Planned closure of SF immigration court could further delay cases for years
Jan 08, 2026
The planned closure of San Francisco’s primary immigration court in January of next year is expected to trigger long delays for thousands of immigrants seeking legal relief across Northern California.
According to sources familiar with the matter, the decision was announced during a Monday st
aff meeting and again in an internal Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) memo later that day, which stated the federal government will not be renewing its lease in the downtown office building that’s been home to the city’s primary immigration court for years.
Mission Local first reported the news of the court’s planned closure.
Court staff will be required to relocate to the relatively new immigration court in Concord, a process expected to begin as early as this summer, according to the memo, which NBC Bay Area has reviewed.
Personnel at the court’s much smaller San Francisco location, inside the federal building at 630 Sansome, will remain in place, the memo stated.
On Thursday, an emailed statement from an EOIR spokesperson said the government “determined it would be more cost effective to relocate its court operations at 100 Montgomery Street to the nearby Concord Immigration Court” and that it will provide notice to “all parties whose cases are reassigned to the Concord Immigration Court.”
The closure announcement comes as the San Francisco immigration court’s judicial staff has been nearly wiped-out during President Trump’s second term.
Only four of the 21 judges who occupied the bench in San Francisco when President Trump took office last January remain on the job. Most of the judges – 13 in total – were fired without cause, according to the union that represents immigration judges, with four others retiring.
Given the dwindling number of judges, the court’s closure didn’t come as a shock to immigration attorney Milli Atkinson, the director of the Immigrant Legal Defense Program with the San Francisco Bar Association. Even so, she said the decision to close the court will indefinitely delay thousands of cases for Bay Area immigrants attempting to adjust their legal status.
Many of those people have already had their cases postponed following the firing of judges presiding over their cases.
“There are 120,000 people with cases pending in the San Francisco immigration court,” Atkinson said. “So, 120,000 people who were actively trying to pursue asylum or other forms of legal relief in their case are just going to have to deal with a little bit of chaos and confusion for the next year to year-and-a-half.”
Atkinson said the court’s closure, along with the widespread firing of immigration judges, will exacerbate the longstanding backlog of pending cases.
“From the perspective of how this is going to create efficiencies and make cases get processed faster and not have this huge line of people waiting to have their day in court, this move is going to just make that worse,” Atkinson said.
She also said many of the region’s resources for immigrants will now have to shift from San Francisco to Concord.
“A lot of organizations and attorneys and law firms build their practice around where the courts are located,” Atkinson said. “So, it’s going to require a significant shift in resources and how non-profits and attorneys serve their clients just because of the logistics of where the court is going to be.”
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