QueueCheckofficial waits, shared dates
Two wait-time timelines being compared

Comparison guide

How to compare Advance Parole travel document wait times without misleading yourself

Compare Advance Parole travel document waits by route, channel, location, start month, and case stage so another person's timeline does not mislead you.

Official

Advance Parole travel document: USCIS Form I-131 covers several travel and parole document types; pending I-485 travel should be tracked separately from refugee, TPS, reentry, and parole requests

Updated Jul 18, 2026

Shared by readers

Collecting data

No reader reports published yet.

People who started in the same month

Pending

No same-month summary yet.

Advance Parole travel document wait signals in one view

Official timing and reader reports answer different parts of the wait question.

Official and reader reports

Official wait

Advance Parole travel document: USCIS Form I-131 covers several travel and parole document types; pending I-485 travel should be tracked separately from refugee, TPS, reentry, and parole requests

Advance Parole travel document: USCIS Form I-131 covers several travel and parole document types; pending I-485 travel should be tracked separately from refugee, TPS, reentry, and parole requests

Updated Jul 18

Official waitAdvance Parole travel document: USCIS Form I-131 covers several travel and parole document types; pending I-485 travel should be tracked separately from refugee, TPS, reentry, and parole requests
Shared by readersStill collecting
People who started in the same monthStill collecting

Start with the official Advance Parole travel document baseline

The official Advance Parole travel document baseline for United States is Advance Parole travel document: USCIS Form I-131 covers several travel and parole document types; pending I-485 travel should be tracked separately from refugee, TPS, reentry, and parole requests. Use it to understand the agency's public baseline before comparing personal stories.

This service is still collecting reviewed reader submissions, so comparisons should lean more heavily on official source context for now.

Public timelines need matching details

A public wait is useful only when the route, office, channel, milestone, and start month are close to yours.

When the details do not match, the timeline may still be emotionally reassuring, but it should not be treated as a forecast.

Match these before comparing Advance Parole travel document waits

  • Country, service route, channel, office, and the month the person started.
  • Current milestone or stage.
  • Whether the person counted to decision, appointment, delivery, interview, or final completion.
  • Whether official messages or document requests changed the timeline.

Help improve the wait data

Share your Advance Parole timeline

Share the date that starts your timeline so other readers can compare similar waits. It takes about a minute, and submissions are reviewed before they affect public wait numbers.

What you add1 starting date
Used forFair comparison
Before publicReviewed

Before comparing waits

  • Save every official date shown for Advance Parole travel document, including receipt and decision dates.
  • Compare with applicants using the same service, channel, and start month.
  • Treat small groups of reader submissions as directional, especially when only a few people have shared a wait.
  • Use official notices for your individual case and public wait data only for broader queue context.

Use this page as public queue context

  • This guide explains public queue context and does not replace official agency notices.
  • Small groups of reader submissions are shown cautiously so one unusual wait does not mislead people.
  • Use service-specific pages for the latest official update and same-month context.

Advance Parole travel document questions people ask

Why is Advance Parole travel document different from the official estimate?

Official estimates are broad benchmarks. Individual waits can vary because of missing documents, identity checks, appointment availability, workload, and local office capacity.

When should I trust waits shared by readers?

Use waits shared by readers as context once enough similar people have shared their experience. Official agency messages should still come first.