# Temporary Protected Status (TPS): How It Works

> TPS lets nationals of certain countries live and work in the U.S. when it's unsafe to return. Why countries are designated, what protection it gives, and what it does not.

- Source: https://carlosmaury.law/news/temporary-protected-status-tps-explained
- Author: Carlos Maury Law
- Published: 2026-07-01
- Topics: Temporary Protected Status, TPS, 8 U.S.C. 1254a, TPS designation, TPS work authorization

When conditions in a country make it dangerous for its nationals to return — a war, a natural disaster, or another crisis — U.S. law provides a form of temporary safety called **Temporary Protected Status (TPS)**. It allows eligible people already in the United States to stay and work legally for as long as the designation lasts. But it is, by design, temporary, and it does not do everything people sometimes assume. This guide explains, in plain English, how it works.

This is general information, not legal advice. The rules below come directly from **[8 U.S.C. § 1254a](https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/USCODE-2022-title8/html/USCODE-2022-title8-chap12-subchapII-partV-sec1254a.htm)** — the section of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA § 244) that governs TPS — published by the U.S. Government Publishing Office. Whether any of it applies to a specific case is a legal judgment that depends on the facts.

## Why a country gets designated for TPS

TPS begins with a **designation** of a foreign country (or part of one). Under **§ 1254a(b)**, the government may designate a country only on one of three grounds:

- **Ongoing armed conflict** — where, because of the conflict, requiring nationals to return would **pose a serious threat to their personal safety;**
- **Environmental disaster** — an **earthquake, flood, drought, epidemic, or other environmental disaster** causing a substantial but temporary disruption of living conditions, where the country is temporarily unable to handle the return of its nationals and has officially requested designation; or
- **Extraordinary and temporary conditions** — other conditions in the country that prevent nationals from returning safely, unless allowing them to stay would be contrary to the national interest.

The common thread is that the danger is understood to be **temporary.** TPS is a response to a country's conditions, not to an individual's persecution — which is what distinguishes it from asylum.

## What TPS gives you

For someone who qualifies, TPS provides meaningful protection. During the period a person holds TPS, the statute provides that:

- they are **protected from removal** based on their immigration status while the designation is in effect; and
- they may receive **employment authorization** — a work permit — that is **effective throughout the period they are in TPS.**

In practical terms, TPS lets an eligible person **live and work lawfully** in the United States for the duration of the designation, without the constant fear of removal that would otherwise exist.

## What TPS does not do

It is just as important to understand TPS's limits, which the statute spells out. Under **§ 1254a(f)**, during the TPS period:

- the person is **not considered to be permanently residing in the United States** — TPS is not a green card and does not by itself create permanent status; and
- the person **may be deemed ineligible for certain state public assistance.**

This is the key point many people misunderstand: **TPS is temporary protection, not a path to permanent residence.** It can provide vital breathing room and work authorization, but on its own it does not lead to a green card. Some TPS holders may have separate avenues to permanent status based on other eligibility — but that is a separate analysis from TPS itself.

## Because it's temporary, it can change

By its nature, a TPS designation has a defined period and is periodically reviewed. A designation can be **extended** when conditions still warrant it, or **terminated** when the government determines the country no longer meets the standard. Because these decisions directly affect whether people keep their protection and work authorization, TPS holders should pay close attention to official announcements about their country's designation and any re-registration deadlines.

## Why the details matter

TPS eligibility depends on nationality, continuous presence and residence requirements set when a country is designated, and registration deadlines — and its benefits and limits are defined by statute. Because the status is temporary and subject to change, and because it interacts with other possible forms of relief, understanding exactly what TPS does and does not provide is important for planning.

## Talk to a lawyer about TPS

If your country has been designated for TPS, or you are unsure how a change in designation affects you, the specific facts and deadlines determine your options. Carlos Maury Law is a national firm of former U.S. Immigration Judges. To talk about your situation, call **(213) 769-0050**. **We speak Spanish.**

## Frequently Asked Questions

### What is Temporary Protected Status?

TPS is a temporary immigration status under 8 U.S.C. § 1254a for nationals of countries the U.S. government has designated because of armed conflict, environmental disaster, or other extraordinary and temporary conditions that make safe return difficult. It allows eligible people to stay and work in the U.S. during the designation.

### Does TPS give me a green card?

No. Under the statute, a person with TPS is not considered to be permanently residing in the United States. TPS is temporary protection with work authorization, not permanent residence, and does not by itself lead to a green card.

### Can I work with TPS?

Yes. The statute provides that a person granted TPS may receive employment authorization that is effective throughout the period they hold TPS.

### Why are only certain countries eligible for TPS?

TPS applies to nationals of countries the government has specifically designated based on conditions there — ongoing armed conflict, an environmental disaster, or other extraordinary and temporary conditions. It is a response to country conditions, which is what distinguishes it from asylum's focus on individual persecution.

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This article is general information only and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney–client relationship. Immigration law is complex and fact-specific; consult a qualified immigration attorney about your situation. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Attorney advertising.

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*General legal information from Carlos Maury Law — not legal advice. https://carlosmaury.law/news/temporary-protected-status-tps-explained*
