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Understanding Your Alien Registration Number (A-Number): The Complete Guide for Immigrants

Alien Registration Number Guide: Find Your A-Number

Your Alien Registration Number—often called an A-Number, USCIS Number, or A#—is one of the most critical identifiers in your U.S. immigration journey. Yet many applicants find this simple nine-digit code confusing, especially when filling out immigration forms or tracking case status.

This guide clarifies everything you need to know about your A-Number: what it is, who gets one, where to find it, and why it matters for your immigration future. Whether you’re renewing a green card, applying for work authorization, or preparing for naturalization, understanding your A-Number is essential.


What Is an Alien Registration Number (A-Number)?

Your Alien Registration Number is a unique identifier assigned by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) to noncitizens engaging with the U.S. immigration system. It is the permanent account number for your immigration history in the United States.

Key Characteristics:

Think of your A-Number as your permanent immigration passport—it connects every application, petition, notice, and benefit in one cohesive file.

The Reactivation of the Alien Registration Act: What Immigrants in the U.S. Need to Know in 2025


Who Gets an Alien Registration Number?

Not everyone who visits or works in the United States receives an A-Number. The government assigns this number only when you pursue a long-term or permanent immigration benefit.

You Likely HAVE an A-Number if You:

You Likely DO NOT Have an A-Number if You:

The dividing line is simple: long-term immigration benefits trigger an A-Number; temporary visits do not.

When Do You Get Your A-Number?

Timing varies depending on your immigration path:

Once assigned, you will keep the same A-Number throughout your entire immigration history, regardless of status changes.


Where to Find Your A-Number on Common Documents

Finding your A-Number is straightforward once you know what to look for. The location depends on your document type.

On Your Green Card (Permanent Resident Card)

Your green card is the easiest place to find your A-Number:

Older green cards may label it as “A#” instead of “USCIS #,” but it’s the same number.

On Your Employment Authorization Document (EAD/Work Permit)

If you have a work permit (Form I-766):

The placement and format are nearly identical to the green card.

On an Immigrant Visa (Visa Stamp in Your Passport)

If you obtained permanent residence through consular processing abroad:

Note: This applies only to immigrant visas (for permanent residence), not nonimmigrant visas (for temporary visits).

On USCIS Notices (Form I-797, Notices of Action)

Every official notice from USCIS includes your A-Number:

On Immigration Court Documents

If you’ve been in removal or deportation proceedings:

On the USCIS Immigrant Fee Handout

If you completed consular processing abroad:


A-Number vs. Green Card Number: Don’t Confuse Them

Many applicants mistakenly confuse their A-Number with their Green Card Number. These are two different numbers serving different purposes.

A-Number (USCIS #)

FeatureDetails
FormatLetter “A” + 7–9 digits (e.g., A123456789)
PurposeYour permanent immigration identifier; links all your immigration records
PermanenceNever changes, even if you renew your green card multiple times
UseRequired on all USCIS forms, for case status checks, and tracking your immigration history
Location on cardFront of green card, labeled “USCIS #”
AssignedWhen you begin a long-term immigration benefit process

Green Card Number (Card # or Document #)

FeatureDetails
FormatThree letters + ten numbers (e.g., ABC1234567890)
PurposeIdentifies your specific physical green card document
PermanenceChanges each time you renew or replace your card
UseSometimes requested on renewal forms (Form I-90) or for proof of card status
Location on cardFront of green card, labeled “Card #” or “Document #” (usually near the bottom)
AssignedWhen your green card is manufactured and issued

Quick Memory Aid

Think of it this way:

Example:

When completing Form I-90 to renew your green card, you must provide your A-Number, not your card number.


A-Number vs. USCIS Case Number: A Critical Distinction

Another common source of confusion is the difference between your A-Number and your USCIS Case Number. Understanding this distinction is crucial for tracking your applications accurately.

A-Number (USCIS # or A#)

USCIS Case Number

Real-World Example

Scenario: You file Form I-90 to renew your green card in January 2026, then apply for citizenship (Form N-400) in January 2029.

ItemJanuary 2026 (I-90)January 2029 (N-400)
Your A-NumberA123456789A123456789 (same)
USCIS Case NumberEAC2601234567IOE2901234567 (different)

You provide your A-Number (A123456789) on both applications because it identifies you. But each application gets its own case number for tracking that specific petition.

Why This Matters

Using the wrong number creates serious delays:

Always double-check which number the form or system requires.


What If You’ve Lost All Your Documents? How to Retrieve Your A-Number

Life happens. Documents get lost, damaged, or destroyed. If you cannot find your A-Number anywhere, don’t panic—the government keeps records of your immigration history.

Step 1: Contact a Previous Immigration Attorney

Fastest option: If you previously worked with an immigration attorney, call their office immediately. Law firms maintain case files for years, and your A-Number is clearly documented. This often takes just a few phone calls to retrieve.

Step 2: Check Your USCIS Online Account

If you’ve created a USCIS online account (myUSCIS.gov):

Step 3: File a FOIA Request (Form G-639)

If the above options don’t work, use the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) to request your immigration file:

What to do:

Filing options:

Processing time:

Cost: Most requests are provided at no cost. Requests requiring extensive copying or research may incur small fees.

Step 4: Contact USCIS Contact Center

If you need your A-Number urgently:

An agent can often look up your number within minutes if you have basic biographical information.

Step 5: Schedule an In-Person Appointment

Visit your local USCIS field office to:


When Do You Need Your A-Number?

Your A-Number is required for nearly every interaction with USCIS and federal immigration authorities. Here are common situations:

Filing New Immigration Applications

Checking Your Case Status

Employment Verification

Requesting Immigration Records

Immigration Court Proceedings

Naturalization and Citizenship

DHS and State Interactions


Formatting Your A-Number Correctly on Forms

A small but important detail: USCIS forms require nine numerical digits after the “A.”

The Rule

If your A-Number has fewer than nine digits, add leading zeros after the “A” to make it nine digits total:

Examples:

Original A-NumberFormatted for Forms
A12345678A012345678
A1234567A001234567
A123456A000123456

The form will typically show the blank as: A _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ (nine blanks after the A).


A-Number and Your Immigration Journey: Critical Moments

Understanding your A-Number becomes especially important at key junctures in your immigration story:

Getting Your First Green Card

When you file Form I-485 or attend a consular interview, USCIS assigns your A-Number. You’ll receive it on your receipt notice or consular interview documents.

Next step: Write down your A-Number and store it safely.

Renewing Your Green Card

When you file Form I-90 to renew your expiring green card:

Link to resource: See Lunel Law’s comprehensive Form I-90 Explained guide for step-by-step instructions on green card renewal.

Applying for U.S. Citizenship

When you file Form N-400 for naturalization:

Link to resource: Explore Lunel Law’s naturalization services and USCIS naturalization interview guide to prepare for your citizenship journey.

Obtaining Work Authorization (EAD)

When you apply for Form I-765 (employment authorization):

Link to resource: Learn about employment authorization and automatic extensions at Lunel Law.

Filing for DACA or Other Protective Status

Link to resource: Lunel Law provides DACA renewal guidance and latest updates for 2025 and beyond.

Facing Removal or Deportation Proceedings

If you receive a Notice to Appear (NTA) for removal proceedings:

Link to resource: Lunel Law offers comprehensive removal defense representation and explains how an attorney can help you fight deportation.


Common Questions About Your A-Number

Q1: Can I have more than one A-Number?

No (with extremely rare exceptions). Once USCIS assigns you an A-Number, you keep it for life. Even if your status changes (from asylum to green card, for example), you use the same A-Number.

Q2: Is my A-Number the same as my USCIS number?

Yes. “A-Number,” “USCIS Number,” and “USCIS #” are three names for the same identifier. The term depends on which document you’re looking at.

Q3: What’s the difference between my A-Number and my case number?

Your A-Number identifies you and your entire immigration history. Your case number identifies a single application. You have one A-Number for life but multiple case numbers over time (one for each application).

Q4: Do I need my A-Number to check my case status online?

No. Use your USCIS Case Number (the 13-character code starting with letters like EAC, WAC, etc.) to check your case status at uscis.gov/case-status.
Provide your A-Number when calling USCIS customer service to ask about your account in general.

Q5: What if my A-Number is on documents but I don’t have a green card yet?

This is common. USCIS assigns A-Numbers early in the process—sometimes months before your physical green card arrives. The receipt notice, approval letter, or consular interview documents will have it.

Q6: Can I choose or change my A-Number?

No. USCIS automatically assigns your A-Number based on its internal system. You cannot request a different one.

Q7: Is my A-Number confidential? Should I protect it?

Yes. Treat your A-Number like you would a Social Security Number. Don’t share it on unsecured websites or with people you don’t trust.
However, it’s not as sensitive as your SSN since it’s less tied to financial systems. Still, keep it safe and use it only on official USCIS forms and communications.

Q8: What happens if I enter the wrong A-Number on a form?

Processing delays are likely. USCIS systems may:
Fail to match the form to your existing immigration file
Return your form as incomplete
Lose track of your application
Always double-check before submitting any form.

Q9: Can my A-Number expire?

No. Your A-Number is permanent. Your green card expires (usually every 10 years), but your A-Number never does.
When you renew your green card using Form I-90, your A-Number stays the same—only your physical card is replaced.

Q10: Do I need my A-Number to travel internationally?

No, you need your green card to travel internationally (or passport + immigrant visa if outside the U.S.). However, USCIS needs your A-Number on any travel-related immigration forms (Form I-131 for advance parole).


Protecting Your A-Number: Best Practices

Once you have your A-Number, safeguard it:

  1. Write it down in a safe place—a locked drawer, password-protected document, or safety deposit box
  2. Share only with authorized persons—immigration attorneys, employers verifying I-9, or USCIS officials
  3. Use only on official USCIS forms and government portals
  4. Never provide it in emails or texts unless you initiated the contact with a verified government source
  5. Create copies of documents containing it—receipt notices, green card photos, EAD documentation
  6. Verify you’re using the correct number before submitting any form

When to Seek Professional Help

Your A-Number connects your entire U.S. immigration story. Complex situations—such as errors on documents, lost records, prior denials, or overlapping statuses—benefit from professional guidance.

Contact Lunel Law if you:

Lunel Law’s comprehensive services include:

Our multilingual team (English, French, and Spanish) serves the Atlanta area and beyond with compassionate, expert immigration counsel.


Your A-Number: The Golden Thread of Your Immigration Story

What once seemed like a confusing string of digits is now a clear, permanent identifier connecting every chapter of your U.S. immigration journey.

Your A-Number is:

From your first application for a green card to your final citizenship oath, your A-Number is the thread linking your entire story. Now that you understand it—where to find it, how to protect it, and when you’ll need it—you’re empowered to navigate your immigration future with confidence.


Summary & Quick Reference

QuestionAnswer
What is an A-Number?Your permanent immigration identifier assigned by USCIS; format is A + 7–9 digits
Who gets one?Anyone pursuing long-term immigration benefits (green card, EAD, asylum, DACA, etc.)
Where is it located?Green card: “USCIS #” on front; EAD: “USCIS #” on front; Visa: “Registration Number” on stamp; Notices: top of I-797 letters
How is it different from my green card number?A-Number is permanent (never changes); card number changes with each renewal
How is it different from my case number?A-Number identifies you; case number tracks a single application
What if I lose it?Call previous attorney, check USCIS account, or file Form G-639 (FOIA request)
Do I need it for everything?Nearly every USCIS form, employment I-9, and immigration court document
Can it be changed or lost?No—it’s permanent, even if all your documents are lost
When do I need it most?Green card renewal (I-90), citizenship (N-400), employment (I-9), any immigration application
What if it’s on my documents but seems wrong?Contact USCIS or an immigration attorney to verify and correct

Take the Next Step

Your A-Number is critical to your immigration success. If you have questions about your A-Number, need help with immigration applications, or want expert guidance on your next steps, contact Lunel Law today for a confidential consultation.

With over a decade of experience serving immigrants from all backgrounds, Lunel Law is your trusted partner in navigating the U.S. immigration system with clarity, confidence, and legal excellence.

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