What Is Form I-765 and the Work Permit?
For many immigrants, the single most important document in daily life is the work permit. It is what lets you take a job, pay rent, support your family, and build a life here. The work permit has a formal name: the Employment Authorization Document, or EAD. To get one, you file Form I-765, Application for Employment Authorization, with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS).
Form I-765 is the application. The EAD, officially called Form I-766, is the physical card USCIS mails you when the application is approved. The card shows your photo, your category, and the dates your authorization is valid. When people say they are waiting on their work permit, they are usually waiting on the EAD card after filing the I-765.
As an immigration attorney in Massachusetts, I help people file these applications and, just as often, help them fix problems when a card is about to expire or has already lapsed. In 2026 a major rule change has made timing more important than ever. This guide explains what the I-765 is, who can file it, what it costs, how to renew it, and what changed on October 30, 2025.
Who Needs to File Form I-765?
Not everyone needs to file an I-765. Federal regulations at 8 CFR 274a.12 divide work authorization into three broad groups, and which group you fall into decides whether you file at all.
People Authorized to Work Because of Their Status
Some people are allowed to work because of the immigration status they already hold. Lawful permanent residents (green card holders), refugees, and people granted asylum fall into this group. They may still carry an EAD card as proof, but their permission to work comes from their status, not from the card alone.
People Authorized to Work for a Specific Employer
Certain nonimmigrant workers, such as those on employer-sponsored visas, are authorized to work only for the employer that petitioned for them. Their authorization is tied to that job and usually does not require a separate I-765.
People Who Must Apply for a Work Permit
This is the largest group and the one this guide focuses on. These are people who are eligible to request work authorization but must apply for it by filing Form I-765. Common examples include:
- Asylum applicants with a pending case (category C08)
- Green card applicants who have filed Form I-485 to adjust status (category C09)
- People applying for cancellation of removal before the immigration court (category C10)
- VAWA self-petitioners with an approved self-petition (category C31)
- U visa and T visa applicants and recipients
- Temporary Protected Status (TPS) applicants and holders
- DACA recipients
- Certain spouses of nonimmigrant workers, such as H-4 and L-2 spouses
Key point: The category code on your application, such as (c)(8) or (c)(9), is not a small detail. It controls your fee, your eligibility, and whether any extension rules apply to you. Filing under the wrong category is one of the most common and costly mistakes I see. If you are unsure of your category, ask an attorney before you file.
How Much Does Form I-765 Cost in 2026?
On the current USCIS Fee Schedule (Form G-1055), the standard Form I-765 filing fee is $520 when you file on paper and $470 when you file online. The lower online fee is one reason many people file electronically through a USCIS online account when their category allows it.
The standard fee is not the whole story, because the fee depends on your category:
- Filed with a green card application: If you file your first work permit together with a Form I-485 green card application and pay the I-485 fee, there is generally no separate fee for the I-765.
- DACA: DACA-related filings carry an additional biometrics fee.
- Humanitarian categories: Several humanitarian categories, including some asylum and parole-based filings, now carry additional fees created by the law commonly called the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, Public Law 119-21.
- Fee waivers and exemptions: Some applicants, such as certain VAWA, T visa, and U visa applicants, are exempt from the fee, and others may request a fee waiver using Form I-912 if they cannot afford to pay.
Filing fees change, and 2025 and 2026 brought several changes at once. Always confirm the current amount and any extra fees on the USCIS G-1055 Fee Schedule, or have your attorney confirm it, before you mail or submit anything. A check for the wrong amount can cause USCIS to reject the whole package and cost you weeks.
A note on payment: For paper filings, USCIS has moved away from accepting personal checks and money orders for many applications. Card payments use Form G-1450 and bank debit uses Form G-1650. Online filings are paid through Pay.gov. Confirm the accepted payment method for your filing before you send it.
The Biggest 2026 Change: The End of the Automatic Extension
This is the part every immigrant in Massachusetts who holds a work permit needs to understand, because it changes how you should plan.
For years, many people who filed to renew their EAD on time received an automatic extension of their work authorization while USCIS processed the renewal. Their old card stayed valid, when combined with the USCIS receipt notice, for a set period after the printed expiration date. In recent years that automatic extension period was as long as 540 days under 8 CFR 274a.13(d). The automatic extension prevented millions of people from losing their jobs simply because USCIS was slow.
That changed. The Department of Homeland Security published an interim final rule, effective October 30, 2025 (DHS Docket No. USCIS-2025-0271), that removed the automatic extension of EAD validity for renewal applications filed on or after that date.
Here is what this means in plain terms:
- Renewals filed before October 30, 2025: If you properly and timely filed your renewal before that date, you still keep the up-to-540-day automatic extension under the prior rule.
- Renewals filed on or after October 30, 2025: There is no automatic extension. Your card stops being valid on the date printed on it. If USCIS has not approved your renewal and mailed you a new card by that date, you may lose your authorization to work, even though you filed correctly and on time.
What to do about it: File your renewal as early as USCIS allows. USCIS generally recommends filing a renewal up to 180 days, about six months, before your current card expires. Under the new rule, that early filing window is your main protection against a gap in work authorization. Do not wait until the last month.
How to File Form I-765, Step by Step
Step 1: Confirm Your Eligibility Category
Before anything else, identify the exact category you qualify under. Your category determines your eligibility, your fee, the evidence you must include, and whether any waiting period applies. If you have more than one possible category, an attorney can help you choose the strongest one.
Step 2: Gather Your Evidence
The documents you need depend on your category, but most filings include a copy of a government-issued photo identity document, a copy of your prior EAD if you are renewing, evidence of the underlying case or status that makes you eligible, and passport-style photos that meet USCIS specifications. Online filers upload photos and documents directly.
Step 3: Complete the Current Form Edition
USCIS only accepts the current edition of the form. As of this writing, the current Form I-765 edition is dated 08/21/25, but USCIS updates form editions from time to time. Using an outdated edition can lead to rejection. Download the form directly from the USCIS website, or file online, so you always have the latest version.
Step 4: Pay the Correct Fee
Pay the exact fee for your category, request a fee waiver with Form I-912 if you qualify and cannot afford the fee, or include nothing if your category is exempt or already covered by a concurrently filed application. Double-check this against the current G-1055 Fee Schedule.
Step 5: Submit and Track Your Case
File online through your USCIS account when your category allows it, or mail your package to the correct USCIS address for your category. You will receive a receipt notice, Form I-797C, with a receipt number you can use to track your case online. Keep this notice. For some renewal applicants it is part of the proof of continued work authorization.
Renewing Your EAD: Why Timing Is Everything in 2026
Renewing an EAD is not automatic and it is not instant. USCIS processing times vary widely by category and by service center. Because the automatic extension no longer applies to renewals filed on or after October 30, 2025, a slow adjudication can now leave you with no valid work permit even when you did everything right.
To protect yourself:
- Calendar your expiration date the day you receive your card, and set a reminder six months out.
- File the renewal as early as USCIS allows, generally up to 180 days before expiration.
- Keep your address current with USCIS by filing Form AR-11 so your new card and any notices reach you.
- Save every receipt notice and keep copies of your full application.
- Tell your employer early if a gap is possible, so you can plan together rather than be surprised.
For employers and employees: Federal Form I-9 rules require that employees show current, valid work authorization. If your card expires and no automatic extension applies, your employer is generally required to pause your employment until you can show a valid document. This is not your employer being unfair. It is federal law, and it is exactly why early filing now matters so much.
Common Mistakes That Delay or Sink a Work Permit Application
- Filing under the wrong category. The category code controls everything. Guessing can lead to a denial.
- Sending the wrong fee. Too little, too much, or the wrong payment method can get your whole package rejected.
- Using an outdated form edition. USCIS rejects old editions.
- Photos that do not meet specifications. Wrong size, old photos, or low-quality images cause delays.
- Filing a renewal too late. In 2026 this is the most dangerous mistake of all, because there is no longer an automatic extension to protect you.
- Not updating your address. A card mailed to an old address can be lost, forcing you to start over.
Frequently Asked Questions About Form I-765 and the EAD
Getting Help With Your Work Permit
A work permit can feel like a simple form, and in the easiest cases it is. But the category rules, the changing fees, and the 2026 end of the automatic extension have made timing and accuracy matter more than they used to. A small error or a late filing can mean weeks without a paycheck.
An experienced immigration attorney can confirm your correct category, make sure your fee and evidence are right, file your renewal at the earliest moment to protect you against a gap, and step in quickly if something goes wrong. If you or a family member in Framingham, Brockton, Everett, Lowell, Marlborough, Worcester, or anywhere across Massachusetts has a work permit coming up for renewal, the time to act is now, not when the card is about to expire.
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