The browser you are using is not supported. Please consider using a modern browser.

Skip Navigation
Act Now Donate
Start of main content.

Press Release // Refugee Resettlement

Biden Administration Keeps FY 2024 Refugee Cap at 125,000

Global Refuge logo

Global Refuge Staff

September 29, 2023

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

September 29, 2023

Contact: Tim Young | timothy.young@globalrefuge.org | 443-257-6310

Washington D.C. – The White House today announced that President Biden has officially signed the Fiscal Year (FY) 2024 Presidential Determination on refugee admissions, maintaining the annual cap at 125,000 – including 35,000 – 50,000 admissions slots for refugees from Latin America and the Caribbean.

While the target remains the same for the third consecutive fiscal year, actual admissions have significantly increased from an all-time low of 11,411 in FY 2021 to more than 55,000 in FY 2023. While resettlement partners assisted more than 70,000 vulnerable Afghans following the U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan in the summer of 2021, arrivals via the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program had been slow to rebound following dramatic cuts by the Trump administration and operational complications that arose from the COVID-19 pandemic.

In order to respond to the increasing need for services, Global Refuge has taken strides to grow its organizational footprint across the country. From FY 2021 through FY 2023, the nonprofit added 22 resettlement sites nationwide, and will launch 6 additional sites in FY24 in Texas, Florida, Montana, Missouri, Iowa, and Maryland.

In response to the FY 2024 Presidential Determination, Krish O’Mara Vignarajah, President and CEO of Global Refuge, said:

“On the heels of the Biden administration’s monumental progress rebuilding the refugee program, this fiscal year feels like a notable shift from symbolic aspirations to substantive expectations. Thanks to concerted efforts to address bottlenecks in the system, more people have found safety on U.S. soil through this program in the past fiscal year than the previous three fiscal years combined. Each and every one of these refugee admissions should be acknowledged as a life saved, a dream of a brighter future renewed, and a nation’s values honored.

We are also heartened by the administration’s commitment to resettle more families from the western hemisphere, which is critical to building trust with regional partners and maintaining robust protection pathways for vulnerable people who may otherwise risk an incredibly perilous journey to our southern border. With such an ambitious target for admissions from Latin America and the Caribbean, we urge officials to build meaningful humanitarian infrastructure in the region, particularly through the administration’s new Safe Mobility Offices initiative. Amid unprecedented global displacement, however, policy makers should not leverage such pathways as justification to curtail access to the bedrock human right to seek asylum.

It bears repeating that welcoming refugees makes our nation stronger. They may arrive with little, but these newcomers contribute immensely to our society culturally, civically, and economically. We are deeply grateful for the tireless efforts of our resettlement network providers, community co-sponsors, local partners, and ordinary Americans who feel called by their values to this work of welcome. We encourage the administration to consider additional support for housing, employment, and education as more refugee families become cherished neighbors in the many welcoming communities they now call home.”

The Latest

  • News

    April 16, 2025

    What is the Conflict in Sudan?

    This week marks the second anniversary of renewed violence in Sudan and the occupation of Khartoum. Global Refuge continues to call for the resumption of the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program to help bring Sudanese to safety and for the maintenance of Temporary Protected Status for Sudanese families living in the United States. 

    Read More
  • Advocacy

    April 15, 2025

    Protections and pathways for Afghan allies under attack

    Protections and pathways for Afghans have been under a profound assault in recent months. The latest part of that assault: The Administration has reportedly decided it will terminate Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Afghanistan.  

    Read More
  • Press Release · Refugee Resettlement

    April 11, 2025

    Global Refuge Decries Termination of Humanitarian Protections for Afghan Allies in the U.S.

    “Temporary Protected Status exists for a reason: to protect people whose return to their country would place them in grave danger. Afghanistan today is still reeling..."

    Read More
  • News · Community Engagement

    April 9, 2025

    Baking the World a Better Place

    A local group of teenagers hosted a bake sale for immigration and refugee resettlement agency Global Refuge.

    Read More
  • News

    March 24, 2025

    Zumbe’s Story: “I Don’t Know What to Do”

    Zumbe is a former refugee from Democratic Republic of Congo who came to the United States in 2023. Though his wife and children were supposed to join him, recent policy changes mean he doesn't know when--or if--he'll see them again.

    Read More

Share