Cancellation of Removal for Non-Permanent Residents in Georgia: What You Need to Know
Facing deportation is one of the most frightening experiences a person can go through. For non-permanent residents living in Georgia, there is a form of relief that can stop removal proceedings and lead to lawful permanent residence: cancellation of removal under 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(b). This is not a simple process, and not everyone qualifies, but for those who do, it can mean the difference between staying with your family in the United States or being forced to leave the country you have called home for years.
At J. Lee & Associates Law Group in Norcross, Georgia, our bilingual immigration team works with non-permanent residents across the greater Atlanta area who are in removal proceedings before the Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR). We know this process thoroughly, and we want you to understand what cancellation of removal actually involves before you walk into an immigration courtroom.
What Cancellation of Removal Means for Non-Permanent Residents
Cancellation of removal for non-permanent residents is a form of discretionary relief available in Immigration Court. If granted, it cancels your removal order and adjusts your status to lawful permanent resident. Congress authorized this relief through the Immigration and Nationality Act, specifically at 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(b)(1). It is separate from cancellation of removal for lawful permanent residents, which operates under different rules and different standards.
This relief is only available to people already in formal removal proceedings before an Immigration Judge. You cannot apply through USCIS or through a standard petition process. If you have received a Notice to Appear (Form I-862), you are in removal proceedings, and cancellation of removal is one of several defenses your attorney can raise on your behalf.
The Four Statutory Requirements
To qualify for cancellation of removal as a non-permanent resident, you must satisfy all four requirements under 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(b)(1)(A)-(D):
- Ten years of continuous physical presence in the United States immediately before the date of your application
- Good moral character throughout that entire ten-year period
- No disqualifying criminal convictions under 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(2) or 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2) or (3), which include crimes involving moral turpitude, aggravated felonies, controlled substance offenses, and related criminal bars
- Proof that your removal would cause exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to a qualifying relative who is a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident spouse, parent, or child
Every one of these requirements must be satisfied. Falling short on any single element will result in denial, regardless of how strong the rest of your case may be.
The Ten-Year Continuous Presence Requirement
The ten-year continuous physical presence rule is typically the starting point when evaluating whether someone qualifies. Under the statute, your period of presence is calculated from the date you entered the United States up to the date you file your application. However, a critical rule known as the stop-time rule under 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(d)(1) can cut that calculation short in ways that surprise many applicants.
The stop-time rule provides that your accrual of continuous presence stops when the government serves you with a Notice to Appear. The U.S. Supreme Court addressed this directly in Pereira v. Sessions, 585 U.S. 198 (2018), and followed up in Niz-Chavez v. Garland, 593 U.S. 155 (2021). Together, those decisions established that a Notice to Appear must include the specific date and time of the hearing to trigger the stop-time rule. If your NTA was defective because it omitted that information, your accrual of time may not have been legally stopped. That is a significant argument that a skilled immigration attorney can raise on your behalf.
What Breaks Continuous Presence
Even apart from the stop-time rule, your continuous presence can be broken by extended travel outside the United States. Under 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(d)(2), a single departure from the United States lasting 90 days or more, or multiple departures totaling more than 180 days, will break the continuity of your presence. Trips abroad for family visits, medical treatment, or work can therefore seriously damage your eligibility if the periods are long enough. Every trip outside the country must be documented and disclosed to your attorney so the full impact on your case can be assessed before you file anything.
Exceptional and Extremely Unusual Hardship: The Most Demanding Standard
The hardship requirement is where most cancellation cases succeed or fail. The statute demands proof of "exceptional and extremely unusual hardship" to a qualifying relative. The Board of Immigration Appeals explained this standard in Matter of Recinas, 23 I&N Dec. 467 (BIA 2002), holding that the hardship must be substantially beyond the ordinary hardship that is expected when a family member is removed from the country.
Sadness, financial difficulty, and disruption to family routines are real and understandable consequences of removal, but they are not enough on their own. The hardship your qualifying relative would face must be exceptional when measured against similarly situated families across the country. This is a high bar, and meeting it requires careful preparation.
Factors Immigration Judges Weigh
When evaluating hardship, Immigration Judges and the BIA consider a range of factors, including:
- The age, health, and individual circumstances of the qualifying relative
- Whether the qualifying relative could relocate to your home country and what hardship that relocation would cause them
- Special medical or educational needs of U.S. citizen or LPR children
- The economic consequences of your removal on the household
- Country conditions in your home country and whether those conditions would harm your U.S. citizen or LPR family members if they accompanied you
- The qualifying relative's ties to the United States and their ability to adapt
Building a strong hardship case takes documentation: medical records, school evaluations, letters from physicians or teachers, financial records, and sometimes expert reports on country conditions. The more thoroughly your attorney presents this evidence, the stronger your position before the Judge.
Hardship to the Applicant Is Not Considered
This point surprises many people. The hardship standard focuses entirely on your qualifying U.S. citizen or LPR relative, not on you personally. Your own suffering from removal, as real as it is, carries no legal weight under this standard. The law requires your attorney to frame the entire hardship argument around the impact your absence would have on your spouse, parent, or child who holds lawful status in the United States.
Good Moral Character and the Criminal Bar
Good moral character must be demonstrated throughout the entire ten-year period, and certain criminal convictions serve as automatic bars under the INA. Under 8 U.S.C. § 1101(f), conduct that automatically precludes a finding of good moral character includes conviction of an aggravated felony as defined in 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(43), certain crimes involving moral turpitude, and controlled substance offenses, among others.
Even where a conviction is not a statutory bar, an Immigration Judge retains discretion to find that your overall conduct during the ten-year period does not reflect good moral character. Every prior arrest, charge, or conviction must be fully disclosed to and evaluated by your attorney before you file. In some situations, post-conviction relief under Georgia law may alter the immigration consequences of a prior conviction, and exploring those options early can make a difference.
Georgia Criminal Convictions and Federal Immigration Law
How a Georgia offense is classified under state law does not necessarily determine how federal immigration law treats it. A Georgia misdemeanor under Title 16 of the O.C.G.A. can still constitute a crime involving moral turpitude for immigration purposes, which can eliminate eligibility for cancellation. The overlap between Georgia criminal law and federal immigration consequences is an area where having attorneys who understand both systems gives you a real advantage. At J. Lee & Associates Law Group, our team handles criminal defense alongside immigration matters, and we regularly counsel clients on how criminal charges affect their immigration status before and after any conviction.
Removal Proceedings at EOIR in Georgia
Georgia cases are typically heard at the Atlanta Immigration Court or the Stewart Detention Center Immigration Court, both under EOIR jurisdiction. Proceedings move through a master calendar phase, where scheduling and procedural issues are handled, followed by an individual merits hearing where testimony is given and evidence is submitted before an Immigration Judge.
For cancellation of removal, you must file a formal application on Form EOIR-42B with supporting documentation showing that you meet every statutory requirement. An ICE attorney represents the government and may challenge your evidence and cross-examine your witnesses. This is a formal legal proceeding with serious consequences, and appearing without an attorney places you at a substantial disadvantage.
If the Immigration Judge denies your application, you have the right to appeal to the Board of Immigration Appeals under 8 C.F.R. § 1003.3. If the BIA rules against you, further review is available through the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, which has jurisdiction over federal cases arising in Georgia.
The 4,000 Annual Cap
One aspect of this relief that many applicants do not know about is the annual numerical cap. Congress has limited the total number of cancellation of removal grants for non-permanent residents to 4,000 per fiscal year under 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(e)(1). When that cap is reached, Immigration Judges must administratively close pending cases or hold decisions until the following fiscal year. This makes timing and legal strategy particularly important in cancellation cases, since a delayed filing or prolonged proceedings can affect when relief is actually granted even if you win on the merits.
Related Practice Areas
If you or someone you care about is in removal proceedings in Georgia, the time to act is now. Cancellation of removal is not a guarantee, but with thorough preparation and skilled legal representation, many people who qualify are able to remain in the United States with their families. Call (770) 609-9396 to speak with the bilingual team at J. Lee & Associates Law Group. We serve clients throughout Norcross, Atlanta, Gwinnett County, and the broader metro Atlanta area, and we are ready to evaluate your case and help you build the strongest possible defense before the Immigration Judge.
Free Consultation
Contact J. Lee & Associates Law Group at (770) 609-9396 for a free consultation. Se habla español.

Jerome D. Lee es el abogado fundador de J. Lee & Associates Law Group, representando clientes en lesiones personales, inmigración, defensa criminal y derecho familiar en todo Metro Atlanta.
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