Everything You Need to Know About Global Entry Denials, Revocations, Appeals, FOIA Requests, Timelines, Costs, and Legal Representation

If your Global Entry application was denied, your membership was revoked, or you are considering an appeal, you probably have questions.

A lot of questions.

  • Why was I denied?
  • Can I appeal?
  • Do I need a lawyer?
  • Will a dismissed charge affect me?
  • Should I file a FOIA request?
  • How long does an appeal take?
  • Can I be denied because of a family member, customs violation, or travel history?
  • What happens if my appeal is denied?

The problem is that most websites answer these questions with short, incomplete responses that leave out important details and context. This guide is different.

We created this FAQ resource to serve as a comprehensive reference for travelers facing Global Entry denials, revocations, and appeals. Rather than providing one-sentence answers, we explain how the process actually works, why certain issues matter, and what options may be available depending on your situation.

You do not need to read this page from beginning to end. Use the table of contents below to jump directly to the questions that matter most to you.


 

Global Entry FAQs – Table of Contents


Before You Start

One important thing to understand is that every Global Entry case is different. Two travelers can have seemingly similar situations and receive completely different outcomes. That is because CBP evaluates the totality of the circumstances when determining whether someone qualifies as a Trusted Traveler under 8 CFR § 235.12.

The purpose of this guide is to help you better understand the process — not to predict the outcome of any individual case.

If you are looking for a specific answer, use the section navigation above. If you still have questions after reading, we offer a free consultation and a free Global Entry Appeal Assessment.

Let’s get started.


Section 1: Global Entry Basics

What Is Global Entry?

Global Entry is a Trusted Traveler Program administered by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP). It is designed to provide expedited customs processing for pre-approved, low-risk travelers entering the United States.

Members typically use automated kiosks or designated processing lanes rather than waiting in traditional customs lines. Global Entry membership also includes TSA PreCheck eligibility, allowing travelers to use expedited security screening at participating U.S. airports.

Many travelers think of Global Entry as a travel convenience program. While that is certainly one benefit, CBP views it differently. Global Entry is fundamentally a risk-based program. Before approving an applicant, CBP must be satisfied that the traveler presents a sufficiently low risk to justify Trusted Traveler status.

That distinction becomes important when discussing denials, revocations, and appeals. The question is not whether someone deserves faster customs processing. The question is whether CBP believes the person qualifies as a low-risk traveler under the program’s standards.


What Is the Trusted Traveler Program (TTP)?

The Trusted Traveler Program (TTP) is the umbrella system used by the federal government to administer several different trusted traveler programs, including Global Entry, NEXUS, SENTRI, and FAST. Each program serves a slightly different purpose, but they all operate on the same general concept: allowing pre-approved, low-risk travelers to move through ports of entry more efficiently.

When people refer to their “TTP account,” they are referring to the online Trusted Traveler Program account used to manage applications, renewals, interviews, approvals, denials, and appeals. Many Global Entry appeals are submitted and managed through the Trusted Traveler Program system.


What Is the Difference Between Global Entry, TSA PreCheck, SENTRI, NEXUS, and FAST?

This is one of the most common sources of confusion. Full comparison: Global Entry vs. TSA PreCheck, SENTRI, NEXUS, CLEAR, and FAST

While the programs overlap in some ways, they are not identical:

  • Global Entry focuses on expedited entry into the United States after international travel
  • TSA PreCheck focuses on expedited airport security screening for domestic and participating international flights departing from U.S. airports
  • NEXUS is primarily designed for frequent travelers between the United States and Canada
  • SENTRI is designed for frequent travelers crossing the U.S.-Mexico border
  • FAST is primarily intended for commercial truck drivers and commercial trade operations crossing international borders

Many travelers are surprised to learn that a denial or revocation from one Trusted Traveler Program can sometimes affect participation in others. A Global Entry revocation may also impact TSA PreCheck eligibility because the programs share information and rely on similar risk assessments.


Who Administers the Global Entry Program?

Global Entry is administered by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), which is a component of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). CBP is responsible for reviewing applications, conducting background checks, conducting interviews, approving applicants, denying applications, revoking memberships, and reviewing reconsideration requests.

Because CBP administers the program, it also plays a central role in the appeal and reconsideration process.


What Does “Low-Risk Traveler” Mean?

This is arguably the most important concept in the entire Global Entry process.

Global Entry is not awarded simply because someone has never been convicted of a crime. Nor is it denied only because someone has been convicted of a crime. The question CBP is trying to answer is: does this person present a sufficiently low risk to justify Trusted Traveler status?

Under 8 CFR § 235.12, that evaluation may include factors such as criminal history, customs compliance, immigration history, travel history, associations, application accuracy, prior government interactions, and other security-related concerns.

The challenge is that CBP does not publicly disclose exactly how it weighs each factor. This is one reason why Global Entry appeals often require more than simply explaining a single event.


Is Global Entry a Right or a Privilege?

Global Entry is a privilege, not a right. CBP retains broad authority under 8 CFR § 235.12 to determine whether a traveler should be admitted to the program and whether an existing member should remain in the program.

This distinction matters because Global Entry appeals are not handled the same way as criminal appeals or court proceedings. The appeal process focuses on whether the traveler should be reconsidered for participation in a discretionary government program.


How Long Does Global Entry Last?

Global Entry memberships are generally valid for five years. Members may apply for renewal before their membership expires. Guide to the Global Entry renewal process.

Many travelers incorrectly assume that once approved, they will remain approved indefinitely. In reality, Global Entry is subject to continuous vetting. A member can be revoked at any time if CBP determines that the person no longer satisfies program requirements. Staying compliant with Global Entry.


Can Global Entry Be Revoked After Approval?

Yes. This surprises many travelers. Some people maintain Global Entry membership for years without any issues before suddenly receiving a revocation notice.

Common reasons for revocation include criminal arrestscustoms violationsagriculture violationsmarijuana-related incidentsapplication disclosure concernsassociation-based concerns, newly discovered information, and changes in CBP’s risk assessment.

A revocation does not necessarily mean the traveler can never regain membership. Many revocations can be challenged through the reconsideration process.


Does Global Entry Include TSA PreCheck?

Yes. Global Entry members generally receive TSA PreCheck eligibility as one of the benefits of membership — expedited customs processing plus expedited airport security screening. Because TSA PreCheck is included with Global Entry, many travelers apply for Global Entry even if they primarily travel domestically. Full program comparison.


Can TSA PreCheck Be Affected by a Global Entry Denial?

Sometimes. A denial of Global Entry does not automatically mean a traveler will lose TSA PreCheck eligibility. However, because the programs rely on similar risk-based screening principles, the issue that caused the Global Entry denial may also affect TSA PreCheck eligibility in certain circumstances.

The specific impact depends on the facts of the case and the reason for the denial. Appealing a TSA PreCheck or Global Entry denial due to criminal history.


Section 2: Global Entry Denials

Why Was My Global Entry Application Denied?

This is by far the most common question we receive. Unfortunately, it is also one of the most difficult to answer because CBP often provides only a limited explanation for its decision.

Many travelers expect the denial notice to clearly explain what happened. Instead, they receive a brief statement indicating that they do not meet program requirements or do not satisfy Trusted Traveler Program eligibility standards.

The first thing to understand is that Global Entry denials are not limited to criminal convictions. CBP evaluates whether an applicant qualifies as a low-risk traveler under 8 CFR § 235.12, and may consider criminal history, customs compliance, immigration issues, application accuracy, travel history, associations, and other concerns.

A denial does not necessarily mean you are a bad candidate for Global Entry. It simply means CBP concluded that, based on the information available to it at the time, approval was not appropriate. The next step is determining why.

Related Resources:


What Are the Most Common Reasons for Global Entry Denial?

Most denials fall into several broad categories:

Criminal History — arrests, convictions, pending charges, outstanding warrants, dismissed chargesexpunged records. Many applicants incorrectly assume that only convictions matter.

Customs and Border Violations — undeclared goods, agriculture violationscurrency reporting issues, customs penalties, border-related incidents.

Immigration Issues — certain immigration concerns may affect eligibility, including prior violations, status issues, or other immigration-related matters.

Application Problems — incomplete answers, inaccurate information, failure to disclose relevant events.

Association-Based Concerns — family members, travel companions, addresses, or organizations.

Travel-Related Issues — certain travel patterns or destinations may prompt additional scrutiny.

Unexplained Denials — some applicants receive almost no meaningful explanation. These cases often require additional investigation before an appeal can be prepared effectively.


Can I Be Denied Because of a Criminal Record?

Yes. Criminal history is one of the most common reasons for Global Entry denial. The agency is not necessarily deciding whether someone is guilty or innocent — CBP is attempting to determine whether the applicant should be considered a low-risk traveler.

Factors that may be considered include type of offense, number of offenses, age of the offense, pattern of conduct, rehabilitation, and evidence of compliance since the incident. A criminal record does not automatically mean denial. Likewise, the absence of a conviction does not automatically mean approval.

Related Resources:


Can I Be Denied Because of a Dismissed Charge?

Yes. This surprises many travelers. A dismissed charge often feels like a complete victory in court — but the underlying arrest, investigation, or circumstances may still appear in government records.

That does not mean the dismissal is irrelevant. A dismissal is often one of the strongest pieces of evidence available during an appeal. But applicants should not assume that a dismissal automatically prevents CBP from considering the incident altogether. A strong appeal usually explains both the favorable outcome and why the incident does not indicate current risk.

Related Resources:


Can I Be Denied Because of an Expunged Record?

Yes. Expungement is often helpful, but it is not an automatic solution. Many applicants assume “the record was expunged, therefore CBP cannot consider it” — that assumption is frequently incorrect.

The better way to think about expungement is that it becomes part of the overall mitigation story. An expungement may help demonstrate passage of time, rehabilitation, a favorable legal outcome, and compliance with court requirements. But the existence of an expungement does not automatically require approval.

What CBP is looking for is honesty. If you fail to disclose an expunged record, they may assume you are trying to hide it and overcoming that may be harder than overcoming the underlying record itself.

Related Resources:


Can I Be Denied Because of a DUI?

Yes. A DUI does not automatically result in denial, but DUI-related cases are among the most common Global Entry issues. Factors that may influence how a DUI is viewed include the number of incidents, age of the offense, severity, whether injuries occurred, compliance with sentencing requirements, evidence of rehabilitation, and subsequent conduct.

A single old DUI often presents a very different situation than multiple recent alcohol-related incidents.

Related Resources:


Can I Be Denied Because of Marijuana?

Yes. Marijuana-related denials are extremely common. Many applicants are surprised because marijuana may be legal in their state — but Global Entry is a federal program administered by CBP, and state legalization does not automatically eliminate federal concerns.

Particularly problematic situations may involve marijuana discovered during travel, airport incidents, border incidents, customs inspections, or transportation across jurisdictions. The appeal should focus on what occurred, the surrounding circumstances, and why the incident does not indicate current risk.

Related Resources:


Can I Be Denied Because of Customs Violations?

Absolutely. Many travelers underestimate how seriously CBP treats customs compliance. Examples include failure to declare merchandisefailure to declare agricultural productscurrency reporting violations, customs penalties, and border inspections. Even incidents that seem relatively minor may affect Global Entry eligibility.

Related Resources:


Can I Be Denied Because of a Family Member?

Sometimes. Many applicants assume “I did nothing wrong, therefore I cannot be denied.” Unfortunately, some denials involve concerns arising from associations — family members, spouses, travel companions, addresses, or organizations.

The exact reason is not always clear from the denial notice. Association-based cases often require a careful review of the facts before an appeal strategy can be developed.

Related Resources:


Can I Be Denied Because of My Address?

Yes. Certain denials involve address associations rather than the applicant’s personal conduct. This may occur where multiple individuals use the same address, another individual associated with the address generated concern, or government records create an association that requires additional review.

Related Resources:


Can I Be Denied Because of an FBI Investigation?

Potentially. A denial may occur even where the applicant has never been charged with a crime. The existence of an investigation does not necessarily mean a denial is justified, but it can create additional complexity. These cases often benefit from obtaining more information before deciding how to proceed.

Related Resources:


Can I Be Denied Even If I Was Never Convicted?

Yes. This is one of the biggest misconceptions surrounding Global Entry. Denials may involve arrests, pending charges, investigations, customs issuesimmigration issuesassociation concerns, and other risk-related factors. A conviction is only one piece of the puzzle. The real question is whether CBP considers the applicant a low-risk traveler. Why was I denied Global Entry if I was never convicted?


Why Was I Denied When My Friend Was Approved?

Two people may have very similar backgrounds and receive very different outcomes because Global Entry decisions are highly individualized. CBP evaluates the totality of the circumstances — criminal history, travel history, customs history, associations, application disclosures, and information that may not be available to the applicant. Comparing one case to another is often difficult. What makes a good or bad Global Entry appeal case?


Why Didn’t CBP Explain Why I Was Denied?

The government is not always required to provide a detailed explanation. When the reason remains unclear, options may include reviewing available records, obtaining court records, contacting appropriate agencies, or pursuing FOIA or Privacy Act requests.

Related Resources:


My Global Entry Was Denied for No Reason. What Should I Do?

First, do not assume there is no reason. A better way to phrase the question is: “What reason has not yet been identified?”

The next step is usually determining whether additional information is needed before preparing an appeal. That may involve reviewing records, obtaining court documents, pursuing FOIA, evaluating travel history, or analyzing potential association concerns.

Once the likely issue has been identified, the appeal process becomes much easier to navigate.

Related Resources:


Section 3: Global Entry Revocations

Why Was My Global Entry Revoked?

Many travelers are shocked when they receive a Global Entry revocation notice. After all, they were already approved. They passed the background check. They may have used Global Entry for years without any problems. Then one day they log into their Trusted Traveler Program account and discover that their membership has been revoked.

The first thing to understand is that Global Entry approval is not permanent. Membership is subject to continuous vetting. Under 8 CFR § 235.12, CBP can review a member’s eligibility at any time and may revoke membership if it determines that the traveler no longer qualifies as a low-risk traveler.

A revocation does not automatically mean the traveler can never regain membership. However, it does mean CBP believes something occurred that warrants reconsideration of the traveler’s eligibility.

Related Resources:


What Is the Difference Between a Denial and a Revocation?

A denial occurs before approval. A revocation occurs after approval. This distinction is important because revocation cases often involve a specific triggering event.

In many denial cases, the issue existed before the application was submitted. In many revocation cases, something happened after approval — or information surfaced after approval — that caused CBP to reconsider the traveler’s eligibility.

Because the traveler was previously approved, revocation appeals often focus heavily on what changed, why it changed, and whether the issue actually demonstrates current risk.


Can CBP Revoke Me Years After Approval?

Yes. Many travelers assume that once they have been approved for several years, their membership is safe. That is not necessarily true. Global Entry members are subject to ongoing review.

A revocation can occur years after approval if a new incident occurs, new information becomes available, a government database is updated, a prior issue is discovered, or CBP reevaluates the member’s eligibility. We routinely see revocations involving travelers who maintained membership for many years before receiving a revocation notice.


Can a Single Incident Cause Revocation?

Yes. In some cases, a single incident can be enough. Examples may include customs violationsagriculture violationsmarijuana-related incidentscriminal arrestsapplication disclosure concerns, and border-related issues.

That does not necessarily mean the revocation is impossible to challenge. However, the appeal usually must address the incident directly. A common mistake is focusing only on years of prior compliance while ignoring the event that triggered the revocation. Top 5 mistakes people make on Global Entry appeals.


Can Customs Violations Cause Revocation?

Absolutely. Customs compliance is one of the foundations of the Global Entry program. Common customs-related revocation issues include undeclared merchandisecurrency reporting violationsagriculture violations, border inspection issues, and customs penalties. Many travelers view these incidents as minor. CBP often does not.

The appeal typically focuses on what happened, whether the incident was intentional, whether the issue has been resolved, and why the incident does not indicate ongoing risk.

Related Resources:


Can Marijuana Cause Revocation?

Yes. Marijuana-related revocations are extremely common. This often surprises travelers because marijuana may be legal in their state — but Global Entry is a federal program, and CBP frequently treats marijuana-related incidents seriously, particularly when they involve airports, border crossings, customs inspections, or international travel.

The facts matter. Some marijuana-related revocations are stronger candidates for appeal than others. The key is understanding what happened and addressing the government’s concerns directly.

Related Resources:


Can a DUI Cause Revocation?

Potentially. A DUI does not automatically result in revocation, but DUI-related incidents may trigger additional review. Factors that often matter include number of incidents, severity, age of the offense, subsequent conduct, and evidence of rehabilitation. A recent DUI often presents a different situation than an isolated incident from many years ago.


Can an Arrest Cause Revocation Even If Charges Are Dismissed?

Yes. Many people assume “the charges were dismissed, so the issue should disappear.” Unfortunately, that is not always how CBP evaluates these cases. The dismissal is often an important part of the appeal, but the underlying incident may still be reviewed. Strong appeals typically explain both the favorable outcome and why the incident does not indicate current risk.


Can a Family Member’s Conduct Cause Revocation?

Sometimes. Certain revocations involve concerns relating to family members, spouses, travel companions, shared addresses, or other associations. These cases can be particularly frustrating because the traveler may feel they are being affected by someone else’s conduct. Association-based cases often require a detailed review of the facts before the strongest appeal strategy becomes clear.

Related Resources:


Can Travel to Certain Countries Cause Revocation?

Potentially. Not every international trip creates problems, but travel history may become relevant in certain circumstances. The analysis often depends on frequency of travel, purpose of travel, associated activities, and other surrounding facts. Travel alone is rarely the entire story — the appeal should focus on the broader context.

Related Resources:


Can I Get Global Entry Back After Revocation?

Yes. Many revocations can be challenged through the reconsideration process. The strongest revocation appeals identify the triggering event, address the government’s concern, include supporting records, present mitigation evidence, and explain why the traveler should still be considered low risk.

Not every revocation can be overturned. But many travelers are surprised to learn that a revocation is not necessarily permanent.

Related Resources:


Does Prior Approval Help in an Appeal?

Sometimes. Prior approval is rarely enough by itself. However, years of successful participation may help demonstrate compliance history, travel history, reliability, and lack of recurring issues.

The strongest appeals generally combine prior approval history with a direct response to the event that triggered the revocation. The appeal should answer both questions: why was I previously trusted, and why should I still be trusted today? That is often the heart of a successful revocation appeal. What a complete Global Entry appeal package looks like.


Section 4: Global Entry Appeals and Reconsideration

Can I Appeal a Global Entry Denial?

Yes. Most Global Entry denials can be challenged through a reconsideration process. Many travelers incorrectly assume that once CBP denies an application, the decision is final. That is not necessarily true.

The purpose of an appeal is not simply to tell CBP that it made a mistake. The purpose is to provide additional information, records, context, mitigation evidence, or legal argument explaining why the applicant should still be considered a low-risk traveler.

Many successful appeals involve criminal history issuescustoms violationsdismissed chargesexpunged recordsapplication misunderstandingsunexplained denials, and government record problems. The key is understanding why the denial occurred before deciding how to respond.

Related Resources:


Can I Appeal a Global Entry Revocation?

Yes. A revocation can often be challenged through the same general reconsideration framework used for denials. However, revocation cases are often different because the traveler was previously approved.

revocation appeal should not simply rely on prior approval. Instead, it should address the issue that caused CBP to change its position and explain why the traveler should continue to be considered low risk.

Related Resources:


How Do I Appeal a Global Entry Denial?

While every case is different, the process generally follows several steps:

  1. Identify the Issue — determine the most likely reason for the denial
  2. Gather Records — obtain any supporting records needed to explain the issue. Global Entry Appeal Document Checklist
  3. Determine Whether FOIA Is Needed — some denials require additional investigation before an appeal can be prepared effectively
  4. Prepare the Appeal — the appeal should address the government’s concern directly and provide supporting evidence
  5. Submit the Appeal — the appeal is generally submitted through the appropriate reconsideration process
  6. Wait for Review — the government reviews the submission and determines whether reconsideration is appropriate

The quality of the appeal often matters more than the speed with which it is submitted.

Related Resources:


How Do I Appeal a Global Entry Revocation?

The process is similar to a denial appeal but often focuses more heavily on the event that triggered the revocation. The first question should be: what changed? Examples include criminal chargescustoms incidentsmarijuana-related eventsapplication disclosure concerns, and association-based concerns.

Once the triggering issue has been identified, the appeal should explain why the incident does not justify permanent removal from the program.

Related Resources:


What Is the CBP Trusted Traveler Ombudsman?

The CBP Trusted Traveler Ombudsman is responsible for reviewing many Global Entry reconsideration requests. For most Global Entry denials and revocations, the Ombudsman is the primary review authority. The Ombudsman evaluates the denial or revocation, supporting evidence, new information, mitigation evidence, and appeal arguments. Many people refer to this process as an appeal. The government generally refers to it as reconsideration.

Related Resources:


What Is DHS TRIP?

DHS TRIP stands for Department of Homeland Security Traveler Redress Inquiry Program. Unlike the Ombudsman process, DHS TRIP is not limited to Global Entry. It is a broader travel-redress program designed to address watchlist concerns, misidentification, screening problems, border-crossing issues, repeated secondary inspections, and other travel-related difficulties.

DHS TRIP is not always the correct solution for a Global Entry denial. However, it may be appropriate in certain situations.

Related Resources:


What Is the Difference Between DHS TRIP and the Ombudsman?

A simple way to think about it:

CBP Ombudsman — focuses primarily on Trusted Traveler Program decisions, including Global Entry denialsGlobal Entry revocations, and eligibility issues.

DHS TRIP — focuses primarily on broader travel-screening and identification concerns, including watchlist issues, misidentification, and repeated screening problems.

Some cases involve both. Many do not. Full comparison: CBP Ombudsman vs. DHS TRIP.


Which Appeal Path Should I Use?

Situation Typical Starting Point
Criminal-history denial Ombudsman
Customs violation Ombudsman
Revocation Ombudsman
Unexplained denial Ombudsman and/or records review
Watchlist concern DHS TRIP
Misidentification DHS TRIP
Repeated screening problems DHS TRIP

Many travelers are unsure which path applies. That uncertainty often makes records gathering and investigation important before filing.


Can I Appeal Without a Lawyer?

Yes. Many travelers submit their own reconsideration requests. The real question is whether you understand why you were denied, what records are needed, what evidence supports your case, and how to address the government’s concerns. Do you need a lawyer for a Global Entry appeal?


What Should I Include in My Appeal?

The strongest appeals generally include a clear explanation of what happened, supporting records, mitigation evidence, organized exhibits, and a low-risk traveler analysis explaining why you should still be considered low risk. What makes a strong Global Entry appeal? | Global Entry Appeal Strategy & Winning


What Records Should I Submit?

The answer depends on the issue. Common records include court dispositions, dismissal ordersexpungement recordscustoms records, immigration records, employment verification, reference letters, professional licenses, military records, and FOIA recordsGlobal Entry Appeal Document Checklist


What Makes a Strong Global Entry Appeal?

Strong appeals identify the actual issue, address risk directly, include supporting records, present mitigation showing why the issue does not indicate current risk, and remain professional throughout. Full guide: What makes a good or bad Global Entry appeal case? | Appeal Strategy & Winning


What Mistakes Should I Avoid?

The most common mistakes include appealing before understanding the problem, ignoring missing records, submitting emotional arguments, minimizing the incident, failing to address risk, and filing before obtaining necessary information.

Related Resources:


What If I Do Not Know Why I Was Denied?

This is extremely common. Many denial notices provide only limited information. If you do not know why you were denied, possible next steps may include reviewing available records, gathering court documents, evaluating customs history, investigating potential association concerns, and considering FOIA.

Related Resources:


Can I Submit Additional Evidence After Filing?

Sometimes. However, it is generally preferable to submit the strongest possible appeal package from the beginning. A complete appeal often avoids delays and confusion later in the process. That is one reason why records gathering is so important before filing.


What Happens After I Submit the Appeal?

After submission, the government reviews the appeal, supporting records are evaluated, additional information may be requested, and a decision is issued. Possible outcomes include approval, reinstatement, conditional approval, additional review, or denial.

The timeline varies considerably depending on the circumstances.

Related Resources:


Section 5: Global Entry Appeal Strategy

What Makes a Global Entry Appeal Successful?

This is the question almost every traveler asks. Unfortunately, there is no single formula that guarantees success. Global Entry appeals are fact-specific. What works in one case may be ineffective in another.

That said, after handling hundreds of denials and revocations, certain patterns become obvious. Strong appeals tend to do the same things well. Weak appeals tend to make the same mistakes repeatedly.

The goal is not simply to explain what happened. The goal is to persuade CBP that, despite the issue that triggered the denial or revocation, you should still be considered a low-risk traveler under 8 CFR § 235.12. That distinction is critical. What makes a good or bad Global Entry appeal case?


What Are the Strongest Global Entry Appeal Arguments?

Many travelers assume the strongest argument is “I deserve Global Entry.” It is not. The strongest appeals generally focus on why the issue that triggered the denial does not indicate current risk. Global Entry Appeal Defenses, Strategies, and Hacks

Common successful themes include:

Passage of Time — an isolated incident that occurred many years ago is often viewed differently than a recent event. The more time that has passed without additional problems, the stronger the argument may become.

Rehabilitation — CBP wants to know who you are today, not simply who you were years ago. Evidence of rehabilitation can be powerful, particularly in cases involving criminal historyalcohol-related incidentsdrug-related incidents, and customs violations.

Compliance Since the Incident — a strong appeal often demonstrates that the traveler has maintained a clean record and complied with all legal obligations since the event.

Strong Personal and Professional History — stable employment, professional achievement, military service, education, and community involvement often help provide context.

Correcting Inaccurate Records — some appeals succeed because the underlying records were incomplete, inaccurate, or misunderstood. In those cases, the strongest argument may simply be the truth supported by documentation. How FOIA can help identify inaccurate records.


What Are the Weakest Global Entry Appeal Arguments?

Some arguments appear frequently but rarely help. Top 5 Mistakes People Make on Global Entry Appeals

“It Wasn’t Fair” — fairness arguments generally carry little weight unless supported by facts and evidence.

“My Friend Was Approved” — Global Entry decisions are highly individualized. Comparisons to other applicants are rarely persuasive.

“It Was Only…” — minimizing the issue often backfires. CBP already knows what happened. The better approach is to acknowledge the issue and explain why it does not indicate current risk.

Attacking the Government — aggressive attacks on CBP or the review process rarely help. Professional, fact-based appeals are generally more effective.


Does Remorse Matter?

Sometimes — particularly when the issue involves criminal conductcustoms violationsalcohol-related incidents, or drug-related incidents.

The key is sincerity. A strong appeal does not simply say “I’m sorry.” Instead, it explains what happened, what was learned, what changed, and why the issue will not happen again. The focus should be on future risk rather than simply expressing regret.


Does Rehabilitation Matter?

Absolutely. In many cases, rehabilitation is one of the most important factors. Examples include treatment completion, counseling, education, stable employment, military service, community involvement, and long-term compliance. The stronger the evidence of rehabilitation, the easier it becomes to argue that the incident no longer reflects who the traveler is today. How to maximize the chances of your Global Entry appeal.


Do Reference Letters Help?

Often, yes. Strong reference letters can help provide context that government records alone cannot. Reference letters may be particularly useful when they come from employers, supervisors, military officers, attorneys, professional colleagues, community leaders, and religious leaders. The best letters discuss character, reliability, trustworthiness, professionalism, compliance, and personal growth. Global Entry Appeal Document Checklist — reference letter guidance


How Many Reference Letters Should I Submit?

There is no magic number. Quality matters more than quantity. As a general rule, many strong appeals include between three and seven reference letters. One detailed letter from a credible source is often worth more than ten generic letters. What makes a strong Global Entry appeal?


Should I Explain My Entire Life Story?

Usually not. Some travelers submit lengthy narratives that contain large amounts of information unrelated to the denial. The strongest appeals are focused. The appeal should provide enough context to explain what happened, why it happened, and why it does not indicate current risk — and everything else should support those three points. Global Entry Appeal Strategy & Winning


Does Professional Success Matter?

Sometimes. Professional accomplishments can help demonstrate responsibility, stability, reliability, and trustworthiness. Helpful evidence may include employment history, promotions, professional licenses, awards, business ownership, and leadership positions. Professional success is rarely enough by itself, but it can be an important part of the overall mitigation picture.


Does Military Service Help?

Often. Military service can demonstrate responsibility, discipline, public service, and government trust. Military records, awards, evaluations, and service history may all be relevant depending on the circumstances. Military service does not guarantee approval, but it can be valuable supporting evidence.


Do Security Clearances Help?

Sometimes. A current or prior security clearance may help demonstrate that another part of the federal government has previously trusted the individual with sensitive responsibilities. That does not automatically mean Global Entry must be approved, but it can be useful evidence — particularly when combined with stable employment, positive professional history, and strong mitigation evidence.


How Important Are Court Records?

Extremely important. In criminal-history cases, court records are often among the most important documents in the entire appeal. Examples include dispositions, dismissal ordersexpungement orders, sentencing documents, and diversion records. Many appeals are weakened because the traveler relies on memory rather than documentation.


How Important Are Customs Records?

Just as important in customs-related cases. If the denial or revocation involves customs violationsagriculture violationscurrency issues, or border incidents, the appeal should generally include the relevant records. The government’s understanding of the incident should not be left unchallenged if documentation tells a different story.


What If Government Records Are Wrong?

It happens more often than many travelers realize. Possible problems include incomplete records, outdated records, incorrect criminal-history information, address associations, misidentification, and data-entry errors. When records are inaccurate, one of the most effective appeal strategies is simply correcting the record. Many successful appeals begin with identifying inaccuracies through FOIA before drafting legal arguments.


What Is the Most Important Concept in a Global Entry Appeal?

If there is one concept that appears repeatedly in successful appeals, it is this: the record controls the case.

Not assumptions. Not emotions. Not frustration. Not what should have happened.

The strongest appeals are built on facts, records, evidence, and mitigation. The better the record, the stronger the appeal. That is why identifying the issuegathering the records, and presenting them effectively are often more important than any particular legal argument.


Related Resources:


Section 6: FOIA Requests

What Is a FOIA Request?

FOIA stands for the Freedom of Information Act. The law allows individuals to request certain records from federal government agencies.

In the Global Entry context, FOIA requests are often used when a traveler is denied or revoked and does not fully understand why. Many applicants receive only a brief denial notice with little useful information. A FOIA request may help uncover records that shed light on the issue that triggered the denial or revocation.

However, FOIA is not a magic solution. It is simply an information-gathering tool. The value of a FOIA request depends on the facts of the case and the records that exist.


Should I File a FOIA Request Before Appealing?

One of the most common misconceptions is that every Global Entry appeal requires a FOIA request. That is not true. Some cases are clear enough to appeal immediately. For example:

In these situations, the issue is already known and the appeal can often focus directly on addressing the government’s concern.

Other cases are different. If the denial reason is vague, unexplained, or appears inconsistent with your history, a FOIA request may be worth considering before filing an appeal. The decision should be based on the facts — not on a blanket rule.


What Information Can a FOIA Request Reveal?

The answer varies from case to case. Potentially useful records may include CBP records, prior application information, inspection records, customs-related records, border encounter information, notes or data relating to the denial, and other agency records that may have influenced the decision.

Not every record will be disclosed. Some records may be heavily redacted. Some may be withheld entirely. The purpose of FOIA is not necessarily to obtain every document the government possesses — the purpose is to gather enough information to better understand what happened. How to determine the basis for your Global Entry denial through FOIA.


Can FOIA Tell Me Why I Was Denied?

Sometimes — but not always. A FOIA response may confirm a suspected issue, reveal records the traveler did not know existed, identify inaccuracies, clarify a customs incident, explain a border encounter, or help connect the dots. In other cases, the records may still leave unanswered questions.

FOIA should be viewed as one investigative tool rather than a guaranteed explanation. Shedding light on Global Entry denials through FOIA.


How Long Does a FOIA Request Take?

There is no fixed timeline. Some requests are processed relatively quickly. Others can take months. Factors affecting the timeline may include agency workload, complexity of the request, volume of records, whether multiple agencies are involved, and whether records require review and redaction.

This is one reason we do not automatically recommend FOIA in every case. Sometimes the value of the records justifies the delay. Sometimes it does not. The correct decision depends on the circumstances.


Does Every Global Entry Case Need FOIA?

No. Many appeals are successfully prepared without filing a FOIA request. A FOIA request is most useful when the denial reason is unclear, government records appear inaccurate, the traveler genuinely does not know what triggered the denial, prior appeals have failed, or additional investigation is needed before developing a strategy. In straightforward cases, FOIA may add time without adding much value. When to submit a FOIA request for a Global Entry denial.


Can FOIA Help If My Appeal Was Already Denied?

Often, yes. A denied appeal is one of the situations where FOIA may become particularly useful. Many travelers reach the end of the appeal process still unsure why they were denied. A FOIA request may help identify missing records, inaccurate information, misunderstood facts, or previously unknown issues — information that can be valuable when deciding whether additional action is worthwhile.

Related Resource:


What If the FOIA Records Are Wrong?

This happens more often than people realize. Potential issues include incorrect criminal history, incomplete dispositions, address associations, misidentification, outdated records, and missing information.

When records are inaccurate, correcting those inaccuracies often becomes one of the most important parts of the appeal strategy. In some cases, the strongest argument is not legal at all — it is simply demonstrating that the government’s information is wrong.


Can a Lawyer Help With FOIA?

Sometimes. A lawyer cannot force the government to produce records faster. However, legal counsel may help determine whether FOIA is worth pursuing, identify which records are most relevant, draft focused requests, interpret responses, and integrate the records into an appeal strategy.

The biggest benefit is often strategic. The question is not simply “can I get records?” The question is “what records actually matter to my case?” Why you need a lawyer to submit your FOIA request | Navigating the FOIA Maze


What Is Better: FOIA or an Appeal?

This is usually the wrong question. FOIA and appeals serve different purposes.

FOIA — obtains information.

Appeal — attempts to change the outcome.

Sometimes an appeal can proceed immediately. Sometimes the records obtained through FOIA make the appeal significantly stronger. The correct sequence depends on the facts.


What Is the Biggest Mistake People Make With FOIA?

Assuming that every denial requires it. FOIA is a powerful tool, but it is not always necessary. Many travelers spend months waiting for records they never actually needed. Others skip FOIA when it would have been extremely valuable.

The right approach is to evaluate what you already know, what information is missing, and whether the missing information matters. Only then can you determine whether FOIA is worth the additional time and effort. FOIA and Global Entry: When does it make sense?


Related Resources:


Section 7: Timelines and Processing Times

How Long Does a Global Entry Appeal Take?

This is one of the most common questions we receive. Unfortunately, there is no fixed answer. Global Entry appeals do not operate on a guaranteed timeline. Some appeals move relatively quickly. Others take months. In some situations, the process can take considerably longer.

The total timeline depends on why the denial or revocation occurred, whether records must be gathered, whether a FOIA request is necessary, government workload, the complexity of the issue, and whether additional information is requested. The most important thing to understand is that every case is different. Full guide: How Long Does a Global Entry Appeal Take?


What Is a Realistic Timeline for a Global Entry Appeal?

Most appeals involve three separate phases:

Phase 1: Investigation and Record Gathering — reviewing the denial, identifying the issue, gathering records, and evaluating whether FOIA is needed. Simple cases may move quickly. More complicated matters often take longer.

Phase 2: Appeal Preparation — reviewing records, developing the appeal strategy, gathering mitigation evidence, preparing supporting exhibits, and drafting the appeal package. The strongest appeals are generally not rushed.

Phase 3: Government Review — this is usually the longest phase. After submission, the government reviews the appeal, supporting records, mitigation evidence, and any additional information requested. Many appeals spend the majority of their time in this phase.

Navigating the Global Entry Appeal Process: A Timeline Perspective


What Factors Cause Delays?

Several factors commonly increase the timeline:

Unexplained Denials — cases involving vague denial notices often require additional investigation before the appeal can even begin.

Missing Records — court recordscustoms records, and other supporting documents sometimes take time to obtain.

FOIA Requests — FOIA can be extremely valuable, but it often increases the overall timeline.

Complex Cases — cases involving criminal historycustoms violationsassociation concernsimmigration issues, or multiple incidents often require more review.

Government Workload — processing times can vary significantly depending on the volume of appeals and agency resources.


Can I Expedite a Global Entry Appeal?

Usually not. There is no official expedited Global Entry appeal process. There is no premium filing option. There is no special fee that moves your appeal to the front of the line. No attorney can force CBP to review an appeal faster.

That said, some delays can be avoided. The fastest appeals are often those where the denial reason is known, records are readily available, the appeal is complete when submitted, and additional information is not required later.

Related Resource:


Can a Lawyer Expedite a Global Entry Appeal?

No attorney can force CBP to move faster. However, legal representation may help avoid delays by identifying issues earlier, gathering records efficiently, avoiding common mistakes, and submitting a complete appeal package.

In other words, a lawyer generally cannot expedite CBP. A lawyer may help prevent delays caused by an incomplete or poorly prepared submission. Top 5 mistakes people make on Global Entry appeals.


How Long Does a FOIA Request Take?

FOIA timelines vary considerably. Some requests are processed relatively quickly. Others take months. Factors that influence timing include agency workload, number of records requested, complexity of the request, whether multiple agencies are involved, and redactions and review requirements.

This is one reason why FOIA should be used strategically. The value of the information should justify the additional time. When to submit a FOIA request for a Global Entry denial.


How Long Should I Wait Before Following Up?

Patience is important. The government generally needs time to review the submission. If a significant amount of time has passed without any communication, a reasonable follow-up may be appropriate. However, many travelers make the mistake of repeatedly contacting the government before meaningful review has occurred. Repeated inquiries rarely accelerate the process. A complete appeal package is usually more valuable than frequent follow-ups.


What If I Have Urgent Travel Coming Up?

Unfortunately, urgent travel does not automatically accelerate the appeal process. This can be frustrating for business travelers, executives, consultants, government contractors, and individuals with family overseas. CBP generally does not provide expedited appeal review simply because travel is scheduled.

That said, evidence showing why Global Entry is important may still be useful in the appeal itself. International business travel, frequent overseas travel, significant travel burdens, and professional responsibilities may all help explain why reinstatement or approval matters. Can you expedite a Global Entry appeal?


What Is the Fastest Type of Global Entry Appeal?

Generally speaking, appeals tend to move more efficiently when the denial reason is known, the records are readily available, the issue is isolated, the appeal package is complete, and no FOIA request is required. Simple does not necessarily mean successful — but straightforward cases often move more quickly than complicated ones. What makes a good or bad Global Entry appeal case?


What Is the Slowest Type of Global Entry Appeal?

Cases that often take the longest include:


Should I Wait Before Appealing?

Usually no. One of the biggest mistakes travelers make is doing nothing. That does not mean every appeal should be filed immediately — it does mean you should begin evaluating the denial as soon as possible.

The sooner you identify the issue, the sooner you can determine whether records are needed, whether FOIA makes sense, whether an appeal is worthwhile, and what strategy should be pursued.


What Is the Most Important Timeline in the Entire Process?

The most important timeline is not the government’s review period. It is your response time.

The sooner you understand the denial, gather records, evaluate your options, and develop a strategy — the sooner you can put yourself in the strongest position possible.

Many delays are unavoidable. Delays caused by inaction usually are not. Start with the free appeal assessment | Book a free consultation


Related Resources:


Section 8: What Happens If Your Global Entry Appeal Is Denied?

Is a Denied Appeal the End of the Road?

Not necessarily. Many travelers assume that once an appeal is denied, there is nothing else they can do. That is not always true.

The better question is: why was the appeal denied? The answer to that question often determines whether additional action makes sense. Some denied appeals are strong candidates for further review. Others are better addressed through reapplication, additional evidence, or simply the passage of time. What Should I Do If My Global Entry Appeal Is Denied?


Can I Appeal Again After My Appeal Is Denied?

Sometimes. The most important consideration is whether anything has changed. Examples include new records, new evidence, corrected government information, additional mitigation, new legal developments, or previously unavailable documentation.

Submitting the same appeal package with the same evidence often produces the same result. Before pursuing another challenge, it is important to identify what new information exists and why it may matter. What makes a good or bad Global Entry appeal case?


Should I Submit Another Appeal Immediately?

Usually not. One of the most common mistakes travelers make is immediately resubmitting essentially the same information. Top 5 Mistakes People Make on Global Entry Appeals.

Before taking further action, ask: what issue caused the denial, was that issue fully addressed, were important records missing, was new information needed, and do you actually understand why the appeal failed? If the answer to those questions is unclear, additional investigation is often more valuable than immediately filing another request.


What Should I Do First After an Appeal Denial?

Start by reviewing everything. Review the original denial (what concern was identified?), review the appeal (what evidence was submitted?), review the outcome (did the government provide any additional explanation?), and identify missing information. Many successful follow-up strategies begin by identifying what was missing the first time. What Should I Do If My Global Entry Appeal Is Denied?


Can New Evidence Change the Outcome?

Absolutely. One of the strongest reasons to revisit a denied case is the existence of new evidence. Examples include:

Newly Obtained Court Records — certified dispositions often clarify issues that were previously unclear.

Expungement Orders — new record relief may strengthen mitigation arguments.

Additional Character References — strong reference letters can help provide context.

Professional Achievements — promotions, licenses, certifications, and other accomplishments may help demonstrate reliability and trustworthiness.

Military Service or Government Vetting — security clearances, military service, and similar evidence may become relevant depending on the circumstances.

Corrected Government Records — sometimes the most important evidence is proof that the government’s information was wrong.


Should I File a FOIA Request After a Denied Appeal?

In some situations, yes. A denied appeal is often one of the strongest reasons to consider FOIA. This is especially true when the denial remains unexplained, the government’s reasoning is vague, the traveler suspects inaccurate records, or the appeal appeared strong but was denied anyway.

FOIA may help answer questions such as: what records exist, what information was considered, are there inaccuracies, and is there a different issue than the one originally suspected?

Related Resources:


Can I Reapply After a Denied Appeal?

Yes. Many travelers eventually reapply. However, reapplication should usually be strategic. The goal is not simply to submit another application and hope for a different result — the goal is to address the issue that caused the denial before reapplying.

Examples may include obtaining missing records, resolving outstanding issues, building additional positive history, correcting inaccurate information, and gathering stronger evidence. A stronger application often produces a better result than simply repeating the original process. How to apply for Global Entry.


How Long Should I Wait Before Reapplying?

There is no universal answer. The correct timing depends on why the application was denied, whether new evidence exists, whether the issue has been resolved, how much time has passed, and whether additional positive history has developed. In some situations, waiting may strengthen the case. In others, immediate reapplication may make little sense. The facts matter.


Is There Any Point in Trying Again?

Often, yes. Many travelers assume that a denied appeal means the government’s position can never change. That is not necessarily true. Circumstances evolve. Records become available. Issues are resolved. Time passes. Additional evidence emerges. The key is determining whether anything meaningful has changed since the original denial — the stronger the change, the stronger the argument for reconsideration.


When Is Reapplication Better Than Another Appeal?

This depends on the facts.

Reapplication may make more sense when: significant time has passed, new evidence exists, the original issue has been resolved, the traveler has built a stronger record, or additional positive history has developed.

Additional appeals may make more sense when: government records are inaccurate, new information directly addresses the denial, important records were unavailable during the first appeal, or the original appeal did not fully address the issue.

The correct strategy varies from case to case.


What If I Still Don’t Know Why My Appeal Was Denied?

This is more common than many people realize. Many travelers reach the end of the process and still do not know what actually caused the denial. In those situations, the focus often shifts from appealing to investigating.

Possible next steps may include FOIA requests, record gathering, criminal-history reviewcustoms-history reviewassociation analysis, and travel-history analysis. You cannot effectively solve a problem you have not identified — finding the issue is often the first priority.


Can a Lawyer Help After an Appeal Is Denied?

Sometimes. The greatest value of legal counsel after a denial is often strategic rather than procedural. An attorney may help identify why the appeal failed, determine whether records are missing, evaluate whether FOIA is worthwhile, analyze government records, identify new mitigation evidence, assess reapplication options, and determine whether additional action is realistic. What NSLF does in a Global Entry appeal.


What Is the Biggest Mistake People Make After a Denied Appeal?

Assuming that they have only two choices: give up or submit the exact same appeal again. There are often additional options between those extremes. The smartest approach is usually to step back, evaluate the denial carefully, identify what information is missing, and determine whether circumstances have changed enough to justify further action.

Book a free consultation | Take the free appeal assessment


Related Resources:


Section 9: Hiring a Global Entry Lawyer

Do I Need a Lawyer for a Global Entry Appeal?

Not everyone does. This may sound surprising coming from a law firm, but it is true. Some Global Entry denials involve relatively straightforward issues that a traveler can address on their own — a simple documentation issue, a minor misunderstanding, or a denial where the reason is clear and the supporting records are readily available.

Other cases are far more complicated. These often involve criminal historycustoms violationsmarijuana-related incidentsassociation concernsimmigration issuesunexplained denialsgovernment record errors, or prior unsuccessful appeals.

The more complicated the issue, the more important it becomes to understand exactly what caused the denial and how the government is evaluating risk. Full guide: Do You Need a Lawyer for a Global Entry Appeal?


When Is a Lawyer Worth Considering?

You Do Not Know Why You Were Denied — without understanding the problem, it is difficult to build an effective appeal. Guide to unexplained Global Entry denials.

The Case Involves Criminal History — these cases often require court records, dispositions, expungement records, mitigation evidence, and rehabilitation analysis.

The Case Involves Customs or Border Issues — these cases often require customs records, penalty records, resolution documentation, and detailed explanations of the incident.

The Government Records Appear Wrong — some cases involve incorrect criminal records, address associations, misidentification, or incomplete information. Identifying and correcting those problems through FOIA can be critical.

You Already Appealed and Lost — a denied appeal often requires a different strategy than the original submission. Before taking additional action, it is usually important to understand why the first appeal failed.

Why Hire a Global Entry Lawyer? — Full Guide | The Benefits of Legal Representation


What Does a Global Entry Lawyer Actually Do?

Many people assume a lawyer simply writes a letter and submits it. In reality, the process is often much more involved. Depending on the circumstances, legal representation may include:

Case Assessment — reviewing the denial or revocation and identifying the likely issue.

Records Strategy — determining whether court records, criminal-history reportscustoms recordsimmigration records, or FOIA records should be obtained.

Evidence Development — identifying character references, employment documentation, professional records, military records, and mitigation evidence that may strengthen the appeal.

Appeal Preparation — preparing the written appeal and supporting exhibits. What a complete appeal package looks like.

Submission Guidance — ensuring the appeal is submitted through the appropriate process.


What Records Will a Lawyer Gather?

One of the most common misconceptions is that clients must obtain every record themselves before contacting us. That is not how our process works. If a client already has records, we review and organize them. If records are missing, we help identify what is needed and work to obtain available records whenever possible.

Depending on the circumstances, this may include court records, dispositionsexpungement orders, criminal-history records, customs records, immigration records, and supporting documentation. The stronger the record, the stronger the appeal. Global Entry Appeal Document Checklist


Does NSLF Gather Court Records?

Yes. In many cases, obtaining the underlying records is one of the first steps in the appeal process. Clients are often missing court dispositionsdismissal ordersexpungement records, sentencing records, and other critical documentation. Our team routinely helps identify and obtain records that are relevant to the appeal.


Does NSLF Handle FOIA Requests?

Yes. Not every case requires FOIA. However, when additional government records may help identify the reason for a denial or revocation, we can evaluate whether a FOIA request is appropriate. The goal is not simply to obtain records — the goal is to determine whether those records are likely to help the case. When to submit a FOIA request for a Global Entry denial.


How Much Does a Global Entry Lawyer Cost?

The first thing to understand is that you are not paying a lawyer for the Global Entry card itself — you are paying for the legal work involved in responding to the government’s decision.

At National Security Law Firm, our current flat fee for a Global Entry or Trusted Traveler Program appeal is $2,995.

That fee covers attorney-led appeal representation, which may include case assessment, records gathering, mitigation development, appeal preparation, exhibit organization, and submission guidance.

Related Resource:


Why Do Global Entry Lawyers Charge What They Charge?

The government application fee pays for participation in the program. The legal fee reflects the work involved in understanding the denial, gathering records, developing evidence, preparing the appeal, organizing exhibits, and addressing the government’s concerns. Some appeals are relatively simple. Others involve dozens of pages of supporting documentation and substantial investigation. The fee reflects the legal work required — not the cost of the Global Entry membership itself. Finding the Best Global Entry Lawyer.


What Is NSLF’s Legal-Fee Refund Promise?

National Security Law Firm offers a written legal-fee refund promise for accepted Global Entry appeal matters.

Approved or Reinstated — or Your Legal Fee Back

If National Security Law Firm accepts your matter for full Global Entry or Trusted Traveler Program appeal representation and the appeal is not successful, we refund your legal fee under the written terms of the engagement agreement.

No lawyer can guarantee a government decision. CBP and DHS decide whether an applicant will be approved or reinstated. Our promise is a legal-fee refund policy — not a guarantee that the government will reach a particular outcome.

Related Resource:


Can NSLF Help If I Was Denied Years Ago?

Sometimes. The answer depends on what caused the denial, whether the issue has been resolved, whether records are available, and whether circumstances have changed. Many older denials can still be evaluated. The age of the denial alone does not necessarily determine whether assistance is possible. Book a free consultation to discuss your situation.


Can NSLF Help If I Do Not Know Why I Was Denied?

Yes. This is one of the most common situations we see. Many travelers contact us because they genuinely have no idea why they were denied. In those cases, the initial focus is often identifying the likely issue, determining whether records are needed, evaluating whether FOIA makes sense, and developing an appropriate strategy. Before an appeal can be successful, the underlying problem usually needs to be identified. Guide to unexplained Global Entry denials.


Not Everyone Needs a Lawyer

One of the most important things we tell prospective clients is that not every case requires legal representation. Some travelers can successfully handle straightforward issues on their own. We would rather tell a prospective client that than accept a case that is not a good fit.

The purpose of a consultation is not simply to sell legal services. The purpose is to help determine why the denial occurred, whether an appeal makes sense, whether records are needed, and whether legal representation is likely to add value. Sometimes the answer is yes. Sometimes the answer is no. Either way, having a clear understanding of the situation is usually the best place to start.

Book a free consultation | Take the free appeal assessment


Related Resources:


Section 10: Practical Global Entry Questions

Should I Disclose an Expunged Record on My Global Entry Application?

This is one of the most common questions we receive. Many travelers assume that because a record has been expunged, sealed, or otherwise removed from public view, it no longer needs to be disclosed. The reality is often more complicated.

The correct answer depends on the wording of the application question, the nature of the record, the type of record relief obtained, and the information available to the government.

One of the biggest mistakes applicants make is assuming that an expungement automatically means the government will never see the record. The greater risk in many Global Entry cases is not the underlying incident itself — it is the perception that the applicant was not fully candid. When in doubt, it is often worth reviewing the specific circumstances before deciding how to answer. Top Global Entry Application Mistakes.

Related Resources:


Should I Disclose Dismissed Charges?

In many situations, yes. Applicants are often surprised to learn that dismissed charges may still appear in government databases and records. A dismissal is frequently strong mitigation evidence — but it does not necessarily erase the underlying event from all government systems.

One of the most common reasons for denial is not the dismissed charge itself but an incomplete application answer that fails to disclose the incident. The safest approach is usually to understand exactly what the application is asking and answer truthfully and completely. Global Entry Denied After Dismissed Charges.


Should I Disclose Old Arrests?

Many travelers struggle with this question because the arrest occurred years or even decades ago. The passage of time may significantly reduce the importance of the arrest itself. However, that does not necessarily mean the arrest should be omitted.

Global Entry applications place significant emphasis on candor and accuracy. An old arrest that is disclosed and explained is often easier to address than an old arrest that appears later and raises questions about disclosure.


What If I Made a Mistake on My Application?

Mistakes happen. People forget dates, forget old incidents, and misunderstand questions. The important question is usually: was this an innocent mistake or an attempt to conceal information?

A good appeal often explains what the mistake was, why it occurred, why it was not intentional, and what steps have been taken to correct it. Many applicants assume a mistake automatically ends their chances of approval — that is not necessarily true. The response to the mistake often matters more than the mistake itself. Global Entry Denied for Incomplete or Inaccurate Application.


What If I Forgot to Disclose Something?

This is one of the most common appeal scenarios. Examples include old arrestsdismissed chargesexpunged recordscustoms incidents, foreign travel, or other historical information.

The worst approach is usually pretending the omission never happened. The better approach is often to correct the record, explain the omission, provide supporting documentation, and demonstrate candor moving forward. Appeals involving omissions are often stronger when the applicant proactively addresses the issue. Global Entry Denied for Incomplete or Inaccurate Application.


What If My Spouse Was Denied?

A spouse’s denial does not automatically mean you will be denied. Global Entry decisions are generally individualized. However, there are situations where the government may consider information involving shared travel, shared addresses, shared activities, or shared customs incidents.

These cases fall under association-based concerns. The important thing is not to assume that one person’s denial automatically determines another person’s outcome. Global Entry Denials Due to Association with Another Individual.


What If My Child Was Denied?

Children can be denied Global Entry. When this occurs, the denial often relates to application issues, family-related concerns, documentation problems, or other eligibility issues. The appropriate response depends on the reason for the denial. Many of the same principles that apply to adult denials apply to minors as well. Who Is Eligible for Global Entry?


What If I Travel Internationally for Work?

This is extremely common among Global Entry applicants. Frequent international business travel often strengthens the practical importance of the appeal — examples include client meetings, consulting work, international sales, government contracting, executive travel, and professional conferences.

A strong appeal often explains not only why the denial should be reconsidered but also why Global Entry matters professionally. That does not guarantee approval, but it can provide useful context regarding the impact of the denial. What makes a good Global Entry appeal case?


What If I Am a Government Contractor?

Government contractors often ask whether their work helps their case. The answer is: sometimes. Depending on the circumstances, government contracting may help demonstrate professional responsibility, government trust, compliance obligations, and security-related vetting. These facts do not automatically require approval, but they may be relevant as part of the overall picture. What makes strong mitigation evidence in a Global Entry appeal.


What If I Hold a Security Clearance?

Many applicants assume that a security clearance guarantees Global Entry approval. It does not. The two systems are different. That said, a current or prior security clearance can be valuable evidence — it may help demonstrate government trust, successful vetting, professional responsibility, and reliability. In some cases, security-clearance history becomes an important piece of mitigation evidence.


What If I Travel Internationally Several Times Per Month?

The impact of a denial or revocation is often much greater for executives, consultants, attorneys, government contractors, sales professionals, and international business owners. A strong appeal may explain travel frequency, professional obligations, time lost due to the denial, and practical consequences of losing membership. Travel needs do not automatically result in approval, but they can help explain why the issue matters. How to maximize the chances of your Global Entry appeal.


Does Having a Clean Record Guarantee Approval?

No. Many applicants are denied despite having no criminal convictions. That is because Global Entry decisions can involve customs concernsimmigration issuesapplication disclosuresassociation concernstravel-related factors, and other risk considerations. A clean criminal record is helpful — it is not the only factor CBP evaluates.


Does Prior Government Employment Help?

Sometimes. Prior service as a federal employee, military member, law enforcement officer, or government contractor may provide useful context and demonstrate responsibility and trustworthiness. Like all mitigation evidence, these factors are generally evaluated as part of the totality of the circumstances rather than in isolation. What makes a strong Global Entry appeal?


What Is the Most Important Practical Tip for Applicants?

Be completely truthful.

Many successful appeals overcome arrestsconvictionscustoms violationsdismissed charges, and expunged records. Far fewer appeals overcome the appearance that the applicant intentionally concealed information. When in doubt, honesty, documentation, and transparency are usually the strongest long-term strategy.

Book a free consultation | Take the free appeal assessment


Related Resources:


Section 11: Why National Security Law Firm?

Why Do Travelers Hire NSLF for Global Entry Appeals?

There are many attorneys who can help prepare legal documents. Far fewer have substantial experience handling Global Entry and Trusted Traveler Program appeals.

Global Entry cases are unusual because they often sit at the intersection of criminal historycustoms lawimmigration concerns, government vetting, security-related risk assessments, and administrative appeals.

Many travelers discover that the challenge is not simply writing an appeal. The challenge is identifying the issue, gathering the right records, and presenting the strongest possible case that they should still be considered a low-risk traveler. That is where experience matters. Why Hire a Global Entry Lawyer?


How Much Global Entry Experience Does NSLF Have?

National Security Law Firm has handled more than 1,000 Global Entry and Trusted Traveler Program appeal matters since 2017. Those matters have involved:

That volume matters because Global Entry appeals often involve pattern recognition. Many issues repeat themselves. The more cases you review, the easier it becomes to identify likely causes, missing records, and effective appeal strategies.


What Makes NSLF Different From a General Practice Lawyer?

Global Entry appeals are a very specific type of federal administrative matter. Many attorneys have never handled one. Others may have handled only a handful.

At NSLF, Global Entry and Trusted Traveler Program appeals are a dedicated practice area. Our process is built around issues that commonly arise in these cases, including criminal recordscustoms recordsFOIA requests, mitigation evidence, security-related concerns, and government vetting issues.

The goal is not simply to prepare a letter. The goal is to understand why the denial occurred and build the strongest possible case for reconsideration. Finding the Best Global Entry Lawyer.


What Is Brett O’Brien’s Security Threat Assessment Background?

One of the unique aspects of NSLF’s Global Entry practice is the background of founding attorney Brett O’Brien. Brett’s experience includes conducting and reviewing Security Threat Assessments for U.S. Army counterintelligence.

While Global Entry and military security vetting are not identical processes, both involve evaluating risk, trustworthiness, reliability, and whether an individual presents concerns that justify government action. That experience helps inform how NSLF approaches risk analysis, mitigation evidence, government vetting concerns, and appeal development. The focus is always on understanding how the government is likely evaluating the issue and addressing that concern directly.


How Does NSLF Analyze a Global Entry Denial?

Every case begins with the same question: why did the government say no?

Before drafting an appeal, we typically focus on:

  • Identifying the Issue — what triggered the denial or revocation?
  • Evaluating the Records — what documentation exists and what is missing?
  • Assessing Risk — what concern is the government likely trying to address?
  • Developing Mitigation — what evidence supports approval or reinstatement?
  • Building the Appeal — how do we present the strongest possible case?

The appeal strategy depends on the answers to those questions. What NSLF does in a Global Entry appeal.


What Happens During the Free Consultation?

The consultation is designed to help determine whether an appeal makes sense and what the next step should be. During the consultation, we typically discuss why the denial or revocation occurred, whether additional records may be needed, whether FOIA makes sense, whether the case appears strong, moderate, or difficult, and potential next steps.

One of the most important things we do is tell people when we do not believe legal representation is necessary. Not every case requires a lawyer. The consultation is intended to help you understand where your situation falls. Do you need a lawyer for a Global Entry appeal?


What Happens After I Hire NSLF?

Once representation begins, the process generally involves case assessment, records gathering, mitigation development, appeal preparation, and submission guidance. The exact process varies depending on the circumstances — but the goal remains the same: build the strongest possible appeal supported by records, evidence, and a clear explanation of why approval or reinstatement is appropriate. Full breakdown of what we do in a Global Entry appeal.


What Is Included in the Flat Fee?

Our current Global Entry and Trusted Traveler Program appeal fee is $2,995 flat fee. Depending on the circumstances, representation may include case assessment, records gathering, mitigation development, appeal preparation, exhibit organization, and submission guidance. The fee reflects the legal work involved in responding to a federal government decision — not the cost of the Global Entry membership itself.

Related Resources:


What Is the Legal-Fee Refund Promise?

National Security Law Firm offers a written legal-fee refund promise for accepted Global Entry appeal matters.

Approved or Reinstated — or Your Legal Fee Back

If National Security Law Firm accepts your matter for full Global Entry or Trusted Traveler Program appeal representation and the appeal is not successful, we refund your legal fee under the written terms of the engagement agreement.

No lawyer can guarantee CBP’s decision. CBP and DHS retain complete authority over Trusted Traveler Program approvals and reinstatements. Our promise is a legal-fee refund policy — not a guarantee of a government outcome.

Full details: Pricing & Legal-Fee Refund Promise


Still Have Questions?

If you have made it this far, you are probably dealing with one of three situations:

You Know Why You Were Denied or Revoked — and you are trying to determine the strongest appeal strategy.

You Suspect There Is a Problem in Your Records — and you need help identifying it. FOIA requests for Global Entry denials.

You Still Have No Idea Why CBP Said No — and you are trying to figure out what happened before deciding what to do next. Guide to unexplained Global Entry denials.

All three situations are common. The first step is usually understanding the issue. The second is determining whether an appealFOIA request, reapplication, or some other strategy makes sense.


Thinking About Hiring a Lawyer?

Not every Global Entry denial or revocation requires legal representation. Some travelers can successfully handle straightforward issues on their own. More complicated situations may benefit from legal assistance, particularly when the case involves criminal historycustoms violationsmarijuana-related incidentsassociation concernsunexplained denials, inaccurate government records, or prior unsuccessful appeals.

Learn More:


Ready to Talk?

Book a Free Consultation

An NSLF attorney will review your situation, discuss the likely issue, explain whether records may be needed, and provide an honest assessment of your options.

Take the Free Appeal Assessment

Not ready for a consultation? Our free appeal assessment can help identify potential issues and determine whether a Global Entry appeal may be worth pursuing.