If you hold a U.S. visa, you know its expiration date. You probably have it memorized. What most visa holders do not realize is that the visa expiration date has almost nothing to do with how long they are allowed to stay in the country. That is the job of a completely different document—one that most people have never seen, cannot find in their passport, and rarely think about until something goes wrong.
It is called the I-94. And in many ways, it is the most important piece of paper in your immigration file.
What the I-94 Actually Is
The I-94 is the Arrival/Departure Record issued by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) every time a non-immigrant enters the United States. It documents the terms of your admission: when you arrived, what status you were admitted in, and—critically—the date by which you are authorized to remain.
Until 2013, CBP stamped a paper I-94 card into your passport at the port of entry. That card is now largely gone. For most air and sea arrivals, the I-94 is generated electronically at the time of admission and stored in a CBP database. It does not appear in your passport. There is no stamp, no card, no physical reminder that it exists—which is exactly why so many people forget about it.
Your I-94 can be retrieved at any time at i94.cbp.dhs.gov. Every non-immigrant who has entered the United States should do this. Many people pull up their I-94 for the first time and discover that the date printed there is not what they expected.
The Visa Is Not What You Think It Is
This is where the most consequential confusion in immigration law lives. A visa and an I-94 are not the same thing. They do not serve the same function. Conflating them is one of the most common—and costly—mistakes non-immigrants make.
A visa is a travel document. It is issued by a U.S. consulate or embassy abroad, and it serves one purpose: it authorizes you to appear at a U.S. port of entry and request admission. That is it. The visa says nothing about how long you may stay once you arrive. A visa with a two-year validity does not mean you are authorized to remain in the United States for two years. It means you may use that visa to seek entry during the two-year window—subject to the decision of the CBP officer at the port of entry.
Once you are admitted, the visa becomes functionally irrelevant to your authorized period of stay. What controls that period is the I-94. The CBP officer who processes your entry makes a determination about how long you are permitted to remain, records it on your I-94, and that date is your actual deadline.
Your visa could expire tomorrow. If your I-94 says you are authorized to stay for six more months, you may remain lawfully for six more months. Conversely, your visa could be valid for another three years. If your I-94 says your authorized stay ends in 30 days, you must depart by that date—regardless of what the visa says.
What “Duration of Status” Means
Some non-immigrants—notably students on F-1 visas and exchange visitors on J-1 visas—will find that their I-94 does not contain a specific departure date at all. Instead, it reads D/S, which stands for Duration of Status.
D/S means that the person is authorized to remain in the United States for as long as they maintain their status—meaning, for F-1 students, as long as they are enrolled full-time in a qualifying program and complying with the terms of their visa. There is no fixed calendar date. The authorized period of stay is tied to the ongoing conditions of the status itself.
D/S can create a false sense of security. A student who stops attending school, drops below full-time enrollment without authorization, or otherwise falls out of compliance does not automatically receive a new I-94 reflecting the change. They simply fall out of status—often without any formal notice—and may not realize it until it creates a serious problem.
What Happens When Your I-94 Expires
Remaining in the United States beyond the date on your I-94—without an extension of status, a change of status, or other authorized basis—is called overstaying. Overstaying has consequences that are serious, durable, and often irreversible in the short term.
Once you accrue unlawful presence, federal law imposes mandatory bars on re-entry:
- Unlawful presence of more than 180 days but less than one year, followed by a departure from the U.S., triggers a 3-year bar on re-entry.
- Unlawful presence of one year or more, followed by a departure, triggers a 10-year bar on re-entry.
- In cases involving fraud or misrepresentation, a permanent bar may apply.
These bars are not administrative inconveniences. They are statutory grounds of inadmissibility that attach the moment you depart after accruing the relevant period of unlawful presence. They cannot be waived except in narrow circumstances and through a formal process that is neither fast nor guaranteed.
The particularly painful aspect of this framework is that the bars activate upon departure. Someone who has overstayed and realizes it may feel that leaving voluntarily is the right thing to do. In many cases, leaving is what triggers the bar and locks them out of the country for years.
The Mistakes We See Most Often
Immigration attorneys see I-94 issues with regularity. The situations are almost always the result of a misunderstanding rather than intentional misconduct—but the law does not distinguish between the two when imposing consequences.
The most common pattern: a visa holder arrives in the United States, is admitted for a period shorter than their visa validity, and simply does not notice. They continue going about their life, relying on the visa expiration date as their mental benchmark, and one day realize they have been out of status for months. By that point, the options are constrained and the stakes are high.
Other common scenarios include:
- H-1B workers who are laid off and do not realize the 60-day grace period has already begun running while they sort out other matters
- B-2 visitors who are admitted for 90 days but assume they have six months because they have heard that figure associated with tourist entry
- Students who take a leave of absence without coordinating with their designated school official and find their SEVIS record terminated
- Workers whose employer filed an extension petition late, leaving a gap in authorized status that they were unaware of
Who Should Check Their I-94 Right Now
The honest answer is: anyone who is in the United States on a non-immigrant visa and has not recently verified their I-94 record. This is not an alarmist position. CBP systems are not infallible. Dates are occasionally entered incorrectly. Admissions are sometimes coded in the wrong status. These errors happen, and they are far easier to address when caught early.
You should verify your I-94 immediately if any of the following apply:
- You entered the United States more than a year ago and have not confirmed your authorized period of admission since then
- You recently changed employers, changed visa status, or had a petition filed on your behalf
- You travel internationally with regularity and re-enter the United States frequently
- You experienced a job loss or other disruption to your employment-based status
- You are planning to apply for a green card, change of status, or any other immigration benefit and need to confirm you have maintained lawful status continuously
If you find a discrepancy—a date that appears incorrect, a status code that does not match your visa category, or a record that does not reflect your most recent entry—that needs to be addressed. Errors in CBP records can be corrected, but the process requires documentation and, ideally, legal guidance.
The I-94 and Employment-Based Immigration
For workers in H-1B, L-1, TN, and other employment-based visa categories, the I-94 takes on additional significance. The authorized period of stay reflected on the I-94 is the definitive record of how long the worker is permitted to remain and work in the United States. It does not always align with the approval period on the I-129 petition or the validity dates listed in the USCIS approval notice, which can create confusion when the two documents are read together without understanding how they interact.
In the H-1B context specifically, a worker who loses their job begins accruing unlawful presence once the 60-day grace period expires—regardless of what validity period remains on their I-94. The I-94 does not automatically update to reflect a termination of employment. The practical consequence is that the worker may be holding an I-94 that shows a future expiration date while already being out of status. The document looks valid. The underlying status is not.
This is one of the more counterintuitive aspects of immigration law, and it is why employment-based immigration situations—particularly those involving job changes, layoffs, or gaps in employment—warrant legal review rather than self-diagnosis.
What to Do If You Think There Is a Problem
If you have questions about your I-94, your authorized period of admission, or whether your status is current, the first step is to verify your record at i94.cbp.dhs.gov and compare it against your visa, your petition approval notice, and the actual dates of your entry and any extensions filed on your behalf.
If something does not look right—or if you are simply not sure how to read what you are seeing—this is not a situation to resolve through internet research. The consequences of getting it wrong are disproportionate to the effort of getting a professional opinion. A focused strategy session can clarify your current status, identify whether any corrective action is needed, and define a path forward before a manageable issue becomes an urgent one.
This post provides general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Immigration law is fact-specific and circumstances vary. If you have questions about your specific situation, consult a licensed immigration attorney.