Thursday, Apr. 23, 2026
Are 3 in 100 immigrants granted asylum?
According to Mobile Pathways, which compiles federal immigration data, 2.6% of asylum applicants in February 2026 were granted asylum, down from 3.4% in January.
The downward trend is corroborated by Syracuse University’s TRAC, which found that the asylum grant rate was 4.8% in February and 6.5% in January. The FY2026 asylum grant rate is 9.7% so far, significantly less than the 23.8% in FY2025 and the 38% yearly average since 2001.
Some pointed to the administration’s authorization of military lawyers to serve as deportation judges to explain the falling rate; the average asylum grant rate of 29 such judges is less than half the national rate.
Another vital factor in case outcomes is representation; 80% of unrepresented immigration court cases result in removal. Oklahoma had the third-worst rate of representation at 28% of cases, less than half the national rate of 61%.
This fact brief is responsive to conversations such as this one.
Sources
- Mobile Pathways Breaking Media Barriers with Data and Justice
- Mobile Pathways Asylum Navigator
- TRAC Reports Asylum Decisions
- L.A. Taco Trump’s ‘Deportation Judges’ Take Over Has Begun: Half of L.A. Immigrants Now Miss Court and Get Deported Sight Unseen
- Google Doc Jag/Miliary Immigration Judges
- Mobile Pathways Judge Profiles
- TRAC Reports Outcomes of Immigration Court Proceedings
- TRAC Reports How Many Pending Deportation Cases are There in Your State? TRAC's Updated Mapping Tool Has the Answer
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Fact briefs are bite-sized, well-sourced explanations that offer clear "yes" or "no" answers to questions, confusions, and unsupported claims circulating online. They rely on publicly available data and documents, often from the original source. Fact briefs are written and published by newsrooms in the Gigafact network.
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