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USCIS Online Account — How to Set Up Step by Step (2026)

A free account on my.uscis.gov allows you to track all immigration cases, receive notifications, submit forms electronically, and receive documents, with a complete guide on registration, 2FA, verification, available online forms, and common mistakes.

USCIS Online Account (my.uscis.gov) is free and provides access to everything: case status, notifications, electronic form submissions, document retrieval, and biometrics scheduling. Everyone in the immigration process should create one — it saves weeks of waiting for mail.

What the USCIS Account Provides

  • Status of all your cases — in real-time (faster than the case status tool)
  • Email notifications for any status changes
  • Electronic submission of forms: N-400, I-90, I-130, I-485, I-765, I-131, AR-11, and others
  • Receipt Notice (I-797) electronically — no waiting for mail
  • Biometrics schedule — you can reschedule online
  • Communication with USCIS — responses to RFEs, additional documents
  • Decision documents electronically
  • Case history — complete timeline

What it DOES NOT Provide (Yet)

  • Not all forms can be submitted online — e.g., I-751 (remove conditions) still needs to be submitted on paper
  • Does not support all visa categories (e.g., some nonimmigrant visa adjustments)
  • Updates may sometimes be delayed compared to USCIS's internal systems

Registration — Step by Step

Step 1: Open my.uscis.gov

Go to my.uscis.gov → click "Create an account".

Step 2: Enter Email

  • Use an email that you always control (not a work email that you might lose when changing jobs)
  • DO NOT use your lawyer's email — this is your account, not theirs
  • Best: personal Gmail / Outlook

Step 3: Create a Strong Password

Minimum 8 characters, one lowercase + one uppercase letter, a number, a special character. A password manager (Bitwarden, 1Password) is recommended — see 2FA + Password Manager.

Step 4: Security Questions

Select 3 security questions. Write down the answers — they will be needed for account recovery!

Step 5: Email Verification

USCIS will send an activation link. Click = account activated.

Step 6: 2FA (Two-Factor Authentication) — IMPORTANT

After the first login, USCIS will ask you to set up 2FA. Enable this mandatory:

  • Authenticator app (Google Authenticator, Authy) — best option
  • SMS — last option, vulnerable to SIM-swap
  • Email — average

Linking Existing Cases

If you have already submitted a paper form or through a lawyer — you can "link" the case:

  1. In your account, select "Add a paper-filed case to your account"
  2. Enter the receipt number (starts with letters: WAC, MSC, EAC, IOE, LIN, NBC, YSC)
  3. Enter your date of birth + date of receipt notice
  4. Wait for verification — typically 24-48 hours

What if the lawyer submitted on your behalf

The lawyer may have an account and see your case through their own account. But you can also have your own account and link the case. The receipt number is on Form G-28 or I-797 — ask your lawyer.

Online Filing — Which Forms

Most commonly submitted online by Poles (2026):

FormWhat it isCan be filed online?
N-400Naturalization✅ YES ($50 discount)
I-90Renew/Replace Green Card✅ YES ($125 discount)
I-130Petition for Alien Relative✅ YES
I-485Adjustment of Status✅ YES (in package with I-130)
I-765Work Authorization✅ YES
I-131Advance Parole / Travel Document✅ YES
I-589Asylum✅ YES
AR-11Change of Address✅ YES (MOST IMPORTANT)
I-751Remove Conditions on GC❌ Paper only
I-129FK-1 Fiance petition❌ Paper only
I-526EB-5 investor❌ Paper only

Benefits of Online Filing vs Paper

  • Fee discount — $50 for N-400, $125 for I-90
  • Immediate receipt — no waiting 2-4 weeks for mail
  • No lost documents — USCIS scans paper and sometimes scans get lost
  • Automatic validations — the system will detect errors before submission
  • Tracking entire history in one place
  • Adding documents after submission is easier (RFE response)

Notifications — How to Set Up

  1. Settings → Notification Preferences
  2. Enable "Email me when there is an update on my case"
  3. Check the spam folder — USCIS emails sometimes end up there
  4. Add uscis-notification@dhs.gov to safe senders

Change of Address (AR-11) — CRITICAL

Any change of address MUST be reported to USCIS within 10 days using Form AR-11. The easiest way is online:

  1. Log in to my.uscis.gov
  2. "Change of Address" in the menu
  3. Update all active cases simultaneously
  4. You will receive a confirmation

Failure to submit AR-11 = loss of USCIS decision (RFE letter returns, case closed), suspension of the case, and in extreme cases, issues with naturalization (good moral character).

Communication with USCIS through the Account

The account allows:

  • Responding to RFE (Request for Evidence) — upload documents without mailing
  • Reporting unexpected events (death in the family, illness) affecting the case
  • Requesting expedited processing in certain cases
  • InfoPass — schedule an appointment at the local field office

Multiple Accounts — Attention

USCIS allows only one account per person. Creating a second account with a different email may block both and require contacting USCIS for consolidation.

If you change your email — use the "Change email" function in Settings, do not create a new account.

What if You Forget Your Password

  • "Forgot Password" → send reset email
  • Requires answers to security questions
  • If you forget everything — call USCIS: 1-800-375-5283 (note: long wait times)

Account Security

  • DO NOT share your login — even with family
  • Enable 2FA (crucial)
  • Log in only from secure devices — not from open WiFi in cafes
  • Be cautious of phishing — fake emails "from USCIS" are common. Always check:
    • The sender's domain must be @uscis.dhs.gov (not @uscis-services.com, @uscis-helper.org, etc.)
    • Links in emails: hover over them to check if they lead to my.uscis.gov
    • USCIS NEVER asks for payment via email/SMS — all through the official pay.gov system

Common Mistakes

  1. Work email — lose your job = lose access to your account
  2. Not enabling 2FA — most common account breach
  3. Not selecting email notifications — you may miss RFE, deadline = case rejected
  4. Not updating address (AR-11) after moving
  5. Paying through the lawyer's account instead of your own — the lawyer may leave the case, you won't have access
  6. Ignoring spam folder — most USCIS communication is via email
  7. Entering incorrect receipt number — will not link the case

Official Links

Related: [[how-uscis-works-guide-for-immigrants]] · [[how-to-check-uscis-case-status]] · [[2fa-password-manager-how-to-secure-accounts]]

Official sources

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