U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) recently revised its Form I-9 inspection fact sheet in a way that meaningfully increases employer exposure. The revised guidance is dated March 16, 2026, and was posted without formal notice or rulemaking. It reclassifies a wide range of errors that employers have historically been able to correct without penalty, treating them instead as substantive violations subject to immediate monetary fines.
This change affects every U.S. employer. We are sending this alert because the update is directly relevant to your workforce compliance obligations and warrants a prompt review of your current I-9 practices.
For nearly 30 years, I-9 paperwork violations have fallen into one of two categories:
This framework is codified in federal law under INA Section 274A(b)(6) and has been interpreted through the 1997 Virtue Memorandum. It has shaped how employers structure internal audits, handle remediation, and respond to ICE inspections for decades. The revised fact sheet appears to significantly narrow the first category, and it does so without the formal notice-and-comment process that would ordinarily accompany a change of this scope.
The following errors were previously treated as correctable technical violations. Under the revised guidance, they are now classified as substantive:
|
I-9 Error |
Prior Classification |
New Classification |
|
Missing date of birth |
Technical |
Substantive |
|
Missing A-number for LPR employee (even if document copy retained) |
Technical |
Substantive |
|
Missing A-number, I-94, or foreign passport info for work-authorized alien (even if document copy retained) |
Technical |
Substantive |
|
Employment authorization expiration missing |
Not defined |
Substantive |
|
Missing employee signature date |
Technical |
Substantive |
|
I-9 Error |
Prior Classification |
New Classification |
|
Missing document title, issuing authority, document number, or expiration date (even if document copy retained) |
Technical |
Substantive |
|
Failure to verify replacement document within 90 days of document receipt |
Not defined |
Substantive |
|
Missing employer/authorized representative title |
Technical |
Substantive |
|
Missing date of hire |
Technical |
Substantive |
|
Missing employer or authorized representative signature date |
Technical |
Substantive |
|
I-9 Error |
Prior Classification |
New Classification |
|
Incomplete preparer/translator data in Supplement A |
Technical |
Substantive |
|
No date of rehire in Supplement B (if applicable) |
Technical |
Substantive |
|
No document title, document number, or expiration date (if any) of a List A or C document in Supplement B |
Technical if copy of the document was retained |
Substantive |
|
Failure to verify a replacement document within 90 days of document receipt in Supplement B |
Not defined |
Substantive |
|
I-9 Error |
Prior Classification |
New Classification |
|
Spanish-language I-9 used outside Puerto Rico |
Technical |
Substantive |
|
Failure to check alternative procedure box when remote verification was used |
Not defined |
Substantive |
|
Electronic I-9 system failures (completion, retention, security, signatures) |
Not defined |
Substantive |
Among the most consequential changes is the removal of a longstanding interpretive rule that allowed employers to avoid penalties for missing document information, such as a document number or expiration date, when a legible copy of the document was retained with the I-9. Under the revised guidance, those same omissions are treated as substantive violations with no apparent exception, even when document copies are on file.
A number of new violations were defined and classified as “Technical” that had previously not been defined by ICE. These include:
The way this change was made raises legitimate legal questions. ICE updated a webpage without going through the formal rulemaking process that would ordinarily apply to a shift of this magnitude. Potential challenges that practitioners are already flagging include:
These arguments may be available in future OCAHO proceedings, but employers should not treat the legal uncertainty as a reason to wait. The more prudent approach is to address known issues now.
Please feel free to reach out with any questions about how these changes may affect your organization. We are glad to assist with I-9 audits, remediation planning, and compliance program updates.