What can I do if my allowed duration of stay in the US (based on the passport stamp) is too short? [duplicate]










9
















This question already has an answer here:



  • How important is the 'admitted until' date stamped on my passport while entering the US

    3 answers



Completely paranoid about my last experience with US Immigrafion.

Leaving the Bahamas(my home) I had a very interesting encounter with an immigration officer.

I approached the counter and was asked the usual questions, I was then asked when was the last time I was in the U.S. and I politely told the officer that I didn't remember the exact dates as it was over 6 months ago and that she had my passport so she can verify.

I guess that was suspicious to her since it escalated into a bigger ordeal.



Completely unaware of the severity of no phone policy as I've never had a difficult experience when traveling to the U.S. I attempted to call my mother to get the exact dates and the lady completely lost it and told me to put my phone away which I did.

She then took my passport and asked me to go into this small white room, obviously some sort of secondary questioning/screening.

I waited for almost 30 minutes until she finally arrived and told me "unless you want your visa denied you better have some answers".



I was in complete disbelief that she refused to look in my passport and see the dates.

She then asked me to approach the counter which I did and I apologized to her for not being able to remember the exact dates as I had literally just found out my dad has stage 4 cancer and my mind was clustered and that I'd never thought to memorize the dates as I know they are stamped in the passport and the officers usually verify themselves.

I then tried to remember the dates and I told her I was in Vegas from August until September and then she brought up the fact that I was in Charlotte and Houston to which I let her know they were simply layovers and I never left the airports.



I made an honest mistake of genuinely forgetting a weekend trip to Atlanta in November which she brought to my attention and I apologized for it. She then proceeds to thoroughly check my bags and upon finding nothing suspicious, takes my passport and returns it with a stamp that says I must return on or before April 29th, extremely puzzled I reminded her that my return flight was for May 5th and she said that means you need to change your ticket and be back by the date stamped in my passport.



I've always had my passport stamped with a maximum of 6 months admittance but this time it was stamped for a little under a month as my departure was April 8th.

I'm extremely worried about whether or not this will affect my future travels as my mom, niece and I have already planned to spend the entire summer with my sister in Vegas.



Will this experience affect my future travels and not being admitted for the usual 6 months?










share|improve this question















marked as duplicate by JonathanReez, mts, Gayot Fow, CMaster, Willeke Apr 26 '16 at 21:03


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.













  • 9





    A US immigration officer can authorize entry for any length of time they decide upon. There is no guarantee of XX months.

    – user13044
    Apr 25 '16 at 9:35






  • 3





    Consider filing a complaint at help.cbp.gov/app/forms/complaint . Better yet, talk to a good US-based immigration lawyer if you can afford it.

    – Eugene O
    Apr 25 '16 at 15:57






  • 1





    It'd just like to note that you fundamentally misunderstood the point of the questions you were asked. They're not trying to find out when you were last in the US, which they already know from their records. They're trying to check that you're the person you claim to be, and part of that is being familiar with your own travel history. You don't need to know exact dates: "I was in Vegas from August until September" would have been a perfectly good answer if you'd given it immediately instead of sounding evasive; forgetting transits probably isn't an issue, especially as you visit the US often.

    – David Richerby
    Jan 11 '18 at 14:32















9
















This question already has an answer here:



  • How important is the 'admitted until' date stamped on my passport while entering the US

    3 answers



Completely paranoid about my last experience with US Immigrafion.

Leaving the Bahamas(my home) I had a very interesting encounter with an immigration officer.

I approached the counter and was asked the usual questions, I was then asked when was the last time I was in the U.S. and I politely told the officer that I didn't remember the exact dates as it was over 6 months ago and that she had my passport so she can verify.

I guess that was suspicious to her since it escalated into a bigger ordeal.



Completely unaware of the severity of no phone policy as I've never had a difficult experience when traveling to the U.S. I attempted to call my mother to get the exact dates and the lady completely lost it and told me to put my phone away which I did.

She then took my passport and asked me to go into this small white room, obviously some sort of secondary questioning/screening.

I waited for almost 30 minutes until she finally arrived and told me "unless you want your visa denied you better have some answers".



I was in complete disbelief that she refused to look in my passport and see the dates.

She then asked me to approach the counter which I did and I apologized to her for not being able to remember the exact dates as I had literally just found out my dad has stage 4 cancer and my mind was clustered and that I'd never thought to memorize the dates as I know they are stamped in the passport and the officers usually verify themselves.

I then tried to remember the dates and I told her I was in Vegas from August until September and then she brought up the fact that I was in Charlotte and Houston to which I let her know they were simply layovers and I never left the airports.



I made an honest mistake of genuinely forgetting a weekend trip to Atlanta in November which she brought to my attention and I apologized for it. She then proceeds to thoroughly check my bags and upon finding nothing suspicious, takes my passport and returns it with a stamp that says I must return on or before April 29th, extremely puzzled I reminded her that my return flight was for May 5th and she said that means you need to change your ticket and be back by the date stamped in my passport.



I've always had my passport stamped with a maximum of 6 months admittance but this time it was stamped for a little under a month as my departure was April 8th.

I'm extremely worried about whether or not this will affect my future travels as my mom, niece and I have already planned to spend the entire summer with my sister in Vegas.



Will this experience affect my future travels and not being admitted for the usual 6 months?










share|improve this question















marked as duplicate by JonathanReez, mts, Gayot Fow, CMaster, Willeke Apr 26 '16 at 21:03


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.













  • 9





    A US immigration officer can authorize entry for any length of time they decide upon. There is no guarantee of XX months.

    – user13044
    Apr 25 '16 at 9:35






  • 3





    Consider filing a complaint at help.cbp.gov/app/forms/complaint . Better yet, talk to a good US-based immigration lawyer if you can afford it.

    – Eugene O
    Apr 25 '16 at 15:57






  • 1





    It'd just like to note that you fundamentally misunderstood the point of the questions you were asked. They're not trying to find out when you were last in the US, which they already know from their records. They're trying to check that you're the person you claim to be, and part of that is being familiar with your own travel history. You don't need to know exact dates: "I was in Vegas from August until September" would have been a perfectly good answer if you'd given it immediately instead of sounding evasive; forgetting transits probably isn't an issue, especially as you visit the US often.

    – David Richerby
    Jan 11 '18 at 14:32













9












9








9


2







This question already has an answer here:



  • How important is the 'admitted until' date stamped on my passport while entering the US

    3 answers



Completely paranoid about my last experience with US Immigrafion.

Leaving the Bahamas(my home) I had a very interesting encounter with an immigration officer.

I approached the counter and was asked the usual questions, I was then asked when was the last time I was in the U.S. and I politely told the officer that I didn't remember the exact dates as it was over 6 months ago and that she had my passport so she can verify.

I guess that was suspicious to her since it escalated into a bigger ordeal.



Completely unaware of the severity of no phone policy as I've never had a difficult experience when traveling to the U.S. I attempted to call my mother to get the exact dates and the lady completely lost it and told me to put my phone away which I did.

She then took my passport and asked me to go into this small white room, obviously some sort of secondary questioning/screening.

I waited for almost 30 minutes until she finally arrived and told me "unless you want your visa denied you better have some answers".



I was in complete disbelief that she refused to look in my passport and see the dates.

She then asked me to approach the counter which I did and I apologized to her for not being able to remember the exact dates as I had literally just found out my dad has stage 4 cancer and my mind was clustered and that I'd never thought to memorize the dates as I know they are stamped in the passport and the officers usually verify themselves.

I then tried to remember the dates and I told her I was in Vegas from August until September and then she brought up the fact that I was in Charlotte and Houston to which I let her know they were simply layovers and I never left the airports.



I made an honest mistake of genuinely forgetting a weekend trip to Atlanta in November which she brought to my attention and I apologized for it. She then proceeds to thoroughly check my bags and upon finding nothing suspicious, takes my passport and returns it with a stamp that says I must return on or before April 29th, extremely puzzled I reminded her that my return flight was for May 5th and she said that means you need to change your ticket and be back by the date stamped in my passport.



I've always had my passport stamped with a maximum of 6 months admittance but this time it was stamped for a little under a month as my departure was April 8th.

I'm extremely worried about whether or not this will affect my future travels as my mom, niece and I have already planned to spend the entire summer with my sister in Vegas.



Will this experience affect my future travels and not being admitted for the usual 6 months?










share|improve this question

















This question already has an answer here:



  • How important is the 'admitted until' date stamped on my passport while entering the US

    3 answers



Completely paranoid about my last experience with US Immigrafion.

Leaving the Bahamas(my home) I had a very interesting encounter with an immigration officer.

I approached the counter and was asked the usual questions, I was then asked when was the last time I was in the U.S. and I politely told the officer that I didn't remember the exact dates as it was over 6 months ago and that she had my passport so she can verify.

I guess that was suspicious to her since it escalated into a bigger ordeal.



Completely unaware of the severity of no phone policy as I've never had a difficult experience when traveling to the U.S. I attempted to call my mother to get the exact dates and the lady completely lost it and told me to put my phone away which I did.

She then took my passport and asked me to go into this small white room, obviously some sort of secondary questioning/screening.

I waited for almost 30 minutes until she finally arrived and told me "unless you want your visa denied you better have some answers".



I was in complete disbelief that she refused to look in my passport and see the dates.

She then asked me to approach the counter which I did and I apologized to her for not being able to remember the exact dates as I had literally just found out my dad has stage 4 cancer and my mind was clustered and that I'd never thought to memorize the dates as I know they are stamped in the passport and the officers usually verify themselves.

I then tried to remember the dates and I told her I was in Vegas from August until September and then she brought up the fact that I was in Charlotte and Houston to which I let her know they were simply layovers and I never left the airports.



I made an honest mistake of genuinely forgetting a weekend trip to Atlanta in November which she brought to my attention and I apologized for it. She then proceeds to thoroughly check my bags and upon finding nothing suspicious, takes my passport and returns it with a stamp that says I must return on or before April 29th, extremely puzzled I reminded her that my return flight was for May 5th and she said that means you need to change your ticket and be back by the date stamped in my passport.



I've always had my passport stamped with a maximum of 6 months admittance but this time it was stamped for a little under a month as my departure was April 8th.

I'm extremely worried about whether or not this will affect my future travels as my mom, niece and I have already planned to spend the entire summer with my sister in Vegas.



Will this experience affect my future travels and not being admitted for the usual 6 months?





This question already has an answer here:



  • How important is the 'admitted until' date stamped on my passport while entering the US

    3 answers







usa customs-and-immigration legal passport-stamps bahamian-citizens






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 25 '16 at 19:48









JonathanReez

50.1k41239515




50.1k41239515










asked Apr 25 '16 at 8:46









IslandQueenIslandQueen

461




461




marked as duplicate by JonathanReez, mts, Gayot Fow, CMaster, Willeke Apr 26 '16 at 21:03


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, mts, Gayot Fow, CMaster, Willeke Apr 26 '16 at 21:03


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.









  • 9





    A US immigration officer can authorize entry for any length of time they decide upon. There is no guarantee of XX months.

    – user13044
    Apr 25 '16 at 9:35






  • 3





    Consider filing a complaint at help.cbp.gov/app/forms/complaint . Better yet, talk to a good US-based immigration lawyer if you can afford it.

    – Eugene O
    Apr 25 '16 at 15:57






  • 1





    It'd just like to note that you fundamentally misunderstood the point of the questions you were asked. They're not trying to find out when you were last in the US, which they already know from their records. They're trying to check that you're the person you claim to be, and part of that is being familiar with your own travel history. You don't need to know exact dates: "I was in Vegas from August until September" would have been a perfectly good answer if you'd given it immediately instead of sounding evasive; forgetting transits probably isn't an issue, especially as you visit the US often.

    – David Richerby
    Jan 11 '18 at 14:32












  • 9





    A US immigration officer can authorize entry for any length of time they decide upon. There is no guarantee of XX months.

    – user13044
    Apr 25 '16 at 9:35






  • 3





    Consider filing a complaint at help.cbp.gov/app/forms/complaint . Better yet, talk to a good US-based immigration lawyer if you can afford it.

    – Eugene O
    Apr 25 '16 at 15:57






  • 1





    It'd just like to note that you fundamentally misunderstood the point of the questions you were asked. They're not trying to find out when you were last in the US, which they already know from their records. They're trying to check that you're the person you claim to be, and part of that is being familiar with your own travel history. You don't need to know exact dates: "I was in Vegas from August until September" would have been a perfectly good answer if you'd given it immediately instead of sounding evasive; forgetting transits probably isn't an issue, especially as you visit the US often.

    – David Richerby
    Jan 11 '18 at 14:32







9




9





A US immigration officer can authorize entry for any length of time they decide upon. There is no guarantee of XX months.

– user13044
Apr 25 '16 at 9:35





A US immigration officer can authorize entry for any length of time they decide upon. There is no guarantee of XX months.

– user13044
Apr 25 '16 at 9:35




3




3





Consider filing a complaint at help.cbp.gov/app/forms/complaint . Better yet, talk to a good US-based immigration lawyer if you can afford it.

– Eugene O
Apr 25 '16 at 15:57





Consider filing a complaint at help.cbp.gov/app/forms/complaint . Better yet, talk to a good US-based immigration lawyer if you can afford it.

– Eugene O
Apr 25 '16 at 15:57




1




1





It'd just like to note that you fundamentally misunderstood the point of the questions you were asked. They're not trying to find out when you were last in the US, which they already know from their records. They're trying to check that you're the person you claim to be, and part of that is being familiar with your own travel history. You don't need to know exact dates: "I was in Vegas from August until September" would have been a perfectly good answer if you'd given it immediately instead of sounding evasive; forgetting transits probably isn't an issue, especially as you visit the US often.

– David Richerby
Jan 11 '18 at 14:32





It'd just like to note that you fundamentally misunderstood the point of the questions you were asked. They're not trying to find out when you were last in the US, which they already know from their records. They're trying to check that you're the person you claim to be, and part of that is being familiar with your own travel history. You don't need to know exact dates: "I was in Vegas from August until September" would have been a perfectly good answer if you'd given it immediately instead of sounding evasive; forgetting transits probably isn't an issue, especially as you visit the US often.

– David Richerby
Jan 11 '18 at 14:32










1 Answer
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First, you should check your electronic I-94 online because the date on your entry stamp is not always correct.



If you wish to stay beyond the admit-until date on your I-94, you can apply for Extension of Status with Form I-539. You can file it at any time as long as USCIS receives and accepts your application before your I-94 expires. (Though seeing as your I-94 will expire in 4 days, you probably would need to send it on the fastest courier service and then it still may or may not get it in time.) Currently it takes about 3+ months to process these applications, and as long as you timely filed, you are allowed to stay in the US while it is pending regardless of whether your I-94 has expired. (Yes, this means that if you will leave in less than about 3 months of the I-94 expiring, and you submit the application and it is received right before the I-94 expiration, then you don't need to worry about whether they will approve or deny your EOS application, because they won't have gotten to it yet by the time you leave.)



Note that EOS is pretty expensive ($290) to apply for, so this is something you probably would only consider if it is really important to stay for longer or really expensive to alter your original plans to match your I-94 expiration date.






share|improve this answer





























    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    6














    First, you should check your electronic I-94 online because the date on your entry stamp is not always correct.



    If you wish to stay beyond the admit-until date on your I-94, you can apply for Extension of Status with Form I-539. You can file it at any time as long as USCIS receives and accepts your application before your I-94 expires. (Though seeing as your I-94 will expire in 4 days, you probably would need to send it on the fastest courier service and then it still may or may not get it in time.) Currently it takes about 3+ months to process these applications, and as long as you timely filed, you are allowed to stay in the US while it is pending regardless of whether your I-94 has expired. (Yes, this means that if you will leave in less than about 3 months of the I-94 expiring, and you submit the application and it is received right before the I-94 expiration, then you don't need to worry about whether they will approve or deny your EOS application, because they won't have gotten to it yet by the time you leave.)



    Note that EOS is pretty expensive ($290) to apply for, so this is something you probably would only consider if it is really important to stay for longer or really expensive to alter your original plans to match your I-94 expiration date.






    share|improve this answer



























      6














      First, you should check your electronic I-94 online because the date on your entry stamp is not always correct.



      If you wish to stay beyond the admit-until date on your I-94, you can apply for Extension of Status with Form I-539. You can file it at any time as long as USCIS receives and accepts your application before your I-94 expires. (Though seeing as your I-94 will expire in 4 days, you probably would need to send it on the fastest courier service and then it still may or may not get it in time.) Currently it takes about 3+ months to process these applications, and as long as you timely filed, you are allowed to stay in the US while it is pending regardless of whether your I-94 has expired. (Yes, this means that if you will leave in less than about 3 months of the I-94 expiring, and you submit the application and it is received right before the I-94 expiration, then you don't need to worry about whether they will approve or deny your EOS application, because they won't have gotten to it yet by the time you leave.)



      Note that EOS is pretty expensive ($290) to apply for, so this is something you probably would only consider if it is really important to stay for longer or really expensive to alter your original plans to match your I-94 expiration date.






      share|improve this answer

























        6












        6








        6







        First, you should check your electronic I-94 online because the date on your entry stamp is not always correct.



        If you wish to stay beyond the admit-until date on your I-94, you can apply for Extension of Status with Form I-539. You can file it at any time as long as USCIS receives and accepts your application before your I-94 expires. (Though seeing as your I-94 will expire in 4 days, you probably would need to send it on the fastest courier service and then it still may or may not get it in time.) Currently it takes about 3+ months to process these applications, and as long as you timely filed, you are allowed to stay in the US while it is pending regardless of whether your I-94 has expired. (Yes, this means that if you will leave in less than about 3 months of the I-94 expiring, and you submit the application and it is received right before the I-94 expiration, then you don't need to worry about whether they will approve or deny your EOS application, because they won't have gotten to it yet by the time you leave.)



        Note that EOS is pretty expensive ($290) to apply for, so this is something you probably would only consider if it is really important to stay for longer or really expensive to alter your original plans to match your I-94 expiration date.






        share|improve this answer













        First, you should check your electronic I-94 online because the date on your entry stamp is not always correct.



        If you wish to stay beyond the admit-until date on your I-94, you can apply for Extension of Status with Form I-539. You can file it at any time as long as USCIS receives and accepts your application before your I-94 expires. (Though seeing as your I-94 will expire in 4 days, you probably would need to send it on the fastest courier service and then it still may or may not get it in time.) Currently it takes about 3+ months to process these applications, and as long as you timely filed, you are allowed to stay in the US while it is pending regardless of whether your I-94 has expired. (Yes, this means that if you will leave in less than about 3 months of the I-94 expiring, and you submit the application and it is received right before the I-94 expiration, then you don't need to worry about whether they will approve or deny your EOS application, because they won't have gotten to it yet by the time you leave.)



        Note that EOS is pretty expensive ($290) to apply for, so this is something you probably would only consider if it is really important to stay for longer or really expensive to alter your original plans to match your I-94 expiration date.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Apr 25 '16 at 20:30









        user102008user102008

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        11.9k12353













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