Last name spelled wrong on waiver.

Meredithposted 7 years ago

I received my second waiver today, good for 5 years, took 4.5 months to get.
BUT...
They've spelled my last name wrong!! Who should I contact about this? Has this happened to anyone else?

Replies (recent first):

L to the Y.

L × L = L2

If L = Y

How many Ls ?

Lman replied 4 years ago   #10

John said I have a big willy.

YYYYYYY replied 4 years ago   #9

@Michelle

Tequila

Tequilla replied 4 years ago   #8

I agree with John, I have clients who last name has been misspelled; usually missing a letter. Most time, it is not even noticed by Customs. If it is really bothering you, follow John's advise in #7.

Michelle replied 4 years ago   #7

In my experience it is easier to leave any mistakes on the waiver, rather than the massive effort to get it corrected. I would photocopy the waiver, write a letter explaining the mistake (including proof like a passport) and mail it to Homeland Security at the address on the waiver.

John Rogers replied 4 years ago   #6

I also received my first waiver and with mine they addressed me as MR. Instead of Ms. On the cover letter (1stpage)

I haven't had a waiver before and now I am worried. I called CBP at the border to ask if it would be a problem and they couldn't say. I should come to the border and see.

I emailed ARO and hoping to get a response.

Anyone experienced this?

Grateful replied 4 years ago   #5

It amazes me the lack of ability at that level to correctly type a letter . It seems there are more waivers with errors than without. While this is certainly not your fault it could potentially cause a problem. I went back to the port of entry where I originally dropped the application off and the officer literally crossed out the error, corrected it and initialed it. While this obviously seems ridiculous I have yet to be question on it. Peace of mind would be to have them reissue which will cut into your waiver time. The system is far from perfect as are we. Good luck to you

Doug Chainy replied 4 years ago   #4

@Meredith,

The card being stapled is your actual I-194 in to your passport., it's stamped with your name A# (ALIEN number) etc etc and depending on the officer you get 3-6 months is usually the norm for most people (multiple entries) to enter without always going into secondary.

It costs $6 USD.

For the most part, it is an error, mistakes happen no one is perfect so unless a CBP officer gives you a real hard time I can't see it being that big of an issue, the card stapled will have the exact name as your passport anyways, but who knows with CBP officers and their power trips nowadays.

What's the worst that's going to happen, they tell you to get a new one with your proper name on it, nothing else you can do about it.

RS replied 7 years ago   #3

Thanks RS. Yes I still have my original waiver with the correct spelling. I would like to get the second one reissued, so as to avoid any extra hassles at the border.
With my first waiver, it was only good for one year,(my new one is for 5 years) and I never had an opportunity to use it, so I am unfamiliar with what the process is at the border, I've read in this forum that a CPB officer will attach a card to my passport. Does that card have my name on it? Could the name spelling issue be corrected at that time? Or am I better to contact the ARO about having the I-94 reissued?

Meredith replied 7 years ago   #2

@Meredith,

Hopefully you have your original first waiver still if that one had your actual correct last name without being re-married etc, etc. I have come across one waiver with a last name reversed all by a typo error and all we did was contact CBP in Falls Church, VA for a correct one. I will admit that it did take them 9 months to be printed with the correct last name and re-sent which chewed up part of there waiver time, mistakes do happen, if it its just a couple of letters keep the first waiver handy don't try to over explain it to a CBP officer..... you could talk to a supervisor though, make a photocopy of the first one and always show it is you and you should be able to enter ....if they do make a big deal, "withdraw your application" from entering and contact DHS for further instructions.

A#'s number never change, so they will be able to access all your information on the new waiver ..you might be in secondary a lot with repeated questions and have hours wasted, but at least they shouldn't deny you entry.

RS replied 7 years ago   #1

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