If you hold Temporary Protected Status and your country is on this list, your protection may be ending — and the clock is already running. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals has cleared the way for TPS terminations affecting more than 300,000 people across all affected nationalities, including Hondurans, Nicaraguans, Nepalis, Salvadorans, and Haitians. Somalia TPS terminates March 17, 2026. Yemen TPS has already been terminated. If you have not spoken to an immigration attorney yet, today is the day. Not next week. Today.
This article explains exactly what is happening, what it means for you and your family, and — most importantly — what legal options you may still have. Do not read this and do nothing. Every day you wait narrows your choices.
What Is Temporary Protected Status (TPS)?
Temporary Protected Status is a humanitarian protection created by Congress under INA § 244, 8 U.S.C. § 1254a. It allows nationals of designated countries to live and work lawfully in the United States when conditions in their home country — such as armed conflict, environmental disasters, or extraordinary conditions — make safe return impossible.
Under INA § 244(c), TPS provides two core benefits: protection from deportation (removal) and the right to obtain a work permit, known as an Employment Authorization Document (EAD). For hundreds of thousands of people, TPS has been the legal foundation of their entire life in the United States — their jobs, their homes, their children’s stability.
Under INA § 244(b)(1), the Secretary of Homeland Security has authority to designate a country for TPS. Under INA § 244(b)(3)(B), the Secretary also has authority to terminate that designation. It is that termination authority that is now being exercised — and challenged in federal court.
TPS is not a path to a green card on its own. It was always meant to be temporary. But for many people, it has lasted decades — long enough to build deep roots, raise U.S. citizen children, and create lives that cannot simply be packed up and returned to countries they barely remember. When TPS ends, it does not just end a legal status. It ends a life as people know it.
Which Countries Are Affected — TPS Termination Dates in 2026
Below is the current status for each affected nationality as of February 2026. These dates and statuses can change based on litigation or new Federal Register notices. Verify current status with an attorney.
Haiti TPS 2026 — Largest Affected Population
Haiti has approximately 500,000 TPS holders in the United States — the single largest TPS-designated population in the country. Haitian TPS holders face acute termination risk in 2026 under the current administration’s broad review of TPS designations. If you are Haitian and hold TPS, do not wait for an official termination notice to consult an attorney. The scale of potential impact is enormous, and early legal planning is essential. Haitian TPS holders should immediately consult an attorney about adjustment of status options, family-based petitions, and protection from removal.
El Salvador TPS 2026 — Second Largest Affected Population
El Salvador has approximately 250,000 TPS holders in the United States. Salvadoran TPS termination proceedings are among the most critical in 2026. The current administration has treated Salvadoran TPS termination as a priority. If you are Salvadoran and reading this article, do not assume you have more time than other nationalities. Salvadoran nationals should also specifically ask their attorney about NACARA relief options (see the NACARA section below), which may provide an independent path to permanent residence for those who qualify.
Honduras TPS 2026
Honduras TPS termination is proceeding after the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, in Ramos v. Nielsen and related cases, stayed a lower court order that had blocked the termination. This means the injunction that was protecting Honduran TPS holders has been lifted pending appeal. Honduran nationals are among the hundreds of thousands now at immediate risk. Watch the Federal Register and consult an attorney immediately for the operative termination date applicable to your specific registration.
Nicaragua TPS 2026
The same 9th Circuit stay applies to Nicaraguan TPS holders. The lower court injunction blocking termination has been paused, and Nicaraguan nationals face the same immediate risk as Hondurans. Importantly, some Nicaraguan nationals may qualify for special relief under NACARA (Nicaraguan Adjustment and Central American Relief Act) — a separate statute that predates and operates independently of TPS. If you are Nicaraguan, ask your attorney about NACARA eligibility immediately.
Nepal TPS 2026
Nepali TPS holders are also directly affected by the 9th Circuit stay. Nepal was designated for TPS following the 2015 earthquakes. The same risk of imminent termination applies to Nepali nationals, who are among the 300,000+ now without the protection of the district court injunction.
Somalia TPS — Terminating March 17, 2026
Somalia TPS terminates on March 17, 2026. If you are a Somali TPS holder, you have weeks — not months. The termination date is fixed. Your work permit will expire with your TPS. You must consult an attorney before that date to understand what legal options, if any, are available to you before your status ends.
Yemen TPS — Already Terminated
Yemen TPS has been terminated, effective 60 days after the Federal Register notice of termination. If you are a Yemeni TPS holder and that 60-day window has passed, your TPS has already ended. You may already be without lawful status and at risk of removal proceedings. Do not wait another day.
Other TPS Designations Under Review
The current administration has initiated broad review of TPS designations across multiple nationalities. Venezuela, Ukraine, and other designated countries may face reviews, extensions, or terminations in 2026. TPS holders of all nationalities should monitor developments closely and maintain contact with an immigration attorney.
What TPS Termination Actually Means for You
When your TPS is terminated, three things happen simultaneously — and all three are serious.
You Lose Protection from Deportation
Under INA § 244(c), TPS currently prevents the government from removing you. The moment TPS ends, that protection is gone. You become deportable and could be placed in removal proceedings before an immigration judge. You could also be detained. This is not a hypothetical risk — it is the direct legal consequence of termination.
Your Work Permit Expires
Your Employment Authorization Document (EAD) is tied directly to your TPS. When TPS terminates, your work authorization terminates with it — unless a regulatory automatic extension applies (see the section on EAD auto-extensions below). You will no longer be legally permitted to work in the United States. Your employer may be required to terminate your employment. The financial impact on your family can be immediate and severe.
You Have No Lawful Immigration Status
Unless you have another basis for lawful status — a pending green card application, a visa, a pending asylum claim — TPS termination means you are unlawfully present in the United States. Unlawful presence begins to accumulate, which can trigger 3-year and 10-year bars to future immigration benefits under INA § 212(a)(9)(B).
This is why you cannot wait. Every day without a plan is a day closer to a crisis you cannot reverse.
The 9th Circuit Ruling — What It Really Means
You may have heard that a court “blocked” the TPS terminations. Here is the truth in plain language: that protection is gone — for now.
A federal district court had issued an injunction blocking the government from terminating TPS for Hondurans, Nicaraguans, and Nepalis. That injunction was based on ongoing litigation, including Ramos v. Nielsen in the 9th Circuit, which challenges TPS terminations on constitutional and statutory grounds, and the related case Bhattarai v. Nielsen.
The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals then issued a stay of that injunction. A stay means the injunction is paused while the appeal is decided. In practical terms: the government can now proceed with TPS terminations while the courts continue to debate the legal questions.
The stay is not a final decision. The underlying legal challenges may still succeed. But you cannot count on a court ruling to save you. Courts can take months or years. Your TPS termination date will not wait for a favorable ruling. You need a legal strategy that does not depend entirely on winning in court.
Critical Legal Issue: Sanchez v. Mayorkas and TPS Holders Seeking Green Cards
If you are a TPS holder who entered the United States without inspection (meaning you crossed the border without being admitted by an immigration officer) and you are trying to get a green card through a U.S. citizen or permanent resident family member, there is a Supreme Court decision you absolutely must know about.
In Sanchez v. Mayorkas, 141 S.Ct. 1809 (2021), the Supreme Court held unanimously that a grant of Temporary Protected Status does not constitute an “admission” for purposes of adjustment of status under INA § 245(a). This means that a TPS holder who originally entered the United States without inspection cannot use their TPS grant alone to satisfy the “inspected and admitted” requirement for adjustment of status — even though TPS gave them lawful status.
This decision has a direct and serious impact on many TPS holders. If you entered without inspection, you generally cannot adjust status to lawful permanent resident inside the United States based on your TPS alone. You would typically need to leave the country and apply through consular processing — which can trigger the 3-year and 10-year unlawful presence bars.
However, there is an important legal strategy that may help: advance parole travel under INA § 244(f)(4).
The Advance Parole Strategy — INA § 244(f)(4)
Under INA § 244(f)(4), TPS holders may apply for and receive advance parole — a travel document that allows them to travel outside the United States and return. This provision is specifically designed for TPS holders and is separate from ordinary advance parole.
Here is why this matters enormously after Sanchez v. Mayorkas: when a TPS holder travels on advance parole and is inspected and admitted upon return to the United States by a border officer, that return entry may constitute the “inspection and admission” required for adjustment of status under INA § 245 — at least in certain federal court circuits. This is often called the “advance parole strategy” or the “travel cure.”
In circuits that recognize this strategy, a TPS holder who previously entered without inspection can travel on advance parole, be admitted upon return, and then may qualify to adjust status inside the United States to a green card holder — without needing to trigger the unlawful presence bars.
Important caveats: This strategy is not available in all circuits, is fact-specific, carries risks (travel always carries the risk of being denied re-entry), and requires careful legal evaluation. The advance parole must be approved before travel occurs. Do not attempt this strategy without experienced immigration counsel advising you every step of the way.
TPS EAD Auto-Extensions — Your Work Permit May Still Be Valid
One of the most practically important — and most misunderstood — aspects of TPS termination is the automatic extension of TPS-based Employment Authorization Documents through Federal Register notices.
When the government terminates a TPS designation, it does not always immediately cancel all existing EADs. USCIS has repeatedly issued Federal Register notices automatically extending the validity of TPS-based EADs for certain nationalities for specific periods — sometimes 180 days or more — to allow TPS holders time to transition. This automatic extension means your work permit may remain valid even after your technical TPS termination date, if USCIS has issued an auto-extension notice for your country.
These auto-extensions are published in the Federal Register and are tied to specific EAD category codes. To determine whether your EAD is covered by an auto-extension:
- Check the Federal Register for notices specific to your country’s TPS designation
- Look at the category code printed on your EAD card (it should begin with “A-12” or “C-19” for TPS-based EADs)
- Consult an immigration attorney, who can verify current auto-extension status for your nationality
Do not assume your EAD is expired just because your TPS termination date has passed. And do not assume it is still valid without verifying. Knowingly presenting an invalid EAD to an employer can have serious consequences. Get legal confirmation of your current work authorization status.
Your Legal Options After TPS Ends
TPS termination is not necessarily the end of your legal options. Depending on your specific situation — how long you have been here, your family ties, your criminal history, your country conditions — you may have one or more of the following paths. An attorney must evaluate which apply to you.
Asylum and Withholding of Removal
Under INA § 208, you may apply for asylum if you fear persecution in your home country based on race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion. Asylum, if granted, provides a path to a green card.
If you do not qualify for asylum — for example, because of the one-year filing deadline or a bar — you may still qualify for withholding of removal under INA § 241(b)(3), which requires showing a higher probability of persecution but does not have the one-year bar. Withholding prevents removal but does not provide a path to permanent residence.
You may also apply for protection under the Convention Against Torture (CAT) under 8 C.F.R. §§ 1208.16–1208.18 if you fear torture by or with the acquiescence of your government. CAT protection is available even if you have a criminal conviction that would bar asylum.
Adjustment of Status — With the Advance Parole Strategy
Under INA § 245, if you are the immediate relative of a U.S. citizen (spouse, parent, or unmarried child under 21), or if you have an approved employment-based petition with a visa immediately available, you may be eligible to adjust status to lawful permanent resident. However, as explained above, Sanchez v. Mayorkas means that TPS alone does not satisfy the “inspected and admitted” requirement for those who entered without inspection. The advance parole strategy under INA § 244(f)(4) may provide a path — but only with careful legal guidance and only in circuits where courts recognize that strategy.
Cancellation of Removal
Under INA § 240A(b), non-permanent residents in removal proceedings may apply for cancellation of removal if they can show: (1) continuous physical presence in the United States for at least 10 years; (2) good moral character during that period; (3) no disqualifying criminal convictions; and (4) that removal would cause exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to a qualifying U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident spouse, parent, or child.
The “exceptional and extremely unusual hardship” standard is demanding — ordinary hardship does not meet it. But if you have U.S. citizen children and have been here for 10 or more years, this form of relief may be available. It requires removal proceedings to have begun. An attorney can assess whether your situation meets the standard.
NACARA Relief — Nicaraguans, Salvadorans, and Others
The Nicaraguan Adjustment and Central American Relief Act (NACARA), Pub. L. 105-100 (1997), provides special immigration relief structured in two distinct sections:
NACARA § 202 covers Nicaraguan and Cuban nationals who have been in the United States continuously since December 1, 1995, and who applied for asylum or registered under certain programs by specified deadlines. These individuals may be eligible for adjustment of status regardless of how they entered.
NACARA § 203 covers certain Guatemalan and Salvadoran nationals, as well as nationals of former Soviet bloc countries, who had asylum applications pending or registered under the American Baptist Churches settlement. NACARA § 203 relief involves a different standard — demonstrating that the applicant’s case would have been approvable under pre-1996 asylum standards — and has different procedural requirements. This is a more demanding standard than NACARA § 202. Salvadoran nationals specifically should ask their attorney whether they or family members may qualify under NACARA § 203.
Deferred Action and Humanitarian Parole
These discretionary forms of relief are not guaranteed and are subject to the administration’s enforcement priorities. However, in certain compelling humanitarian cases, they may be available. An attorney can advise you on whether to pursue these options.
Voluntary Departure
Under INA § 240B, voluntary departure allows you to leave the United States at your own expense within a set time period, avoiding a formal removal order. A formal removal order carries a 10-year bar on re-entry and can have other severe consequences. Voluntary departure preserves more future options. However, this should only be considered after all other relief options have been exhausted and with full attorney guidance.
What TPS Holders Must Do Right Now — Immediate Action Steps
These steps apply regardless of your nationality. Do all of them immediately.
- Consult a licensed immigration attorney this week. Not a notario. Not a friend who “knows about immigration.” A licensed attorney who practices immigration law. Bring all your immigration documents to the consultation.
- Gather your documents now. Collect: your TPS approval notices, all EADs, your passport, any prior visa records, entry records, birth certificates, your children’s birth certificates (especially if U.S. born), marriage certificate (if applicable), any prior removal orders or immigration court notices.
- Verify your specific TPS termination date. Check the Federal Register notice for your country. Your attorney can help you identify the exact date your protection ends and whether any regulatory automatic extension of your EAD applies.
- Ask about the advance parole strategy. If you entered without inspection and have a qualifying family member who could petition for you, ask your attorney specifically whether advance parole travel under INA § 244(f)(4) could help you qualify for adjustment of status.
- Do not let any deadlines pass. If there is an open registration or re-registration window, file immediately. If there is a court-ordered or regulatory EAD extension in effect, make sure you have documentation of it.
- Assess your full immigration history. Have you ever been ordered removed? Have you ever had a visa? Do you have U.S. citizen family members who could petition for you? Have you been continuously present for 10+ years? All of this matters for determining what relief is available.
- Ask your attorney about every option listed above. Do not assume you know which ones apply. Let a qualified attorney evaluate your specific facts against all available forms of relief.
- Do not travel outside the United States without explicit advance parole authorization and legal guidance about the specific risks and benefits in your situation.
- Check your criminal record. Any criminal conviction — even a misdemeanor — can affect your eligibility for multiple forms of immigration relief. Be completely honest with your attorney about your record.
Why You Need an Immigration Attorney Immediately
Immigration law is one of the most complex areas of American law. The intersection of TPS termination, the Sanchez v. Mayorkas ruling, advance parole strategy, removal proceedings, asylum, cancellation of removal, NACARA, and adjustment of status involves dozens of statutory provisions, regulatory interpretations, and case-specific facts. A mistake — a missed deadline, a wrongly filed form, a misunderstood eligibility requirement — can permanently eliminate options that would have been available.
The stakes could not be higher. We are talking about whether you stay in the country where you have built your life, or whether you are forcibly removed to a country you may barely know. We are talking about whether your U.S. citizen children grow up with their parent in America or are separated from them. And lastly, we are talking about whether you can keep your job next month.
An experienced immigration attorney can:
- Identify every form of relief you may qualify for — including ones you have never heard of
- Evaluate whether the advance parole strategy under INA § 244(f)(4) is right for your situation
- Analyze how Sanchez v. Mayorkas affects your specific adjustment of status options
- File protective applications to preserve your options while longer-term strategies are developed
- Represent you in removal proceedings before an immigration judge
- Monitor litigation like Ramos v. Nielsen and advise you how court developments affect your case
- Prepare a legal strategy that does not depend on a single outcome
Do not navigate this alone. The government has attorneys. You deserve one too.
Sources and Legal References
- Immigration and Nationality Act § 244, 8 U.S.C. § 1254a — Temporary Protected Status statute
- INA § 244(a)(1) — TPS eligibility requirements
- INA § 244(b)(1) — Secretary’s authority to designate TPS
- INA § 244(b)(3)(A) — extension authority
- INA § 244(b)(3)(B) — termination authority
- INA § 244(c) — benefits of TPS (protection from removal, work authorization)
- INA § 244(c)(2)(A)(iii) — criminal and other bars to TPS
- INA § 244(f)(4) — TPS travel authorization / advance parole provision
- 8 C.F.R. § 244 — TPS implementing regulations
- INA § 208 — Asylum
- INA § 240A(b) — Cancellation of Removal for Non-Permanent Residents
- INA § 240B — Voluntary Departure
- INA § 241(b)(3) — Withholding of Removal
- INA § 245 — Adjustment of Status
- INA § 212(a)(9)(B) — Unlawful presence bars
- 8 C.F.R. §§ 1208.16–1208.18 — Convention Against Torture regulations
- Nicaraguan Adjustment and Central American Relief Act (NACARA), Pub. L. 105-100 (1997) — § 202 (Nicaraguans/Cubans) and § 203 (Guatemalans, Salvadorans, Eastern Europeans)
- Sanchez v. Mayorkas, 141 S.Ct. 1809 (2021) — Supreme Court held TPS does not constitute “admission” for adjustment of status purposes under INA § 245(a)
- Ramos v. Nielsen, 9th Circuit Court of Appeals — ongoing TPS constitutional and statutory challenges
- Bhattarai v. Nielsen — related TPS litigation
- USCIS Temporary Protected Status — Official Information Page
- Federal Register — TPS designation and termination notices (search by country at federalregister.gov)
Frequently Asked Questions About TPS Termination in 2026
Will I be deported immediately when my TPS ends?
Not automatically, but you become deportable. The government would need to initiate removal proceedings by issuing a Notice to Appear (NTA) before an immigration judge could order your removal. However, once TPS ends, there is no legal protection preventing this from happening at any time. This is why you must have a legal strategy in place before your TPS expires — not after.
Can I still work if my TPS expires?
Possibly, for a limited period. Your Employment Authorization Document (EAD) is tied to your TPS, but USCIS sometimes issues automatic extensions of TPS-based EADs through Federal Register notices during transition periods. You must verify with an attorney whether an auto-extension applies to your specific EAD category code and nationality. Do not assume your EAD is valid or expired without confirming current auto-extension status.
What is the Sanchez v. Mayorkas decision and how does it affect me?
In Sanchez v. Mayorkas (2021), the Supreme Court held that having TPS does not count as being “admitted” to the United States for purposes of applying for a green card through adjustment of status under INA § 245. This directly affects TPS holders who entered without inspection — even though TPS gave them lawful status, it does not satisfy the “inspected and admitted” requirement for adjustment of status. If you entered without inspection and want a green card, you need to discuss the advance parole strategy and other options with an immigration attorney.
What is the advance parole strategy for TPS holders?
Under INA § 244(f)(4), TPS holders can apply for travel authorization (advance parole) and travel abroad. When they return and are inspected and admitted by a border officer, that re-entry may constitute the “admission” needed to qualify for adjustment of status inside the United States. This strategy is recognized in certain federal court circuits and can be a powerful path for TPS holders with qualifying family members. It requires advance parole to be approved before travel and carries risks — only pursue this with an experienced immigration attorney.
Can I travel on advance parole as a TPS holder?
Yes, TPS holders may apply for advance parole travel authorization under INA § 244(f)(4). However, travel always carries risk — there is no guarantee you will be admitted upon return, and any trip could result in being barred from re-entry if you have grounds of inadmissibility. Before any travel on advance parole, you must consult with an immigration attorney who can evaluate your specific situation and the risks involved.
Is there a TPS extension in 2026?
As of February 2026, the current administration has been terminating rather than extending TPS designations. The courts have been the primary check on terminations. Monitor the Federal Register and USCIS announcements for your specific country. Do not rely on an extension occurring — plan for the termination scenario.
Can I apply for asylum after my TPS ends?
You may be able to apply for asylum under INA § 208, but there is a one-year filing deadline from the date of your last arrival in the United States. If you have been here for years on TPS, you have very likely passed the one-year deadline and would need to demonstrate an exception (changed circumstances or extraordinary circumstances). An attorney can assess this. Even if asylum is barred, withholding of removal under INA § 241(b)(3) and CAT protection may still be available.
I am Nicaraguan — do I have any special options?
Yes. Nicaraguans should specifically ask their attorney about NACARA § 202 (Nicaraguan Adjustment and Central American Relief Act). If you have been in the United States continuously since December 1, 1995, and registered under certain programs, you may be eligible for adjustment of status under NACARA, which operates independently of TPS. This is a distinct and potentially very important option.
I am Salvadoran — what special options do I have?
Salvadorans should ask their attorney about NACARA § 203, which covers certain Salvadoran nationals who had asylum applications pending or registered under the American Baptist Churches (ABC) settlement. The standard under NACARA § 203 requires demonstrating that your case would have been approvable under pre-1996 asylum standards. Additionally, Salvadorans with long U.S. residence and qualifying family members should explore cancellation of removal and adjustment of status with advance parole. With approximately 250,000 Salvadoran TPS holders at risk, legal planning is urgently needed.
I am Haitian — what should I know about my TPS situation?
Haiti has approximately 500,000 TPS holders — the largest single TPS population in the United States. Haitian nationals face the same termination risk as other affected nationalities. Haitian TPS holders who have been in the United States for many years, who have U.S. citizen children, or who have other qualifying family members should consult an attorney immediately about adjustment of status options, advance parole strategy, and cancellation of removal. Do not wait for an official termination announcement to seek legal help.
What is cancellation of removal and do I qualify?
Cancellation of removal under INA § 240A(b) is a defense available in removal proceedings that, if granted, results in a green card. You must show 10 years of continuous physical presence, good moral character, and that your removal would cause exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to a U.S. citizen or LPR spouse, parent, or child. The hardship standard is high. Consult an attorney to evaluate whether your specific facts meet it.
Does TPS termination affect my U.S. citizen children?
TPS termination does not affect your children’s citizenship — they remain U.S. citizens. However, your removal from the United States would mean separation from your children or their forced departure with you. U.S. citizen children under 21 can file immigrant visa petitions for their parents, but this process can take years and involves other legal requirements. Meanwhile, the hardship to U.S. citizen children is a factor in cancellation of removal applications.
Should I hire an attorney even if I think I have no options?
Absolutely yes. People frequently believe they have no immigration options when they actually do. The intersection of TPS termination law, Sanchez v. Mayorkas, the advance parole strategy, family-based immigration, asylum law, cancellation of removal, NACARA, and other relief is extraordinarily complex. Only a qualified immigration attorney reviewing your specific facts can tell you what options exist. The cost of a consultation is small compared to the cost of missing a relief option that could have kept you in the country.
What if I cannot afford an attorney?
There are nonprofit legal organizations in most cities that provide free or low-cost immigration legal services to TPS holders. Your attorney’s office can refer you to local resources. Do not use a notario or unauthorized immigration consultant — they cannot legally represent you and fraud in this community is common and devastating.
Act Now — Your Family Cannot Wait
TPS terminations are happening now. Somalia TPS ends March 17, 2026. Yemen TPS has already ended. Honduran, Nicaraguan, and Nepali TPS holders have lost the court protection that was temporarily shielding them. Salvadoran and Haitian TPS holders face equally urgent risks.
If you are reading this because you are scared, good — that fear is appropriate and it should motivate you to act. The TPS holders who will be most protected are the ones who get legal help now, while options still exist, rather than waiting until they receive a Notice to Appear in immigration court.
Our firm represents TPS holders and their families. We handle removal defense, asylum applications, cancellation of removal, adjustment of status, NACARA, advance parole strategy, and all other forms of immigration relief discussed in this article. We will review your situation, explain every option available to you — including what Sanchez v. Mayorkas means for your case — and fight for your right to remain in the United States with your family.
Call our office today at (818) 900-5707. Consultations are available in English and Spanish. Do not face this alone.
Legal Disclaimer: This article is provided for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Immigration law is highly fact-specific, and the information in this article may not apply to your individual situation. Laws, regulations, and court decisions can change rapidly. Do not rely on this article as a substitute for consultation with a licensed immigration attorney who can evaluate your specific circumstances. The termination dates and litigation postures described reflect information available as of February 2026 and are subject to change.


