Mass Termination of Temporary Protected Status Across 11 Countries

TPS was terminated or targeted for termination across 11 countries, de-documenting over 1 million people. Federal courts have blocked or paused several terminations. The State Department maintains 'Do Not Travel' advisories for many of the same countries DHS claims are safe for return.

The Trump administration terminated or initiated termination of Temporary Protected Status for nationals of 11 countries -- Venezuela, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Nepal, Afghanistan, Cameroon, Syria, Somalia, Myanmar, and Ethiopia -- stripping legal status from over 1 million TPS holders. Combined with CHNV parole terminations, 1.6 million people lost their legal right to stay in the United States in 2025, the largest mass de-documentation in US history.

Executive summary

What this record documents

  • 1.6 million people lost their legal right to stay in the United States in 2025 across all TPS and parole terminations -- the largest mass de-documentation in US history.
  • TPS was terminated or targeted for 11 countries: Venezuela, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Nepal, Afghanistan, Cameroon, Syria, Somalia, Myanmar, and Ethiopia.
  • 550,000 workers lost status by end of 2025, with significant economic impact across healthcare, construction, and food industries.
  • Federal courts blocked or paused terminations for Haiti, Syria, Somalia, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Nepal, but the Ninth Circuit reversed some injunctions.
  • The State Department maintains Level 4 'Do Not Travel' advisories for Haiti, Somalia, and other countries whose TPS was terminated.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. Venezuela TPS termination announced

    DHS Secretary Noem terminated TPS for approximately 350,000 Venezuelan nationals under the 2023 designation.

  2. Haiti TPS termination announced

    DHS terminated TPS for Haiti, affecting approximately 348,000 people, despite Level 4 'Do Not Travel' advisory and 90% of Port-au-Prince under gang control.

  3. Honduras and Nicaragua TPS terminated

    DHS terminated TPS for Honduras (72,000) and Nicaragua (4,000). Nepal (12,700) also terminated.

  4. Myanmar TPS terminated

    DHS terminated TPS for Burma/Myanmar, affecting approximately 3,670 people despite ongoing military junta violence.

  5. Ethiopia TPS terminated

    DHS terminated TPS for Ethiopia, with an effective date of February 13, 2026.

  6. NPR reports 1.6 million lost legal status in 2025

    NPR documented that 1.6 million people lost their legal right to stay in the United States in 2025, the most rapid loss of legal immigration status in US history.

  7. Federal judge blocks Haiti TPS termination

    A federal judge in Washington, D.C. issued an order indefinitely pausing the termination of TPS for Haiti, finding the decision 'arbitrary and capricious.'

  8. Ninth Circuit restores Honduras/Nicaragua/Nepal terminations

    A three-judge Ninth Circuit panel stayed the district court's order that had paused TPS terminations for Honduras, Nicaragua, and Nepal.

  9. Federal judge blocks Somalia TPS termination

    A judge in the District of Massachusetts issued an order staying the termination of TPS for Somalia, which had been set for March 17, 2026.

Analysis

Reporting, legal context, and impact

What Happened

In 2025, the Trump administration terminated or initiated the termination of Temporary Protected Status for nationals of 11 countries: Venezuela, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Nepal, Afghanistan, Cameroon, Syria, Somalia, Myanmar (Burma), and Ethiopia. Combined with the termination of CHNV humanitarian parole for 532,000 people, NPR reported that 1.6 million people lost their legal right to stay in the United States in 2025 -- the largest mass revocation of legal immigration status in US history.

TPS is a humanitarian protection granted to nationals of countries experiencing armed conflict, environmental disasters, or other extraordinary conditions that make safe return impossible. The affected countries span four continents and include nations suffering from armed conflict, gang warfare, political repression, natural disasters, and humanitarian crises -- conditions acknowledged by the US government's own agencies.

Country-by-Country Impact

Haiti (~348,000 people)

DHS terminated TPS on June 27, 2025, despite the State Department maintaining a Level 4 "Do Not Travel" advisory for Haiti. The UN estimated that over 90% of Port-au-Prince was under gang control, and displacement reached 1.4 million people by October 2025. A federal judge blocked the termination on February 2, 2026, finding it "arbitrary and capricious."

Honduras (~72,000), Nicaragua (~4,000), Nepal (~12,700)

DHS terminated TPS on July 7, 2025. A district court initially paused these terminations, but the Ninth Circuit reversed the order on February 9, 2026.

Syria (~3,800)

DHS moved to terminate TPS for Syria despite ongoing civil war conditions. Courts have stalled the termination; the Supreme Court will hear arguments in April 2026.

Somalia (designation slated to end March 17, 2026)

A federal judge blocked termination on March 13, 2026, days before it was set to take effect.

Myanmar (~3,670)

TPS terminated November 25, 2025, despite the military junta's ongoing campaign of violence following the 2021 coup.

Ethiopia (effective February 13, 2026)

TPS terminated December 12, 2025, despite ongoing ethnic conflict.

The State Department Contradiction

The most striking feature of the mass TPS terminations is the direct contradiction with the State Department's own assessments. DHS claims conditions in these countries have improved sufficiently to make return safe, while the State Department simultaneously maintains "Do Not Travel" or equivalent warnings for many of the same countries.

For Haiti specifically, DHS claimed the "environmental situation has improved enough that it is safe for Haitian citizens to return home" -- a claim contradicted by every major international assessment of conditions in the country.

Economic Impact

Penn Wharton Budget Model documented that 550,000 workers lost legal status by the end of 2025, with significant economic impacts across healthcare, construction, food service, and agricultural industries that rely on TPS workers.

Why This Entry Is Rated Severe

  • Unprecedented scale: 1.6 million people lost legal status in a single year
  • Contradicts own assessments: State Department travel warnings directly contradict DHS claims of safety
  • Mass refoulement risk: Returning hundreds of thousands to countries in armed conflict, gang warfare, or political repression
  • No individualized assessment: Categorical terminations apply uniformly without evaluating individual risks
  • Economic destruction: Half a million workers lost employment authorization, destabilizing families and industries
  • Fragmented legal landscape: Courts have blocked some terminations but not others, creating chaos for affected populations

Linked reporting

Reporting and secondary sources

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