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New DHS Final Rule Ends Duration of Status for International Students

DHS has finalized a major rule replacing duration of status with fixed admission periods for F-1 students, J-1 exchange visitors, and foreign media representatives. Learn what the four-year admission limit means, how extensions may work, and how international students can protect their lawful status.

DHS Replaces Duration of Status With Fixed Admission Periods

The Department of Homeland Security announced a final rule on July 16, 2026, that replaces duration of status for F, J, and I nonimmigrants with fixed periods of admission. The change applies to international students, exchange visitors, representatives of foreign information media, and qualifying dependents. The rule is scheduled for publication in the Federal Register on July 17, 2026. It is expected to take effect sixty days after publication, subject to congressional review and any later notice from DHS.

Under the former system, many F-1 students and J-1 exchange visitors were admitted for duration of status. This allowed them to remain in the United States while they continued to comply with the requirements of their academic or exchange programs. Under the final rule, affected nonimmigrants will instead receive a specific expiration date governing their authorized period of admission.

The Four-Year Limit Is an Admission Rule, Not Simply a Visa Expiration Rule

The new policy is frequently described as a four-year student visa limit. Legally, however, a visa and immigration status serve different purposes. A visa generally permits a foreign national to request admission at a United States port of entry. The authorized period of stay after admission is normally controlled by Form I-94.

Under the final rule, F-1 students and J-1 exchange visitors may generally be admitted for the length of their approved program, but no initial admission period may exceed four years. A student enrolled in a shorter program may receive less than four years. A student whose program requires more than four years may need to request an extension of stay from United States Citizenship and Immigration Services. The rule does not automatically prohibit students from completing longer academic programs, but it subjects continued stay to formal government review.

This distinction is particularly important for doctoral candidates, medical trainees, researchers, and undergraduate students whose programs may extend beyond four years. The Washington Post reported that many students may need additional time to finish their degrees, especially those pursuing advanced academic programs.

A School Document May No Longer Be Enough to Extend Lawful Stay

An updated Form I-20 or Form DS 2019 will remain important evidence of an academic or exchange program. However, the school or program sponsor will not have independent authority to extend the expiration date issued by the federal government.

A student or exchange visitor who needs to remain beyond the authorized period will generally have to submit a formal extension of stay request to United States Citizenship and Immigration Services. The applicant may need to establish that the additional time is connected to a legitimate academic, exchange, training, or professional purpose and that all applicable status requirements have been satisfied.

Supporting evidence may include academic records, proof of continued enrollment, financial documentation, an updated program document, information concerning research or program delays, and an explanation of why additional time is necessary. Because approval is not automatic, students should begin preparing well before the Form I-94 expiration date.

Form I-94 Will Become One of the Most Important Immigration Documents

International students should not rely exclusively on the expiration date printed on a visa stamp or the program end date listed by a school. The controlling deadline may be the admit until date appearing on Form I-94.

After every entry into the United States, students and exchange visitors should retrieve their latest Form I 94 and compare it with their passport, visa, Form I-20, Form DS 2019, and any employment authorization document. Any inconsistency should be addressed immediately.

The fixed admission system also creates a clearer point at which unlawful presence may begin to accrue. Remaining in the United States after the authorized period without a timely extension, change of status, or another form of lawful authorization may create serious consequences. Those consequences can affect future visa applications, readmission, adjustment of status, and eligibility for permanent residence.

The F-1 Departure Period Will Generally Be Reduced

The final rule generally reduces the period provided to F-1 students after completing their studies or authorized practical training from sixty days to thirty days. During this period, a student may prepare to leave the United States or take qualifying steps to maintain lawful status.

The shorter period may affect graduates who need time to arrange travel, begin another academic program, request a change of status, or address employment authorization matters. A student who submits an extension request during this thirty-day period may face restrictions on beginning or continuing employment while the request is pending. Early filing will therefore be especially important for students who want to avoid interruptions in study or authorized employment.

Optional Practical Training Requires Coordinated Planning

The rule may have significant consequences for students pursuing optional practical training or a STEM optional practical training extension. In many cases, a student may need both employment authorization and an extension of the authorized period of stay.

A recommendation from a designated school official does not by itself guarantee that a student may remain or continue working beyond the Form I 94 deadlines. Students should coordinate the timing of school recommendations, employment authorization filings, extension requests, and international travel.

The final rule includes certain protections for timely filed applications, but those protections depend on the type of application, the filing date, and the form of employment involved. Students should not assume that every pending application automatically extends employment authorization.

International Travel May Trigger the New Admission Framework

Students who are already in the United States under duration of status may receive transition protection. However, departing the United States and requesting readmission after the new rule takes effect may result in the issuance of a fixed expiration date.

Before traveling, students should review the validity of their passport, visa, Form I-20 or Form DS 2019, travel endorsement, employment authorization, and any pending application. A person with a pending extension or change of status request should obtain legal advice before leaving because departure can affect the application and the conditions of readmission.

The Rule Also Affects Academic Planning

The final rule contains provisions addressing school transfers, changes in educational objectives, and language training. For example, an F-1 student may generally be required to complete the first academic year at the school that issued the initial Form I 20 before changing schools or educational objectives, unless an authorized exception applies.

The rule also limits F 1 language training to an aggregate period of twenty-four months, including certain breaks and vacation periods. These changes make it important for students to consider immigration consequences before transferring schools, changing majors, beginning another program, or extending language study.

Universities and International Education Advocates Raise Concerns

DHS maintains that fixed admission periods will improve oversight, strengthen compliance monitoring, and create additional opportunities to review whether nonimmigrants are maintaining lawful status. The agency received nearly 22,000 public comments before issuing the final rule.

International education advocates have expressed concern that the new system may create additional costs, processing delays, and uncertainty for students and universities. They also argue that requiring extensions during longer degree programs could make the United States less competitive when attracting international students and researchers.

Although the new framework creates additional responsibilities, students can reduce risk through early preparation, careful document review, and coordinated legal planning.

What International Students Should Do Now

Students should review their current immigration documents and identify the earliest applicable expiration date. They should maintain complete copies of every Form I 20, Form DS 2019, Form I-94, visa, passport, employment authorization document, application receipt, academic record, and communication with school officials.

A student whose academic program, research, or practical training may continue beyond the authorized admission period should begin extension planning well before the deadline. School transfers, changes in educational level, optional practical training, STEM optional practical training, changes of status, and international travel should all be evaluated as part of a single immigration strategy.

How Spar & Bernstein Can Help International Students

An immigration attorney at Spar & Bernstein can review a student’s immigration history, determine which transition provisions may apply, identify the controlling Form I-94 deadlines, and develop a strategy for maintaining lawful status.

The firm can assist students with extension of stay applications, changes of status, optional practical training questions, travel planning, requests for evidence, reinstatement matters, and long-term immigration options. Spar & Bernstein regularly represents international students, graduates, employers, and educational institutions facing student status and employment authorization issues.

The new rule does not mean that every student in a longer program must abandon an academic goal. It does mean that students will need to treat immigration deadlines as an essential part of educational planning. With timely guidance and a properly documented strategy, international students can continue pursuing their studies and professional opportunities while protecting their lawful status.