USA I94 validity after entry/exit via air then entry/exit via land [duplicate]









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  • I'm arriving to the US by air, but departing via land. How do I end form I-94 now that it is only electronic?

    3 answers



  • Entered the US by land, left by Mexican land border. Had a flight booked but didn't take it. Will I have problems entering the US again?

    1 answer



I am a UK passport holder currently living in Canada. I recently visited Alaska and travelled via air and was issued an electronic I94. The I94 website shows that my I94 has an admit until date that's valid for another 2 months.



Now I'm looking to enter the US via a land border (rail). Last time I did this trip I was issued a paper I94 which I returned to the CBSA officer upon my re-entry to Canada.



I have a couple of questions:



  1. Is my electronic I94 still valid for entry via a land border?

  2. If I use my electronic I94 for entry, how do I prove that I have exited the USA if there is no record of my departure?









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marked as duplicate by JonathanReez Jun 3 '17 at 10:07


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • What's your status in Canada? Permanent resident? Work visa?
    – DJClayworth
    May 15 '17 at 18:37






  • 1




    To eliminate any confusion with your status, I would explain to CBP at the entry on your coming trip. I am of the opinion you will be issued a new I-94 since you live (legally) in Canada and hence your return to Canada was not a short trip as covered in the typical Visa Waiver short trip to Canada sense. Canada shares information with the USA so they should have information about you having entered Canada last time and hence simultaneously left the USA. The two systems may not be communicating in real time.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    May 15 '17 at 18:48











  • @SheikPaulofOsawatomie my understanding (based mainly on reality TV shows, but I don't have time to look up the link for the YouTube video just now) is that VWP nationals resident in Canada generally reuse their existing I-94 until it expires. I suppose the exception would be a case where the I-94 expires during the stay in the US; in that case the traveler should point this out to the officer when applying for entry and explicitly request a new I-94.
    – phoog
    May 15 '17 at 18:51










  • @phoog It could well be the case however since he/she will be meeting a CBP officer on their way here anyway, it doesn't hurt to seek an opinion from them out of an abundance of caution.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    May 15 '17 at 18:58







  • 1




    @SheikPaulofOsawatomie yes, absolutely. After thinking about it some more, I wonder whether the traveler actually has a valid I-94 (because the paper I-94 may have cancelled the earlier electronic I-94, and the paper I-94 has been returned). Regardless, any problems inherent in the situation are purely bureaucratic and as long as the traveler explains everything at the border, the officer should be able to handle the bureaucracy correctly.
    – phoog
    May 15 '17 at 19:13














up vote
3
down vote

favorite













This question already has an answer here:



  • I'm arriving to the US by air, but departing via land. How do I end form I-94 now that it is only electronic?

    3 answers



  • Entered the US by land, left by Mexican land border. Had a flight booked but didn't take it. Will I have problems entering the US again?

    1 answer



I am a UK passport holder currently living in Canada. I recently visited Alaska and travelled via air and was issued an electronic I94. The I94 website shows that my I94 has an admit until date that's valid for another 2 months.



Now I'm looking to enter the US via a land border (rail). Last time I did this trip I was issued a paper I94 which I returned to the CBSA officer upon my re-entry to Canada.



I have a couple of questions:



  1. Is my electronic I94 still valid for entry via a land border?

  2. If I use my electronic I94 for entry, how do I prove that I have exited the USA if there is no record of my departure?









share|improve this question













marked as duplicate by JonathanReez Jun 3 '17 at 10:07


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • What's your status in Canada? Permanent resident? Work visa?
    – DJClayworth
    May 15 '17 at 18:37






  • 1




    To eliminate any confusion with your status, I would explain to CBP at the entry on your coming trip. I am of the opinion you will be issued a new I-94 since you live (legally) in Canada and hence your return to Canada was not a short trip as covered in the typical Visa Waiver short trip to Canada sense. Canada shares information with the USA so they should have information about you having entered Canada last time and hence simultaneously left the USA. The two systems may not be communicating in real time.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    May 15 '17 at 18:48











  • @SheikPaulofOsawatomie my understanding (based mainly on reality TV shows, but I don't have time to look up the link for the YouTube video just now) is that VWP nationals resident in Canada generally reuse their existing I-94 until it expires. I suppose the exception would be a case where the I-94 expires during the stay in the US; in that case the traveler should point this out to the officer when applying for entry and explicitly request a new I-94.
    – phoog
    May 15 '17 at 18:51










  • @phoog It could well be the case however since he/she will be meeting a CBP officer on their way here anyway, it doesn't hurt to seek an opinion from them out of an abundance of caution.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    May 15 '17 at 18:58







  • 1




    @SheikPaulofOsawatomie yes, absolutely. After thinking about it some more, I wonder whether the traveler actually has a valid I-94 (because the paper I-94 may have cancelled the earlier electronic I-94, and the paper I-94 has been returned). Regardless, any problems inherent in the situation are purely bureaucratic and as long as the traveler explains everything at the border, the officer should be able to handle the bureaucracy correctly.
    – phoog
    May 15 '17 at 19:13












up vote
3
down vote

favorite









up vote
3
down vote

favorite












This question already has an answer here:



  • I'm arriving to the US by air, but departing via land. How do I end form I-94 now that it is only electronic?

    3 answers



  • Entered the US by land, left by Mexican land border. Had a flight booked but didn't take it. Will I have problems entering the US again?

    1 answer



I am a UK passport holder currently living in Canada. I recently visited Alaska and travelled via air and was issued an electronic I94. The I94 website shows that my I94 has an admit until date that's valid for another 2 months.



Now I'm looking to enter the US via a land border (rail). Last time I did this trip I was issued a paper I94 which I returned to the CBSA officer upon my re-entry to Canada.



I have a couple of questions:



  1. Is my electronic I94 still valid for entry via a land border?

  2. If I use my electronic I94 for entry, how do I prove that I have exited the USA if there is no record of my departure?









share|improve this question














This question already has an answer here:



  • I'm arriving to the US by air, but departing via land. How do I end form I-94 now that it is only electronic?

    3 answers



  • Entered the US by land, left by Mexican land border. Had a flight booked but didn't take it. Will I have problems entering the US again?

    1 answer



I am a UK passport holder currently living in Canada. I recently visited Alaska and travelled via air and was issued an electronic I94. The I94 website shows that my I94 has an admit until date that's valid for another 2 months.



Now I'm looking to enter the US via a land border (rail). Last time I did this trip I was issued a paper I94 which I returned to the CBSA officer upon my re-entry to Canada.



I have a couple of questions:



  1. Is my electronic I94 still valid for entry via a land border?

  2. If I use my electronic I94 for entry, how do I prove that I have exited the USA if there is no record of my departure?




This question already has an answer here:



  • I'm arriving to the US by air, but departing via land. How do I end form I-94 now that it is only electronic?

    3 answers



  • Entered the US by land, left by Mexican land border. Had a flight booked but didn't take it. Will I have problems entering the US again?

    1 answer







usa borders i-94






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked May 15 '17 at 17:12









AlexM

162




162




marked as duplicate by JonathanReez Jun 3 '17 at 10:07


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






marked as duplicate by JonathanReez Jun 3 '17 at 10:07


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.













  • What's your status in Canada? Permanent resident? Work visa?
    – DJClayworth
    May 15 '17 at 18:37






  • 1




    To eliminate any confusion with your status, I would explain to CBP at the entry on your coming trip. I am of the opinion you will be issued a new I-94 since you live (legally) in Canada and hence your return to Canada was not a short trip as covered in the typical Visa Waiver short trip to Canada sense. Canada shares information with the USA so they should have information about you having entered Canada last time and hence simultaneously left the USA. The two systems may not be communicating in real time.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    May 15 '17 at 18:48











  • @SheikPaulofOsawatomie my understanding (based mainly on reality TV shows, but I don't have time to look up the link for the YouTube video just now) is that VWP nationals resident in Canada generally reuse their existing I-94 until it expires. I suppose the exception would be a case where the I-94 expires during the stay in the US; in that case the traveler should point this out to the officer when applying for entry and explicitly request a new I-94.
    – phoog
    May 15 '17 at 18:51










  • @phoog It could well be the case however since he/she will be meeting a CBP officer on their way here anyway, it doesn't hurt to seek an opinion from them out of an abundance of caution.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    May 15 '17 at 18:58







  • 1




    @SheikPaulofOsawatomie yes, absolutely. After thinking about it some more, I wonder whether the traveler actually has a valid I-94 (because the paper I-94 may have cancelled the earlier electronic I-94, and the paper I-94 has been returned). Regardless, any problems inherent in the situation are purely bureaucratic and as long as the traveler explains everything at the border, the officer should be able to handle the bureaucracy correctly.
    – phoog
    May 15 '17 at 19:13
















  • What's your status in Canada? Permanent resident? Work visa?
    – DJClayworth
    May 15 '17 at 18:37






  • 1




    To eliminate any confusion with your status, I would explain to CBP at the entry on your coming trip. I am of the opinion you will be issued a new I-94 since you live (legally) in Canada and hence your return to Canada was not a short trip as covered in the typical Visa Waiver short trip to Canada sense. Canada shares information with the USA so they should have information about you having entered Canada last time and hence simultaneously left the USA. The two systems may not be communicating in real time.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    May 15 '17 at 18:48











  • @SheikPaulofOsawatomie my understanding (based mainly on reality TV shows, but I don't have time to look up the link for the YouTube video just now) is that VWP nationals resident in Canada generally reuse their existing I-94 until it expires. I suppose the exception would be a case where the I-94 expires during the stay in the US; in that case the traveler should point this out to the officer when applying for entry and explicitly request a new I-94.
    – phoog
    May 15 '17 at 18:51










  • @phoog It could well be the case however since he/she will be meeting a CBP officer on their way here anyway, it doesn't hurt to seek an opinion from them out of an abundance of caution.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    May 15 '17 at 18:58







  • 1




    @SheikPaulofOsawatomie yes, absolutely. After thinking about it some more, I wonder whether the traveler actually has a valid I-94 (because the paper I-94 may have cancelled the earlier electronic I-94, and the paper I-94 has been returned). Regardless, any problems inherent in the situation are purely bureaucratic and as long as the traveler explains everything at the border, the officer should be able to handle the bureaucracy correctly.
    – phoog
    May 15 '17 at 19:13















What's your status in Canada? Permanent resident? Work visa?
– DJClayworth
May 15 '17 at 18:37




What's your status in Canada? Permanent resident? Work visa?
– DJClayworth
May 15 '17 at 18:37




1




1




To eliminate any confusion with your status, I would explain to CBP at the entry on your coming trip. I am of the opinion you will be issued a new I-94 since you live (legally) in Canada and hence your return to Canada was not a short trip as covered in the typical Visa Waiver short trip to Canada sense. Canada shares information with the USA so they should have information about you having entered Canada last time and hence simultaneously left the USA. The two systems may not be communicating in real time.
– Honorary World Citizen
May 15 '17 at 18:48





To eliminate any confusion with your status, I would explain to CBP at the entry on your coming trip. I am of the opinion you will be issued a new I-94 since you live (legally) in Canada and hence your return to Canada was not a short trip as covered in the typical Visa Waiver short trip to Canada sense. Canada shares information with the USA so they should have information about you having entered Canada last time and hence simultaneously left the USA. The two systems may not be communicating in real time.
– Honorary World Citizen
May 15 '17 at 18:48













@SheikPaulofOsawatomie my understanding (based mainly on reality TV shows, but I don't have time to look up the link for the YouTube video just now) is that VWP nationals resident in Canada generally reuse their existing I-94 until it expires. I suppose the exception would be a case where the I-94 expires during the stay in the US; in that case the traveler should point this out to the officer when applying for entry and explicitly request a new I-94.
– phoog
May 15 '17 at 18:51




@SheikPaulofOsawatomie my understanding (based mainly on reality TV shows, but I don't have time to look up the link for the YouTube video just now) is that VWP nationals resident in Canada generally reuse their existing I-94 until it expires. I suppose the exception would be a case where the I-94 expires during the stay in the US; in that case the traveler should point this out to the officer when applying for entry and explicitly request a new I-94.
– phoog
May 15 '17 at 18:51












@phoog It could well be the case however since he/she will be meeting a CBP officer on their way here anyway, it doesn't hurt to seek an opinion from them out of an abundance of caution.
– Honorary World Citizen
May 15 '17 at 18:58





@phoog It could well be the case however since he/she will be meeting a CBP officer on their way here anyway, it doesn't hurt to seek an opinion from them out of an abundance of caution.
– Honorary World Citizen
May 15 '17 at 18:58





1




1




@SheikPaulofOsawatomie yes, absolutely. After thinking about it some more, I wonder whether the traveler actually has a valid I-94 (because the paper I-94 may have cancelled the earlier electronic I-94, and the paper I-94 has been returned). Regardless, any problems inherent in the situation are purely bureaucratic and as long as the traveler explains everything at the border, the officer should be able to handle the bureaucracy correctly.
– phoog
May 15 '17 at 19:13




@SheikPaulofOsawatomie yes, absolutely. After thinking about it some more, I wonder whether the traveler actually has a valid I-94 (because the paper I-94 may have cancelled the earlier electronic I-94, and the paper I-94 has been returned). Regardless, any problems inherent in the situation are purely bureaucratic and as long as the traveler explains everything at the border, the officer should be able to handle the bureaucracy correctly.
– phoog
May 15 '17 at 19:13















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