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Asylum offers protection to individuals who have suffered persecution — or fear future persecution — in their home country on account of race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group. A carefully prepared case is critical.
Asylum is a form of protection granted by the U.S. government to individuals who have experienced persecution — or have a well-founded fear of future persecution — in their home country on account of one of five protected grounds: race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group.
An approved asylum case grants protection from removal, work authorization, the ability to petition for certain family members, and eligibility to apply for a Green Card after one year. Asylum cases are evidence-driven and highly personal — country conditions, credibility, corroborating documentation, and a clear, consistent narrative are all essential. Filing correctly, within the right timeframe, and under the right track (affirmative vs. defensive) is critical.
"Every asylum case is a story that must be told completely, honestly, and with every supporting detail in its proper place — that's what we help you build."
U.S. law offers three main types of protection from persecution. Choosing the correct track and filing properly from the start is the most important early decision.
For individuals not in removal proceedings who file Form I-589 directly with USCIS. A non-adversarial interview is conducted by a USCIS asylum officer. The most common track for people who enter and file voluntarily.
Filed in immigration court as a defense against removal. An immigration judge hears the case in an adversarial setting, with the government represented by an opposing counsel. Requires thorough preparation and documentation.
Mandatory protection for those who face a "clear probability" of persecution. A higher evidentiary standard than asylum, but no 1-year filing deadline. Does not lead to permanent residency but prevents removal to the country of persecution.
Asylum requires meeting specific legal standards tied to persecution, timing, credibility, and one of the five protected grounds.
You must be physically present in the United States or at a port of entry when you file Form I-589.
You must generally file within one year of your last arrival in the U.S. Exceptions exist for changed circumstances or extraordinary situations.
You must show past persecution or a well-founded fear of future persecution in your home country.
The persecution must be based on race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group.
Persecution must be inflicted by the government — or by individuals or groups the government is unable or unwilling to control.
Your testimony, Form I-589, supporting declarations, and corroborating documents must present a consistent, credible narrative.
You must not have firmly resettled in a third country with permission to reside there permanently before coming to the U.S.
You must not fall under statutory bars such as persecution of others, serious non-political crimes, or certain terrorism-related grounds.
From initial assessment to interview preparation, every asylum case we support follows the same structured, rigorous framework.
Start Your CaseWe review your background, home country conditions, and nature of past harm or feared harm — then identify the strongest protected ground and correct filing track.
We build a complete evidence plan: personal declaration, country-condition reports, witness statements, medical and police records, and supporting translations.
We draft and refine your declaration, organize every exhibit, and prepare you for the interview or hearing through detailed review so your testimony is clear and consistent.
We coordinate filing of Form I-589 and remain with you through biometrics, the interview or hearing, work-authorization applications, and any downstream steps after a decision.
Ready to pursue asylum protection? Our team provides structured guidance and clear next steps — reach out and we'll respond within 48 hours.
Define your goals and identify areas where we can add value to your case.