The administration of President Donald Trump is introducing tougher measures on legal immigration, with new policies coming into effect in July that are expected to make green card access more difficult and impose stricter penalties for mistakes in applications.
The changes include new visa restrictions outlined in the U.S. State Department’s July 2026 Visa Bulletin, along with a federal rule that gives authorities greater power to reject or deny applications because of technical mistakes. The measures are also backed by updated policy guidance calling for more rigorous case-by-case assessment of residency applications.
According to the July Visa Bulletin, pressure is increasing on employment-based immigration pathways as yearly visa allocations have been exhausted in certain high-demand categories. As a result, applicants from India under the employment-based second preference (EB-2) category and the unreserved EB-5 investor programme will no longer receive approvals for the remainder of the fiscal year until visa availability resets in October.

The new measures come at a time when the U.S. immigration system is dealing with increasing visa backlogs and growing demand for permanent residency. For many applicants, the tighter rules are expected to result in longer processing periods, reduced opportunities for approval, and stricter examination of applications.
The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) is also maintaining the use of the stricter “Final Action Dates” chart to decide eligibility for adjustment of status in employment-based categories, restricting applications to individuals whose priority dates fall within the currently approved timelines.
Meanwhile, an interim final rule introduced by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security is scheduled to take effect on July 10, expanding the authority of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) to reject or deny immigration applications that are submitted without a valid signature.
The policy also allows immigration authorities to deny applications after they have already been received and processed if they are found to lack a valid signature, while filing fees may not be refunded in such cases.
U.S. authorities said the measure is designed to ensure consistent enforcement of application requirements, but it also raises the stakes for administrative mistakes, as affected applicants may have to begin the process again by submitting a fresh application and paying another filing fee.
The latest measures also align with a May policy memo issued by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), which reaffirmed that adjustment of status remains a discretionary process that allows eligible individuals already in the United States to apply for permanent residency.
The agency stated that adjustment of status is not an automatic entitlement and directed immigration officers to review applications on a case-by-case basis, considering additional factors beyond whether applicants meet the minimum qualification standards.
Although applicants who satisfy legal eligibility conditions may remain eligible for permanent residency, approval is not automatic, and immigration lawyers say the updated guidance has created more uncertainty and led to stricter review of certain applications.
Taken together, the measures highlight increasing strain on the legal immigration system. U.S. immigration laws place annual limits on employment-based and family-sponsored green cards, and officials say rising demand and extensive visa usage have prompted stricter controls and, in some categories, the suspension of approvals before the fiscal year concludes.
In July, family-based immigration categories experienced minimal progress, with a number of classifications moving forward at a slow pace while still remaining constrained by yearly visa quotas.





