I-130: What “Case Is Still Being Processed By USCIS” Means
This is the most common resting status in the USCIS system: the case is in line and nothing new has been published about it. It frequently appears after a fee was taken or biometrics were completed, and it can hold for a long time without meaning anything is wrong.
Good to do now
- Compare your time in this status against the live percentiles above rather than against individual anecdotes.
- If you are far beyond normal processing times for your form, consider an outside-normal-processing-time inquiry with USCIS.
- Keep your address current with USCIS so any notice actually reaches you.
Live numbers
- Waiting in this status now
- 74,733 tracked cases
- Moved into it in the last 4 weeks
- 1,826 cases
- Time in this status so far
- typically 1439 days (822 to 1574 for the middle half)
Where tracked cases went next
Measured from cases tracked on MyCasesHub, not all USCIS filings. Data as of 2026-06-10. Not legal advice.
Frequently asked questions
- Does "still being processed" mean an officer is working on my case?
- Not necessarily. It is a generic in-queue status; it usually means the case is waiting rather than actively on a desk.
- My status went back to this from something else. Is that bad?
- Status text sometimes cycles without a substantive change. A move back to this status on its own is not evidence of a problem.
- When should I contact USCIS about a case in this status?
- A common reference point is when your case is outside the posted processing time for your form and office. Before that, inquiries rarely change anything.
Related
MyCasesHub is not affiliated with USCIS. Statistics are measured from cases tracked on MyCasesHub, not all USCIS filings. This page is general information, not legal advice.