Muslim I-102 Replacement I-94 Checklist for Travel Record Passport Visa and Prayer

Muslim I-102 Replacement I-94 Checklist for Travel Record Passport Visa and Prayer

Muslim Post@muslimpost
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A practical Muslim I-102 replacement I-94 checklist covering travel record, passport, visa, CBP I-94 lookup, USCIS forms, address updates and prayer timing.

A Muslim I-102 replacement I-94 checklist should help a traveler or family fix a missing, incorrect or unavailable arrival-departure record without confusing it with a visa or passport. The folder may include passport pages, visa category, last entry date, port or airport notes, CBP I-94 lookup result, USCIS I-102 question, prior approvals, travel history, address-change proof, receipt notice, prayer timing and a privacy plan for travel history. The checklist does not decide whether I-102 is required or replace legal advice. It organizes the travel-record evidence before school, work, extension or family paperwork depends on the missing record.

Use this with the Muslim I-539 change or extend status checklist when the I-94 issue affects status timing, with the Muslim international travel documents checklist when passport and visa files need a wider travel folder, and with the Muslim online FOIA immigration records checklist when old entry records may require a records request. This guide is not legal, immigration, travel, school, employment or religious advice. It is a document organizer for an I-94 record problem.

The sources set the travel-record map. USCIS Form I-102 keeps the replacement or initial arrival-departure document lane visible. USCIS I-94 information explains why the I-94 record matters for later forms. CBP I-94 keeps online travel-record lookup separate from USCIS filings. State Department and USA.gov visa material keep visa category context separate from admission records. USCIS address-change material keeps mail risk visible. The Muslim layer adds salah scheduling, family privacy, careful travel-history handling and restraint before buying tickets or making school plans.

Write the travel timeline before filing anything

The front sheet should list current legal name, prior name spellings, passport number used, visa category, last entry date, port or airport if known, carrier if known, class of admission, I-94 result, issue type, current address, filing date target, travel deadline, school or employer dependency, prayer windows and who may help. Do not start by assuming the record is gone. First check whether the record is online, whether the passport number was entered differently, and whether an older passport or name spelling explains the mismatch.

  • Passport and visa file: current passport, old passport if used, visa foil, entry stamp if any, name spellings and copies of every relevant page.
  • I-94 file: online lookup result, printout or screenshot note, class of admission, admit-until date, travel history and mismatch notes.
  • USCIS file: I-102 question, receipt notice, prior approvals, related I-539 or school records and address-change proof.
  • Travel file: tickets, airport notes, border or port notes, family travel history and what should not be shared casually.
  • Muslim care notes: prayer timing, work or school pressure, family privacy, who may see travel history and how to avoid gossip about status stress.

The I-94 tab should be factual and unemotional. Write what the online system shows, what the passport shows, what the visa shows and what the person remembers. If there are multiple entries, organize them by date. If a family member has a different admit-until date, do not copy one person's record into another person's folder. A small mismatch can become a large problem when an extension, school record, driver license, employer form or future immigration filing asks for the admission record.

Separate travel evidence from future filing plans

A missing I-94 may affect an I-539, school enrollment, employment paperwork, driver's license renewal, bank request or family travel plan, but those are separate consequences. Keep the I-94 evidence in one tab and the future filing plan in another. If the family is considering travel, write the planned dates, ticket risk, passport expiration, visa question, prayer logistics and whether the pending record issue should be reviewed before departure. Do not let an urgent ticket purchase decide the document strategy.

Address and receipt tracking still matter. Save the submitted copy, payment or fee note, receipt, online account update, mailing proof and any request for evidence. If the household moves, put the address-change proof in the same process tab. A useful Muslim I-102 checklist leaves the travel timeline clear, I-94 evidence labeled, passport and visa records separated, and the next follow-up date visible.

Before filing or asking for help, review the folder with only the people who need access. A helper can read a port-of-entry note without seeing family hardship. A school adviser can know the I-94 issue without reading every visa page. Keep prayer windows, childcare, transportation and safe document storage on the logistics page. The goal is a clean record trail, not a pile of travel memories.

Sources

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