Border
Your rights at airports, ports of entry, and within the border zone.
- Can Border Agents Search My Luggage and Belongings? Yes. At the border, the 'border search exception' lets officers search your luggage, bags, and containers without a warrant or any suspicion. Your privacy protection is at its lowest at the border — though deep searches of electronic devices follow stricter rules.
- Can Border Agents Search My Phone? At the border, YES — more than anywhere else. The 'border search exception' lets CBP search your device without a warrant. But a U.S. citizen cannot be denied entry for refusing to unlock it.
- Can I Be Denied Entry to the U.S.? If you are a U.S. citizen, no — you must be allowed back in (you'll still need to prove citizenship). Green-card holders are not automatically guaranteed reentry, but a green card cannot be revoked without a hearing before an immigration judge. Visa holders can be denied.
- The 100-Mile Border Zone: What Can Border Patrol Do? Within 100 miles of any U.S. border, Border Patrol can run immigration checkpoints and ask about your status. But your constitutional rights still apply — you can stay silent, they need reasonable suspicion to pull you over, and probable cause, consent, or a warrant to search your vehicle.
- What Can CBP Ask Me at the Border — and Do I Have to Answer? U.S. citizens must answer enough to establish identity and citizenship, but cannot be denied entry for declining further questions. Visa holders and other noncitizens may have to answer more, and refusing can lead to delay, denial, or detention.
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