you should not travel outside the United States unless USCIS has approved your application for an Advance Parole Document. Deferred action will terminate automatically if you travel outside the United States without obtaining an Advance Parole Document from USCIS.
- If you obtain an Advance Parole Document in connection with a decision to defer removal in your case under DACA and if, upon your return, you are paroled into the United States, your case will generally continue to be deferred. The deferral will continue until the date specified by USCIS or ICE in the deferral notice given to you or until the decision to defer removal action in your case has been terminated, whichever is earlier.
- If you have been ordered excluded, deported, or removed, departing from the United States without having had your exclusion, deportation, or removal proceedings reopened and administratively closed or terminated will result in your being considered excluded, deported, or removed, even if USCIS or ICE has deferred action in your case under DACA and you have been granted advance parole.
- If you are in the United States and seek an Advance Parole Document, a document may not be issued to you if:
- You hold a nonimmigrant status, such as J-1, that is subject to the 2-year foreign residence requirement as a result of that status. Exception: If you are someone who was subject to this requirement but is now eligible to apply for adjustment of status to lawful permanent resident, USCIS may consider your application for advance parole; or
- You are in exclusion, deportation, removal, or rescission proceedings, unless you have received deferred action under DACA. You may, however, request parole from ICE. See the NOTE below.
- If you depart from the United States before the Advance Parole Document is issued, your application for an Advance Parole Document will be considered abandoned.
- Advance Parole Document for Individuals Outside the United States
- If you or someone else is outside the United States and needs to visit the United States temporarily for an urgent humanitarian reason or for significant public benefit:
- You may apply for an Advance Parole Document if you cannot obtain the necessary visa and any required waiver of inadmissibility or consent to reapply for admission. Under these conditions, an Advance Parole Document is granted on a case-by-case basis for a temporary period of time, according to any conditions that may be placed on parole.
- An individual in the United States may file this application on your behalf. This individual must complete Part 1. of the form with information about himself or herself.
- If you were paroled into the United States when you arrived with an Advanced Parole Document, and need to remain in the United States beyond the authorized parole period to accomplish the purpose for which parole was approved, you must file a new Form I-131 with all supporting documentation to request a new parole authorization and type or print REPAROLE in capital letters at the top of the new Form I-131.
- An Advance Parole Document may also be granted to qualified individuals outside the United States as part of specific USCIS Family Reunification Parole policies.
- Cuban Family Reunification Parole (CFRP) Program. Under the CFRP Program, USCIS offers certain beneficiaries of approved family-based immigrant petitions the opportunity to seek, on a case-by-case basis, a discretionary grant of parole into the United States to apply for lawful permanent resident status, rather than remain in Cuba waiting for their immigrant visas to become available. You may apply for advance parole under this program ONLY if you have received an invitation to apply. The invitation contains instructions on eligibility and how to apply. If you apply for parole under this program without having received an invitation to apply, your application for parole may be denied.
- Haitian Family Reunification Parole (HFRP) Program. Under the HFRP program, USCIS offers certain beneficiaries of family-based immigrant petitions, approved on or before December 18, 2014, an opportunity to seek, on a case-by-case basis, a discretionary grant of parole into the United States up to approximately 2 years before their immigrant visas become available (as indicated in the Application Final Action Dates chart in the Department of State’s Visa Bulletin), rather than remain in Haiti awaiting availability of their immigrant visas. You may apply for advance parole under this program ONLY if you have received an invitation to apply. The invitation contains instructions on eligibility and how to apply. If you apply for this program without having received an invitation to apply, your application for parole may be denied.
- Filipino WWII Veterans Parole (FWVP) Program. Under the FWVP program, USCIS offers certain beneficiaries of family-based immigrant petitions, approved on or before the date the request for advance parole is filed, an opportunity to seek, on a case-by-case basis, a discretionary grant of parole into the United States before their immigrant visas become available, rather than remain in another country awaiting availability of their immigrant visas. An invitation is not needed to apply for parole under this program.
- You are living in the United States and are either a Filipino World War II veteran, as defined by section 405 of IMMACT 90, as amended, or the surviving spouse of such individual;
- You have filed a Form I-130, Petition for Alien Relative, for a family member whose visa is not yet available (as indicated in the Application Final Action Dates chart in the Department of State’s Visa Bulletin), and whose Form I-130 petition was approved on or before the date your request for advance parole under the FWVP program is filed; and
- Your qualifying relationship with your family member existed on or before May 9, 2016.
- Advance Permission to Travel for CNMI Long-Term Residents
- If you have been granted CNMI long-term resident status pursuant to Public Law 116-24, Northern Mariana Islands Long-Term Legal Residents Relief Act (48 U.S.C. 1806(e)(6)), you may apply for Advance Permission to Travel for CNMI Long-Term Residents.
- To request advance permission to travel, you must file Form I-131 in accordance with the filing instructions contained in this document.
- The purpose(s) of your intended travel;
- The specific dates of your trip; and
- Travel destination(s). Please include with your statement any supporting documentation you wish USCIS to consider in deciding your request.
- Travel Warnings
NOTE: A Reentry Permit may be sent to a U.S. Embassy, U.S. Consulate, or DHS office abroad for you to pick up if you make such a request when you file your application.
With the exception of having to obtain a returning resident visa abroad, a Reentry Permit does not exempt you from compliance with any of the requirements of U.S. immigration laws. If you are in possession of a valid, unexpired Reentry Permit, you will not be deemed to have abandoned your status as a lawful permanent resident or conditional permanent resident based solely on the duration of your absences from the United States while the permit is valid.
An absence from the United States for 1 year or more will generally break the continuity of your required continuous residence for the purpose of naturalization. If you intend to remain outside the United States for 1 year or more, you may be eligible to file Form N-470, Application to Preserve Residence for Naturalization Purposes. For further information, contact your local USCIS office.
NOTICE to lawful permanent or conditional permanent residents concerning possible abandonment of status: If you do not obtain a Reentry Permit, lengthy or frequent absences from the United States could be factors supporting a conclusion that you have abandoned your lawful permanent resident status. If DHS determines, upon your return to the United States, that you have abandoned your lawful permanent resident status, you may challenge that determination if you are placed in removal proceedings.
After filing your application for a Refugee Travel Document, USCIS will inform you in writing when to go to your local USCIS ASC for your biometrics services appointment. Unless you have other appropriate documentation, such as a Permanent Resident Card and passport, you must have a Refugee Travel Document to return to the United States after temporary travel abroad. A Refugee Travel Document may be sent to a U.S. Embassy, U.S. Consulate, or DHS office abroad for you to pick up if you request it when you file your application.
Your application must be filed within 1 year of your last departure from the United States and should include an explanation of why you failed to apply for a Refugee Travel Document before you departed from the United States.
Travel Warning Regarding Voluntary Re-Availment
WARNING to asylees who travel to the country of claimed persecution: If you applied for asylum on or after April 1, 1997, your asylum status may be terminated if the U.S. Government determines that you have voluntarily availed yourself of the protection of your country of nationality or, if stateless, country of last habitual residence. See section 208(c)(2)(D) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), 8 USC 1158(c)(2)(D).
NOTE: You should apply for a Refugee Travel Document before you leave the United States. However, a Refugee Travel Document may be sent to a U.S. Embassy, U.S. Consulate, or DHS office abroad for you to pick up if you make such a request when you file your application. Departure from the United States before a decision is made on the application usually does not affect the application decision. However, if biometrics collection is required and the applicant departs the United States before biometrics are collected, the application may be denied.
NOTICE to lawful permanent residents who obtain permanent residence as a result of their refugee or asylee status: If you do not obtain a Reentry Permit (see Item 1. Reentry Permit above) and remain outside the United States, lengthy or frequent absences from the United States could be factors supporting a conclusion that you have abandoned your lawful permanent resident status. With the exception of having to obtain a returning resident visa abroad, a Reentry Permit does not exempt you from compliance with any of the requirements of U.S. immigration laws. If you are in possession of a valid unexpired Reentry Permit, you will not be deemed to have abandoned your status as a lawful permanent resident or conditional permanent resident based solely on the duration of your absences from the United States while the permit is valid.
An absence from the United States for 1 year or more will generally break the continuity of your required continuous residence for the purpose of naturalization. If you intend to remain outside the United States for 1 year or more, you may be eligible to file Form N-470, Application to Preserve Residence for Naturalization Purposes. For further information, contact your local USCIS office.
If DHS determines, upon your return to the United States, that you have abandoned your lawful permanent resident status, you may challenge that determination if you are placed in removal proceedings, and seek a determination whether you may retain asylum status even if you cannot retain lawful permanent resident status.
If any of the items listed under Item a. below apply to you, select Item Number 1.d. in Part 2. of the form.
Important: If you have a TPS or other application pending and you leave the United States on advance parole, you may miss important notices from USCIS regarding your application, including requests for additional evidence. If you do not respond timely to these notices, USCIS may deem your application abandoned, and, in that event, you will not receive the benefit you seek. It is very important that you make appropriate arrangements to ensure that you do not miss any such important notices.
NOTE: Travel for vacation is not a valid purpose. You must NOT file Form I-131 with your deferred action request, or your package will be rejected and returned to you.
Before you apply for an Advance Parole Document, read the following travel warning carefully. For any kind of Advance Parole Document provided to you while you are in the United States:
NOTE: Do not use this form if you are seeking release from immigration custody and you want to remain in the United States as a parolee. You should contact your local ICE office about your request (www.ice.gov/contact/ ero).
If Items (1), (2), or (3) below apply to you, type or print the appropriate parole policy name at the top of Form I-131 and check box 1. f. under Part 2. of the form.
NOTE: A derivative beneficiary can only receive benefits under any of the specific Family Reunification Parole policies if the principal beneficiary receives benefits. A separate application and fee for each individual principal and the derivative beneficiary are required. Applications for a principal beneficiary and any of his or her derivative beneficiaries must be submitted in one package when mailed to USCIS.
You may apply for parole on behalf of your family members under this program if:
NOTE: If you are the surviving spouse of a Filipino World War II veteran, you may only apply for parole under the FWVP program on behalf of a child, son, or daughter who is also the child, son, or daughter of the Filipino World War II veteran. You may apply for parole under the FWVP program on behalf of such individuals, even if the approved Form I-130 on which they are beneficiaries had been filed by the deceased veteran, as long as that Form I-130 was reinstated by USCIS.
NOTE: If the Filipino World War II veteran and his or her spouse are both deceased, certain beneficiaries of an approved Form I-130 that was automatically revoked and which USCIS reinstated may apply for parole under this program on their own behalf.
NOTE: Additional information regarding eligibility under the terms of the FWVP program is described under “Filipino WWII Veterans Parole Program” at www.uscis.gov/FWVP.
If this applies to you, type or print CNMI LONG-TERM RESIDENT TRAVEL at the top of Form I-131 and DO NOT check a box in Part 2. of the form.
NOTE: Failure to indicate CNMI LONG-TERM RESIDENT TRAVEL on the top of the form may result in the rejection of your application.
If you are in the CNMI and you have been granted CNMI long-term resident status, you must obtain advance permission before departing the CNMI to travel to any other part of the United States (including Guam). Traveling to or from a foreign place through direct transit in Guam does not require advance permission.
Along with your completed Form I-131 and proof of CNMI long-term resident status, you must also include a statement describing:
If you travel to Guam (not in direct transit between the CNMI and a foreign place) or elsewhere in the United States without advance permission, your status will be automatically terminated, and you may be subject to removal from the United States.
If you travel to Guam (not in direct transit between the CNMI and a foreign place) or elsewhere in the United States in violation of any other restrictions regarding the dates, destination(s), or purpose(s) of your travel, your status will be automatically terminated and you may be subject to removal from the United States.
Generally, the approval will not exceed six months. Advance permission to travel may be valid for one entry, or multiple entries, depending on the stated purpose(s).
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