La diferencia entre el estatus legal y el período de estancia autorizada en Estados Unidos

Kris Quadros-Ragar • June 19, 2026

 Click here to read this article in English


Entender la legislación estadounidense en materia de inmigración puede parecer, a menudo, aprender un idioma completamente nuevo. Dos términos que suelen generar confusión son «estatus legal» y «período de estancia autorizada». Aunque suenan similares y ambos se refieren a tu capacidad para permanecer en Estados Unidos, son conceptos jurídicos distintos.

Es fundamental comprender la diferencia. Confundirlos puede dar lugar, sin querer, a infracciones de visado, a una estancia ilegal y a graves consecuencias a largo plazo en materia de inmigración.

1. ¿Qué es el estatus legal?

El estatus legal significa que el Gobierno de los Estados Unidos te ha concedido oficialmente el derecho a permanecer en los Estados Unidos y que dicho derecho está actualmente vigente.

Tienes un estatus legal si:


  • Eres un ciudadano o nacional estadounidense.
  • Eres un residente permanente legal (titular de la tarjeta verde) o un residente permanente condicional.
  • Eres un no inmigrante que haya sido admitido legalmente en el país por un período temporal (por ejemplo, con un visado de turista, de estudiante o de trabajo).

En el caso de los titulares de visados temporales, su situación legal está directamente vinculada a su formulario I-94 (Registro de entrada y salida). Siempre que la fecha que figura en su I-94 no haya vencido y usted cumpla activamente con las normas de su visado —como mantener una carga lectiva completa con un visado de estudiante F-1 o trabajar únicamente para su patrocinador autorizado con un visado H-1B—, se encuentra en estatus legal.


2. ¿Qué es un período de estancia autorizada?


Un período de estancia autorizada es, en esencia, un margen legal temporal. Significa que el gobierno te permite permanecer físicamente en el país por el momento, pero no tienes un estatus legal vigente.


La forma más habitual de entrar en esta «zona de transición» es presentar una solicitud para prorrogar, cambiar o ajustar el estatus de su visado antes de que caduque su permiso actual. Mientras espera a que el USCIS tome una decisión, es frecuente que caduque la fecha de vencimiento de su formulario I-94. En ese preciso momento, su estatus legal activo finaliza oficialmente. Sin embargo, dado que presentó su solicitud a tiempo, entra automáticamente en un período de estancia autorizada mientras su caso está pendiente.


Es importante señalar que, aunque esta estancia autorizada evita que se acumule presencia ilegal (ese «reloj peligroso» que activa prohibiciones de reingreso de varios años), no le otorga un estatus legal formal ni le protege por completo contra la iniciación de procedimientos de expulsión (deportación). Funciona como una estancia temporal, no como una red de seguridad permanente.


Si el USCIS deniega su solicitud y su visado original ya ha caducado, su margen de seguridad temporal desaparece al instante. Las consecuencias son inmediatas y graves: dado que ya no dispone de un estatus válido ni de un expediente pendiente, deja de tener permiso legal para permanecer en el país, lo que otorga al Gobierno el derecho a iniciar un procedimiento de expulsión. Para evitar estos riesgos estresantes, la estrategia más segura es mantener un estatus subyacente válido siempre que sea posible. 



Si actualmente estás a la espera de que se resuelva una solicitud o tienes dudas sobre tus opciones, nuestra oficina está a tu disposición para ayudarte a movilizarte por el sistema legal con total seguridad. Ponte en contacto con nosotros hoy mismo para concertar una consulta.

Este blog no pretende ser una asesoría legal y nada aquí debe interpretarse como el establecimiento de una relación abogado-cliente. Programe una consulta con un abogado de inmigración antes de actuar sobre cualquier información que aquí lea.

Kris Quadros-Ragar


By Kris Quadros-Ragar June 18, 2026
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