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When a person has a final order of deportation or removal, every decision matters. In certain situations, that person may ask U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, known as ICE, to temporarily delay physical removal from the United States by filing Form I-246, Application for a Stay of Deportation or Removal.
Now, the Department of Homeland Security has proposed a major increase to the Form I-246 filing fee. Under a proposed rule published in the Federal Register on May 7, 2026, DHS seeks to increase the fee from $155 to $755. That is a proposed increase of $600, or 387%. DHS states that the current fee has not been adjusted since 1989 and that the proposed increase is intended to recover the labor costs of adjudicating the application. Public comments on the proposed rule are due by July 6, 2026.
This is still a proposed rule, not a final rule. That distinction is important. At this time, DHS has proposed the increase and is accepting public comments before deciding whether to finalize the change.
Form I-246, Application for a Stay of Deportation or Removal, is used by certain individuals who have been ordered deported or removed from the United States and are asking ICE to temporarily delay their physical removal. ICE’s own form instructions state that anyone ordered deported or removed from the United States may apply for a stay of deportation or removal under 8 C.F.R. 241.6.
In simple terms, a stay of removal is a request asking ICE not to physically remove the person from the United States for a period of time.
A stay of removal does not erase a removal order. It does not automatically reopen the immigration case. It does not create permanent lawful status. It is a temporary request that asks ICE to delay physical removal while specific facts are reviewed.
The Federal Register explains that Form I-246 applies after a person becomes subject to an administratively final order of deportation or removal. In plain language, this means the immigration case has reached the point where the remaining step may be physical removal from the United States.
For many families, Form I-246 is not filed casually. It is often considered when a person is facing a very serious and urgent situation. A person may already have a final removal order but also have medical issues, family hardship, pending legal proceedings, or other humanitarian circumstances that may support a request to delay removal.
DHS explains that ICE may consider factors such as a serious medical condition, whether the person is a minor, whether the person is needed in court proceedings in the United States, or whether there are other circumstances where physical removal may not be in the public interest.
Because of that, raising the fee from $155 to $755 may create a real financial burden for some families. People facing removal may already be dealing with legal fees, medical records, translations, transportation, family expenses, and the emotional weight of possible separation. A higher government filing fee may make an already difficult situation even harder.
At the same time, DHS states that fee waivers may continue to be requested by individuals who are unable to pay the Form I-246 fee. That is an important point for fairness and accuracy. However, the ability to request a fee waiver does not mean every fee waiver or every stay request will be approved.
This proposed fee increase may affect some people who have been ordered removed or deported and who are facing possible physical removal from the United States.
This may include individuals who:
Every case is different. A stay of removal is not available or appropriate in every situation. A person with a final removal order should not assume that filing Form I-246 will stop removal automatically.
A person with a final removal order should be very careful before filing anything with immigration authorities. Once a person is subject to a final removal order, the government may already have authority to carry out physical removal. Any filing may bring attention to the person’s location, immigration history, and current circumstances.
Before filing Form I-246, it is important to review:
A stay request should be supported with strong documentation. Depending on the case, that may include medical records, family documents, evidence of hardship, proof of pending legal matters, proof of rehabilitation, community ties, or other records that explain why immediate removal should be delayed.
This is why legal review is so important. A stay of removal request is not only a form. It is a request for discretion, and the facts must be presented carefully.
The proposed Form I-246 fee increase comes at a time when other immigration enforcement and immigration court developments are also taking place.
ICE’s official 287(g) program page reported that, as of May 21, 2026, at 4:27 p.m., ICE had signed 1,864 Memorandums of Agreement for 287(g) programs covering 39 states and 2 U.S. territories.
The 287(g) program allows ICE to enter into agreements with state and local law enforcement agencies so designated officers may perform certain immigration enforcement functions.

This matters because local law enforcement encounters may have immigration consequences in some jurisdictions. Immigrants and mixed-status families should understand their rights, avoid misinformation, and speak with an immigration attorney if they have concerns about detention, prior removal orders, criminal history, or pending immigration cases.
The Executive Office for Immigration Review announced on May 21, 2026 that it swore in 77 immigration judges and 5 temporary immigration judges. EOIR described this as the largest class of new adjudicators in the agency’s history and stated that the total immigration judge corps has grown to nearly 700.
This may affect immigration court operations, but it does not mean every case will move faster immediately. Immigration court scheduling depends on many factors, including the court location, the assigned judge, the type of case, the procedural history, and whether there are pending motions or appeals.
Anyone with a case in immigration court should continue checking official notices carefully and should not miss any hearing date.
USCIS has posted its June 2026 adjustment of status filing chart guidance. For June 2026, USCIS states that applicants in family-sponsored preference categories must use the Dates for Filing chart, while applicants in employment-based preference categories must use the Final Action Dates chart from the Department of State Visa Bulletin.
This matters for people waiting to file adjustment of status based on family or employment preference categories. A person’s priority date must be reviewed carefully before filing. Filing too early, using the wrong chart, or misunderstanding visa availability can create delays and complications.
If you or a loved one has a final order of removal, this is not the time to guess or rely on social media rumors. A stay of removal request may be important in some cases, but it must be prepared carefully and supported with the right evidence.
If you are waiting for a green card, have a pending family petition, are in immigration court, are under ICE supervision, or have questions about a prior removal order, speak with a qualified immigration attorney before making decisions.
Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Immigration law changes frequently, and every case depends on its specific facts. Reading this article does not create an attorney-client relationship. For advice about your situation, please consult an immigration attorney.

Martha L. Arias, Esq.
Immigration Law Attorney
For professional and dedicated immigration legal services, reach out to our immigration attorney Martha Arias and her team at Arias Villa, PLLC. Schedule your consultation today and let us help you achieve your immigration goals.