Legal Sidebari 
 
Supreme Court: Unlawful Entrants with 
Temporary Protected Status Cannot Adjust to 
Lawful Permanent Resident Status 
June 11, 2021 
Certain non-U.S. nationals (aliens, as the term is used in the
 Immigration and Nationality Act [INA]) who 
are physically present in the United States may
 adjust to lawful permanent resident (LPR) status if they 
meet certain requirements. Among other things, an applicant for adjustment of status generally must have 
bee
n “inspected and admitted or paroled” into the United States by immigration authorities. For some 
time, court
s disagreed over whether aliens who unlawfully entered the United States without inspection, 
but later receiv
ed Temporary Protected Status (TPS), have been “inspected and admitted” to qualify for 
adjustment. In 
Sanchez v. Mayorkas, the Supreme Court, i
n a unanimous opinion, held that the grant of 
TPS does not enable an unlawful entrant to pursue adjustment of status. This Legal Sidebar examines the 
Supreme Court’s decision and its implications for unlawful entrants who seek to pursue LPR status. 
Legal Background 
INA § 245(a) authorizes the Secretary of Homeland Security to adjust the status of the beneficiary of an 
approved
 immigrant visa petition (e.g., an immediate relative petition filed by a U.S. citizen spouse) to 
that of an LPR. To qualify, an applicant generally must meet certain requirements, including having been 
“inspected and admitted or paroled” into the United States. Apart from these requirement
s, INA § 245(c) 
bars certain classes of aliens from adjusting status, including those who engaged in unauthorized 
employment in the United States, and those who failed “to maintain continuously a lawful status” since 
entering the country. The § 245(c) bar does not apply to some categories of applicants, including 
“immediate relatives” (e.g., a spouse) of petitioning U.S. citizens
, “special immigrants” (e.g., certain 
abused or abandoned juveniles), aliens whose visa petitions were fil
ed on or before April 30, 2001, and 
som
e employment-based applicants present in the United State
s “pursuant to a lawful admission.” 
A separate provision
, INA § 244, authorizes the Secretary of Homeland Security (in consultation with the 
State Department) to designate a country for TPS if persons from that country cannot safely return 
because of specified conditions (e.g., an armed conflict or natural disaster). An alien from a country 
designated for TPS
 may remain and work in the United States for the period in which the TPS designation 
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is in effect
, even if the alien had entered the United States unlawfully, so long as the alien meets
 certain 
criteria. A TPS recipient, however, does not have a dedicated pathway to LPR status based on the grant of 
TPS alone. Instead, a TPS holder must independently qualify for an immigrant visa and meet the other 
requirements for adjustment of status specified under INA § 245(a).  
INA § 244(f)(4)
 provides that, for purposes of adjustment of status, a TPS holder “shall be considered as 
being in, and maintaining, lawful status as a nonimmigrant” during the period in which the alien has TPS. 
A nonimmigrant is an alien admitted temporarily to the United States for a specified purpose (e.g., a 
temporary visitor). The Department of Homeland Security’
s U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services 
(USCI
S) has interpreted § 244(f)(4) to mean that a TPS holder who entered the United States lawfully, 
and would otherwise accrue unlawful presence in the United States 
during the TPS period were it not for 
having TPS (e.g., because the period of stay authorized by a nonimmigrant visa expired), is exempt from 
INA § 245(c)’s bar to adjustment for aliens who failed to maintain lawful status. According to USCIS, 
however, INA § 244(f)(4) cures no 
prior period of unlawful status before the grant of TPS for purposes of 
the § 245(c) bar. 
An adjustment applicant must also show that the applicant had bee
n “inspected and admitted or paroled” 
into the United States. INA § 244(f)(4)
 is silent on whether a TPS holder is considered to be “inspected 
and admitted” for purposes of adjustment of status. USCI
S has taken the position that § 244(f)(4)’s 
reference to “lawful status” does not mean that a grant of TPS constitutes an “admission.” Prior to the 
Supreme Court’s decision in 
Sanchez, federal court
s had split over whether aliens granted TPS are 
“inspected and admitted” for purposes of adjustment of status, even if they unlawfully entered the United 
States
. Some lower courts construed § 244(f)(4)’s reference to “lawful status as a nonimmigrant” to mean 
that a TPS holder is necessarily inspected and admitted to the United State
s. Other courts disagreed, 
reasoning that “lawful status” is distinct from “admission,” which refers to an authorized 
entry into the 
United States. 
Procedural History in Sanchez v. Mayorkas 
Jose Santos Sanchez, a native and citizen of El Salvador
, entered the United States without inspection in 
1997. In 2001, shortly after El Salvador was
 designated for TPS, Sanchez
 applied for and received TPS 
and maintained that status since then. In 2014, Sanchez
 applied for adjustment of stat
us based on an 
employment-based visa petition. USCIS determined that Sanchez was
 ineligible for adjustment because 
he was never “inspected and admitted” to the United States as required under INA § 245(a). USCIS also 
determined that Sanchez was barred from adjustment under INA § 245(c) because he ha
d engaged in 
unauthorized employment before receiving TPS, and did not qualify for the exception for employment-
based applicants present in the United States “pursuant to a lawful admission.” Sanchez
 challenged 
USCIS’s decision in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey. The court
 ruled for Sanchez, 
reasoning that INA § 244(f)(4)’s language that a TPS recipient “shall be considered” to have “lawful 
status as a nonimmigrant” for purposes of adjustment of status required treating TPS recipients as though 
they had been “inspected and admitted.”  
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
 reversed. The court
 rejected the argument that, by having 
“lawful status as a nonimmigrant,” a TPS recipient is necessarily “inspected and admitted.” The court 
noted that obtaining “lawful status” is different than “admission,
” defined in the INA as “the lawful entry 
of the alien into the United States after inspection and authorization by an immigration officer.” The court 
observed that while “admission often accompanies a grant of lawful status, it does not follow that a grant 
of lawful status is an admission.” The court thus
 held that a grant of TPS does not constitute an admission 
for purposes of adjustment of status. Sanchez
 petitioned for review of the Third Circuit’s decision before 
the Supreme Court. 
  
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The Supreme Court’s Decision 
On June 7, 2021, the Supreme Court
 held that the grant of TPS does not satisfy the lawful admission 
requirement for adjustment of status. In a unanimous opinion authored by Justice Kagan, the Court first 
observed that INA § 245(a) plainly requires an adjustment applicant to have been “inspected and admitted 
or paroled into the United States.” The Court
 described a separate provision, INA § 245(k), as allowing 
employment-based visa beneficiaries to pursue adjustment despite having accrued unlawful presence or 
engaged in unauthorized employment only if the alien is present in the United States “pursuant to a lawful 
admission.” Noting that Sanchez never claimed that he has been lawfully admitted “without aid from the 
TPS provision,” the Court
 determined that “[a] straightforward application of [INA § 245] thus supports 
the Government’s decision to deny him LPR status.” 
The Court
 held that the fact that Sanchez was granted TPS did not make him eligible for adjustment of 
status. The Court
 reasoned that, although under INA § 244(f)(4), a TPS recipient is considered to have 
lawful nonimmigrant “status,” that provision does not enable a TPS recipient to meet INA § 245’s 
separate requirement of being “admitted” because lawful status and admission “are distinct concepts in 
immigration law.” While lawful status may be conferred upon entry into the United States or sometime 
after entry, the Court
 explained, an admission requires a physical entry after inspection and authorization 
by an immigration officer. According to the Court, “because a grant of TPS does not come with a ticket of 
admission, it does not eliminate the disqualifying effect of an unlawful entry.” 
The Court
 rejected Sanchez’s argument that nonimmigrant status necessarily involves an admission to the 
United States because “one cannot obtain lawful nonimmigrant status without admission.” The Court 
recognized that, under INA provisions regulating the process for admitting aliens, most aliens acquire 
nonimmigrant status through an admission. Still, the Court
 observed, nothing in the INA provides that 
admission is necessarily a prerequisite for nonimmigrant status. In fact, the Court
 noted, under the INA 
some aliens can receive nonimmigrant status without being admitted (e.g., qualifying alien crewmen 
arriving in the United States; certain crime victims who had entered the country unlawfully). Without “an 
indissoluble link” between nonimmigrant status and admission, the Court
 concluded, “there is no reason 
to view the TPS provision’s conferral of nonimmigrant status as also a conferral of admission.” 
The Court thus
 held that INA § 245 generally requires a lawful admission before an applicant can obtain 
LPR status, and that the grant of TPS does not constitute an admission. The Court t
hus affirmed the denial 
of Sanchez’s adjustment application. 
Implications of the Court’s Decision and Legislative 
Options 
Sanchez clarified that an adjustment applicant generally must have been inspected and admitted into the 
United States, and that the grant of TPS does not qualify as an “admission.” Given the Court’s ruling, 
aliens who unlawfully entered the United States without inspection by immigration authorities, and who 
later received TPS, generally will remain ineligible for adjustment of status. Because
 many aliens with 
TPS entered the United States without inspection, the Court’s decision potentially could mean that they 
will be unable to adjust status.  
Despite the Court’s ruling, it is possible that some TPS recipients have a separate foothold in the United 
States that enables them to pursue adjustment, even if their grant of TPS does not. For example, aliens 
who first entered the United States without inspection, but were later permitted to travel abroad and return 
to the United States (e.g., using 
an “advance parole” document) are considered to be “inspected and 
admitted or paroled” for adjustment purposes if they had departed and returned to the United States
 before 
  
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August 20, 2020 (such aliens could still be barred from adjustment under
 INA § 245(c) if they had 
accrued unlawful presence in the United States before being granted TPS, but this bar does not apply to 
immediate relatives of U.S. citizens, among other classes of aliens). Under
 INA § 245(i), a very small 
(and decreasing) category of aliens who unlawfully entered the United States may pursue adjustment if 
they were the beneficiaries of visa petitions filed on or before April 30, 2001; or if they were 
“grandfathered derivative beneficiaries” who were the spouses or children (defined as unmarried and 
under 21 years of age) of the alien beneficiary when the qualifying visa petition was filed. Under
 INA 
§ 245(m), aliens who obtai
ned “U” nonimmigrant status as the victims of certain enumerated crimes, 
including those who had entered the United States unlawfully, may apply for adjustment if they meet 
applicable requirements. Additionally, under the Violence Against Women Act, some aliens battered or 
subjected to extreme cruelty by a U.S. citizen or LPR spouse or parent
 may adjust status, even if they 
were never lawfully admitted into the United States. 
A TPS recipient who is otherwise barred from adjustment could potentially apply for certai
n other forms 
of relief from removal that lead to LPR status. For instance, an alien who fears persecution in his or her 
country may apply for
 asylum, and if the application is granted, the alien may pursue LPR status after one 
year (the asylum application generally
 must be filed within one year of the alien’s arrival in the United 
States, but exceptions exist for changed or extraordinary circumstances). Additionally, certain long-term 
residents of the United States who are placed in formal removal proceedings may 
seek cancellation of 
removal and adjust to LPR status if they meet certain requirements (e.g., showing that removal would 
lead to “exceptional and extremely unusual hardship” to a qualifying relative). 
Finally, as the Supreme Court
 indicated, Congress may clarify whether TPS recipients can apply for 
adjustment of status. In the 117th Congress, the U.S. Citizenship Act
 (S. 348, H.R. 1177), the American 
Dream and Promise Act of 
2021 (H.R. 6), and the SECURE Act
 (S. 306) would provide that a person 
granted TPS be considered to be “inspected and admitted” for establishing eligibility for adjustment. The 
U.S. Citizenship Act would al
so exempt TPS recipients from INA § 245(c)’s bars to adjustment, including 
for accrual of unlawful presence and unauthorized employment. These bills
 would also allow current TPS 
holder
s to adjust to LPR status even without having to qualify independently for an immigrant visa 
petition (as generally required under INA § 245(a)), if they meet specified criteria (e.g., showing 
continuous physical presence in the United States for a certain period). 
 
Author Information 
 Hillel R. Smith 
   
Legislative Attorney  
 
 
 
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