Did CBP One app just revoke my migrant status? Need advice

Yeah, CBP One freaking people out is kind of its main feature at this point.

I do agree with a lot of what @jeff said, but I’d add a few things and push back a bit on the “it’s just the app, don’t worry” vibe. Sometimes it really does matter, just not in the way people think.

Key things people mix up:

  1. “Revoked / inactive” can mean different things
    The app isn’t super clear, but from real cases I’ve seen:

    • Sometimes it is only the appointment or travel authorization that was canceled.
    • Other times it reflected that the person’s parole period actually ended, and they just hadn’t noticed the date.
    • In a few cases, people got an updated status because CBP changed some internal classification, not because the person did anything wrong.

    So: it’s not automatically harmless, but it’s also not automatically the end of your protection.

  2. Do not assume “if my court date is active, I’m 100% safe”
    I’ve seen people with:

    • Active EOIR cases
    • Expired parole
    • And weird CBP One status
      Who then got detained when they tried to re‑enter from Mexico or traveled too close to the border. The court case did not “protect” them from CBP enforcement at the port.

    So @jeff is right that your case can still be alive, but that does not mean you can move around freely.

  3. What I’d focus on that the app doesn’t show you:

    • Your parole end date or I‑94 “admit until” date is way more important legally than what CBP One says.
    • Your status with ICE (if you’re checking in) and with immigration court / USCIS is what controls hearings, work permits, etc., not the app.
  4. Subtle red flags people ignore:

    • If the app stopped showing your QR code or past appointment details at the same time it went “revoked,” that can be a sign that that specific entry authorization is closed out in their system.
    • If you had a second or third appointment request pending and that suddenly shows revoked or “not available,” that could mean they are changing how they’re handling repeat entries.
  5. Concrete next steps that are not just “check a website”:

    • Talk to a legit immigrant legal org and ask specifically:
      • “Does this affect my eligibility for asylum, parole renewal, work permit, or future travel?”
      • “If I leave my current city or go near the border, is there any extra risk for me with my current status?”
    • If you already entered using CBP One, tell the lawyer the exact date you entered and how much parole time you were given, if any. A lot of stress comes from people not realizing that their 60 or 2-year parole clock already started ticking.
  6. Things I would absolutely not do while it shows revoked/inactive:

    • Do not try to cross again at a different port “just to ask.” People have gotten detained like that.
    • Do not leave the U.S. to “reset” anything. There is no reset button.
    • Do not assume a random social media comment saying “mine says revoked and I’m fine” means you’re fine too. Facts of each case are different.

If you’re willing to share (privately with a lawyer, not here):

  • Did you already enter with that CBP One appointment, or were you still waiting to cross?
  • Did an officer ever give you a printed parole document, I‑94, or stamp?
  • Do you already have a court hearing notice or USCIS receipt?

Those 3 things matter more than the word “revoked” on the app. Right now, treat the app as a warning light, not a final decision: something changed in CBP’s system, and you need a human who can actually see your record to explain what changed and if it has real consequences for you.