Can You Return to the US After Voluntary Departure?

Last Updated: July 2026

Voluntary departure can be a smart choice, but it comes with a question that matters as much as the decision itself: if you leave, when and how can you legally come back? The answer is not a simple yes or no. It depends on how long you were here unlawfully, whether you left on time, and what family or work ties you have.

The good news is that voluntary departure usually preserves more paths home than a formal deportation order does. The important news is that it is not consequence-free, and understanding the rules before you leave is what protects your future return.

Below, we walk through four things that shape your return:

  • What voluntary departure does and does not do for re-entry
  • The waiting periods, or bars, that can apply after you leave
  • What happens if you miss your departure deadline
  • The legal ways people return after voluntary departure

Our team at Law Group International serves clients across Virginia, Washington D.C., and Maryland, and we weigh these decisions with their long-term return in mind. Here is what you need to know.

Understanding voluntary departure and its consequences for re-entry

Voluntary departure lets you leave the United States on your own terms, within a set deadline, instead of receiving a formal order of removal. Its biggest advantage is what it avoids. A formal removal order carries its own re-entry bars under INA section 212(a)(9)(A), commonly 5, 10, or 20 years, and leaving with voluntary departure instead can keep those particular bars from ever attaching.

That does not mean you can turn around and come back. Voluntary departure is not consequence-free for re-entry, because a separate set of rules, the unlawful presence bars, can still apply based on your time in the country. Before you go, pin down which of those bars, if any, reach your situation. That single answer is what sets your realistic timeline home.

What bars apply after voluntary departure?

The most common obstacle after voluntary departure is the unlawful presence bar, and it is triggered by your departure, not by the voluntary departure order itself. Under INA section 212(a)(9)(B):

  • If you were unlawfully present for more than 180 days but less than one year, and then you leave, you face a 3-year bar to being admitted.
  • If you were unlawfully present for one year or more, and then you leave, you face a 10-year bar.

There is a crucial point of hope here. These are bars to admission, not permanent prohibitions, and waivers can exist. A bar means you generally cannot get a visa or be admitted during that window, but a waiver, if you qualify, can shorten or overcome it. Because the exact length turns on counting your unlawful presence precisely, let an attorney run that calculation before you build plans around any timeline.

What happens if you fail to depart by the deadline?

Meeting your departure deadline is not a formality. It is the difference between keeping the benefit and losing it badly.

Under INA section 240B(d), if you do not leave within the time the judge granted, your voluntary departure generally converts into a removal order, and the law adds real penalties. You become ineligible for 10 years for several key forms of relief, including cancellation of removal, adjustment of status, and voluntary departure itself, and you can be charged a civil penalty set by statute at between $1,000 and $5,000. A limited exception exists for certain VAWA petitioners.

The lesson is simple and strict. If you accept voluntary departure, leave on or before the deadline, keep proof of your departure, and never let the date pass while you wait on another plan.

Legal ways to return after voluntary departure

Leaving does not have to be the end of your story. Depending on your situation, one or more of these paths may be open.

  • Consular processing for a new visa. If you are otherwise eligible and either no bar applies or you have obtained a waiver, you may apply for a visa at a U.S. consulate abroad.
  • Form I-212, permission to reapply for admission. This is generally for people who received a removal order, and it asks the government for permission to seek admission again.
  • Form I-601A, provisional unlawful presence waiver. If you have a qualifying U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident spouse or parent, this waiver can, in some cases, forgive the unlawful presence bar before you travel, reducing the time apart.

Each of these has specific eligibility rules, and the wrong choice can cost years. Work with an attorney to match your facts to the right pathway, and our overview of immigration waivers: when and how they work explains how these tools fit together, along with our guide to the I-601 waiver of inadmissibility.

Voluntary departure vs deportation: which is better for future return?

For most people focused on coming back, voluntary departure preserves more options than a formal removal order. The table below compares the two at a glance.

Factor Voluntary departure Formal removal order
Section 212(a)(9)(A) removal bar Generally avoided if you leave on time Applies: commonly 5, 10, or 20 years
Unlawful presence bar (212(a)(9)(B)) Can still apply (3 or 10 years) Can still apply (3 or 10 years)
Permission to reapply (I-212) Usually not required to overcome a removal bar Often required before returning
If you miss the deadline Converts to removal order plus penalties Not applicable

As the table shows, the advantage of voluntary departure is real but conditional: it depends on leaving on time and on managing the unlawful presence bars. Every case is different, and the right choice depends on your specific facts, which is why this comparison is a starting point, not a decision. You can go deeper in our guides to voluntary departure vs deportation and voluntary departure vs removal order.

Immigration attorneys in Virginia, DC and Maryland

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Whether you are facing removal proceedings, waiting on a delayed application, or need to understand your options, a confidential consultation with our attorneys can clarify your next steps.

Attorneys Khalid Shekib & Daniela Lucena · Law Group International

Schedule a consultation (703) 549-5445 Frequently asked questions

How long do I have to wait before I can return?

It depends mostly on your unlawful presence. If you were unlawfully present for more than 180 days but under a year, the wait is generally 3 years; for a year or more, it is generally 10 years. A waiver may shorten or overcome that wait if you qualify. Because the count is fact-specific, an attorney should calculate your exact exposure before you rely on any date.

Can I get a tourist visa after voluntary departure?

Possibly, but the same bars apply to a tourist visa as to other visas. If a 3-year or 10-year bar is in effect and you do not have a waiver, a consulate will usually deny the visa. Once any bar has passed or been waived, and if you can show strong ties abroad, a visitor visa may become possible. This is worth reviewing with an attorney before you apply and risk a denial on your record.

What if I re-enter the US illegally after voluntary departure?

This is one of the most damaging things you can do to your future. Returning unlawfully after accruing unlawful presence can trigger the permanent bar under INA section 212(a)(9)(C), which is far harder to overcome than a 3-year or 10-year bar. It can also expose you to criminal consequences. The safer path is always to return through a lawful process, even if it takes longer.

Can an I-601 waiver help me overcome the bars?

In many cases, yes. Waivers such as the I-601 and the provisional I-601A exist precisely to forgive certain bars, most often the unlawful presence bar, for people with qualifying family members. Eligibility depends on your relationships and the hardship you can show. An attorney can tell you which waiver, if any, fits your situation and how strong your case is.

Your future return starts with the decision you make now

Voluntary departure is a decision best made with your return in mind, not just your exit. The timing of your departure, the length of your unlawful presence, and your family ties all shape whether and when you can come back. Getting those details right, before you leave, is what keeps the door open.

Deportation defense and re-entry planning sit at the center of what Law Group International does, and we serve clients throughout Virginia, Washington D.C., and Maryland. Our attorneys Khalid Shekib and Daniela Lucena can calculate your bars, identify the right return pathway, and help you leave in the strongest possible position. Reach out before the deadline pressures your choice, and let a plan, not the clock, guide your exit.

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Khalid Shekib & Daniela Lucena · Law Group International

Alexandria, VA · Virginia, DC & Maryland

 

This article provides general information and does not constitute legal advice. Every immigration case is different, and the law may change. For guidance on your particular situation, consult a licensed immigration attorney.

 

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Last updated: July 2026.

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