Affidavit of Support

I-864 Qualification Wizard

Check whether your income meets the 2026 requirement for Form I-864 -- and if it falls short, see exactly how much and what closes the gap.
Step 1
Where does the sponsor live?
Step 2
Active-duty military sponsoring your spouse or child?
Active-duty members of the U.S. armed forces sponsoring a spouse or child only need to meet 100% of the poverty guideline, instead of the usual 125%.
Step 3
Household size
Yourself (the sponsor)
1
Spouse
If your spouse lives with you or you're claiming them as a dependent
0
Dependent children / other tax dependents
0
Immigrants sponsored on this I-864
1
Previously sponsored immigrants still in force
Anyone from a prior I-864 whose sponsorship obligation hasn't ended
0
Household size2
Step 4
Sponsor's current annual income
Step 5
Relationship to the intending immigrant
This determines the asset multiplier if income falls short: 3x the gap for a U.S. citizen sponsoring a spouse or child, 5x for every other sponsored relationship.
Step 6
Assets
All asset values should be net of debts and readily convertible to cash within a year.

Your result

Boundless reviews your I-864 as part of every application, so nothing gets missed before it reaches USCIS.
See how Boundless can help
How to read this tool: figures are based on the 2026 HHS poverty guidelines as published on Form I-864P, effective for USCIS filings beginning March 1, 2026. Poverty guidelines are updated annually and the numbers here will change -- always confirm the current figures at uscis.gov/i-864p before filing. This tool is a planning aid, not legal advice, and doesn't account for every fact pattern (for example, sponsors on active duty sponsoring someone other than a spouse or child, or households near the edge of joint-sponsor rules). Talk to a Boundless immigration attorney about your specific case.

Ready to make that start date real?