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Green Cards. |
Who may get a green card?
Green cards are available through family, employment, special immigrant status, refugee or asylee status, human trafficking or crime victims, victims of abuse, and other nuanced categories. Speak with an immigration attorney to review your options.
How do I get a green card for my husband, wife, child, father, mother, brother or sister?
As a United States Citizen, you can sponsor your spouse, unmarried child under the age of 21, or your parent if you are at least 21 years of age. A United States Citizen may also sponsor an unmarried son or daughter that is over 21 years old, or a brother or sister who is at least 21 years old.
As a permanent resident (green card holder) you may sponsor your spouse, an unmarried child under the age of 21, an unmarried son or daughter 21 years of age or older.
As a permanent resident (green card holder) you may sponsor your spouse, an unmarried child under the age of 21, an unmarried son or daughter 21 years of age or older.
How do I get a green card for my boyfriend, girlfriend, uncle, aunt, niece or nephew?
You may not qualify for these as a family relationship; this does not mean there are not other categories where this individual will qualify for permanent residency status.
What is adjustment of status?
Per USCIS, Adjustment of Status (AOS) is the process used to apply for lawful permanent resident (LPR) status when you are present in the United States. This is also known as applying for a green card. This means that you may get a Green Card without having to return to your home country to complete visa processing.
What is consular processing?
Per USCIS, once you have an approved immigrant petition and an immigrant visa number is immediately available to you, there are two ways to apply for lawful permanent resident status (a green card). If you are outside of the United States, you may apply at a U.S. Department of State consulate abroad for an immigrant visa to come to the United States as a permanent resident. This is referred to as consular processing.
How much does it cost to get a green card?
The Petition for Alien relief is first necessary before filing for the Adjustment of Status, the filing fee is $535. The Adjustment of Status filing fee is $1140. There is a requirement for biometrics which is $85. There is also a medical exam, this cost will be dependent upon the physician you use.
How long does it take to get a green card?
The processing time for a green card depends on many factors, including your petitioner/beneficiary relationship, your country of origin and your service center. The processing times may be found at this link: https://egov.uscis.gov/processing-times/
What is the difference between a permanent residency card and a green card?
These are two names for the same item. The identification cards given to permanent residents (LPR) were at one time, green.
Can I travel to my home country and come back with a green card?
Yes, you can travel internationally with a green card. You will need to travel on a valid passport, plus any necessary visas for the country of your travel. In order to re-enter the United States after your temporary travel abroad you will need to present a valid, unexpired green card.
It is important that your travel outside the United States be temporary. If it is determined that you do not intent to make the United States your permanent home, your green card will be classified as abandoned.
It is important that your travel outside the United States be temporary. If it is determined that you do not intent to make the United States your permanent home, your green card will be classified as abandoned.
What do I do if I lose or misplace my green card?
There are options to file a replacement application online or through a paper application. If you are outside the U.S. and have lost your green card, contact the nearest U.S. consulate, USCIS office or port of entry.
Can my green card be taken away?
Yes. There are multiple ways to lose your permanent resident status. Some of the potential ways to lose status include:
- Failure to maintain permanent residency by spending too much time outside of the United States
- Not removing conditions on a marriage based conditional lawful permanent resident status
- An immigration judge issues a final removal order against you
- You intentionally abandon your status