2026 DACA Renewal Delays: What can be seen so far

DACA Renewals are delayed in 2026. A renewal 2 years ago took 2 weeks to 2 months to complete. However, now DACA Recipients are seeing delays exceeding 120-days and 150-days. What is likely the cause?
Effective December 12, 2025, USCIS updated its biometric policy, limiting photo reuse to 3 years (36 months) for immigration benefits.
Now, DACA Holders must have a biometric appointment to update photo, fingerprints, and signature samples. With a new set of fingerprints, a background check SHOULD occur just as quick as 2 years ago. However, the opposite has occurred. Now the background checks are delaying, USCIS officers have double the material needed to timely complete a background check, but more does not always mean best. USCIS systems have been encountering technical complications throughout 2025 and now into 2026 that slows done simple tasks like:
- opening a PDF
- opening a file
- completing a task
- creating a USCIS Notice
The Biometric Policy started to add extra items into filings, which (when coupled with a USCIS that has had technical issues), has made USCIS Officers work much more slowly and only be able to review/process a reduced amount of cases versus at the rate of workflow from prior to the USCIS Policy Change.
What to do in response?
USCIS Recommendation is to file DACA renewals within 150-120 days from expiration.
To be safe:
- file at the 150-day mark, AND
- attend your Biometric appointment timely or attempt to attend right when the Biometric Notice is in hand (as many ASC facilities will happily entertain the biometric appointment early).
USCIS does NOT Recommend filing earlier than 150 days. The Note directly from the USCIS Website states:
Please note that filing earlier than 150 days before your current DACA expiration date will not result in a faster decision.
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