Renewal planning factors
Current DACA recipients should organize prior approval notices, EAD records, identity documents, updated address history, education records when relevant, and filing timing during the USCIS 150 to 120 day renewal window.
Immigration Tools
Answer 7 source-backed questions to review DACA renewal planning and current request posture.
This free DACA quiz helps review renewal planning and current first-time request posture using USCIS DACA factors. It checks age on June 15, 2012, age at entry, continuous residence since June 15, 2007, physical presence on June 15, 2012, education status, criminal history, and prior DACA status. USCIS continues to accept and process renewal requests, while first-time grants remain court-limited. The result is a planning summary, not a legal eligibility decision.
Current DACA recipients should organize prior approval notices, EAD records, identity documents, updated address history, education records when relevant, and filing timing during the USCIS 150 to 120 day renewal window.
The quiz separates historical DACA factors from current court-limited first-time grants so users do not mistake a historical factor screen for a promise that USCIS can approve a first-time request.
DACA filings usually involve I-821D, I-765, and I-765WS planning. Check the current USCIS instructions and fee sources before preparing any packet.
Use these official pages to verify current form rules, filing posture, fees, processing-time data, and category limits. This page is a planning aid, not a filing decision.
Check current court-limited DACA request posture, including renewal processing and initial request limits.
Check the current form edition, renewal instructions, and related filing requirements.
Review the employment authorization form used with DACA-related requests.
Confirm current fees and fee exemptions before preparing or filing a benefit request.
7 quick questions to screen DACA renewal planning and current request posture.
Disclaimer: This quiz provides general information only and does not constitute legal advice. DACA policy is subject to ongoing legal challenges and may change. Results are based solely on the answers you provide and may not reflect your complete situation. Consult a qualified immigration attorney or accredited representative for advice specific to your case.