Can DACA Recipients Travel Outside the United States?
Yes — with advance parole. DACA recipients can apply for a travel document that allows you to leave and re-enter the U.S. for specific qualifying reasons. This is significant because re-entering with advance parole can, in some cases, open pathways to permanent residency.
Qualifying Reasons
Humanitarian — Visiting a seriously ill family member, attending a funeral, or obtaining medical treatment
Educational — Studying abroad, attending conferences, or academic research
Employment — Business meetings, training, or assignments requiring international travel
You must provide documentary evidence for your qualifying reason.
Advance Parole and the Path to Residency
Re-entering the U.S. on advance parole creates a lawful entry that can make you eligible for adjustment of status if you have an approved immigrant petition. This is a complex legal topic — we strongly recommend consulting with an immigration attorney before you travel.
Salt Lake City Document Preparation Support
DocPros serves clients in Salt Lake City and throughout Utah who need organized, bilingual immigration document preparation before submitting to USCIS. Many families come to us because they are worried about expiration dates, inconsistent information across forms, outdated USCIS editions, or missing supporting documents.
Our process is built to reduce preventable filing problems: we gather the details, prepare the forms, check consistency across the packet, and provide filing instructions. USCIS filing fees are separate and paid directly to the government. DocPros is a document preparation service, not a law firm, and we do not provide legal advice or representation.
For clients with arrests, removal history, fraud concerns, unlawful presence questions, or complex eligibility issues, we recommend speaking with a licensed immigration attorney before filing. For routine document preparation, our goal is simple: make the paperwork clearer, more organized, and easier to submit correctly.
Fees Breakdown
| Fee Type | Amount |
| DocPros preparation fee | $349 |
| USCIS I-131 fee | $630 |
| Parole fee (effective Oct 2025) | $1,000 |
| Total | $1,979 |