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Family Based Immigration Brochure

United States citizens and Legal Permanent Residents (LPR) can petition for their close family members to immigrate to the United States as Legal Permanent Residents who will later be eligible to apply for U.S. citizenship. The U.S. citizen or LPR who seeks to sponsor a relative for immigration is known as the “Petitioner” and the alien relative who wishes to immigrate to the United States is the “Beneficiary.”

A U.S. citizen can sponsor a spouse, children, brothers and sisters. A U.S. citizen over the age of 21 can sponsor a parent who wishes to immigrate. Legal Permanent Residents can sponsor a spouse, minor children, and adult unmarried children for LPR status.


 

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There is no numerical limitation on the number of immediate relatives of U.S. citizens who immigrate into the United States in a year. An immediate relative is defined as the spouse, minor unmarried child, or parent of a U.S. citizen. An immediate relative who entered the United States using a visa or through another form of legal entry is not subject to a finding of inadmissibility based on overstaying the visa or unauthorized word.

The other categories of eligible relatives are subject to a limitation of the number of visas issued per year under the Family Preference System. There can be a significant wait before a visa becomes available for a relative qualified for LPR status under a family preference category. Family Preference Classes 2A, 2B and 3 can expect wait times of 5-8 years for most countries before a visa number is available for the beneficiary relative. The 4th Family Preference Class has a 12-20 year waiting period before a visa number might become available for the brother or sister of a U.S. citizen. Mexican relatives experience the longest wait times due to the volume of petitions received that compete for the smaller number of Preference Class visas allocated for Mexican citizens each year. See chart below for the most recent numbers of visas issued under the Family Preference System at the time of this printing.

Preference Class Immigrant Beneficiary U.S. Sponsor Visas Per Year
1st Unmarried Adult Child (21 years or older) U.S. Citizen 23,400*
2nd A Minor Child LPR 87,900
2nd B Unmarried Adult Child LPR 26,300
3rd Married Adult Children U.S. Citizen 23,400*
4th Brothers and Sisters U.S. Citizen 65,000*

* Plus any visas left over from the previous preference class. Visas left over from the 4th preference will be applied to the 1st preference class in the following year.

Evidence of Valid Marriage
Though a spouse of a U.S. citizen is an immediate relative for whom a visa is made immediately available, the USCIS conducts a thorough inspection regarding the validity of a marriage in order to prevent fraud against the United States. The USCIS has the right to visit the residence of Petitioner and Beneficiary as part of an investigation into a suspect marriage. Processing of spouse petitions may be delayed if the USCIS officer reviewing the petition requests additional evidence to support the petition or if the officer suspects that the marriage was entered into for the purpose of securing immigration benefits for the alien beneficiary. The same type of inquiries may also delay LPR spouse petitions.

Affidavit of Support
An alien will be deemed inadmissible for immigration who will become a public charge of the United States. For this reason, all family-based immigrants must have their petitioning relative provide a legally binding Affidavit of Support demonstrating that the Petitioner can support the alien at a level of no less that 125% of the current federal poverty guidelines. If the petitioning relative cannot meet or exceed the required level of income, a joint sponsor may also execute a binding Affidavit of Support to assume financial responsibility for the alien who wishes to immigrate. The Affidavit of Support is a binding contract with the United States government that is enforceable against the petitioning relative and joint sponsor until the alien beneficiary has become a citizen through naturalization or has worked for 40 annual quarters. The Affidavit of Support is enforceable against a petitioning spouse even if the marriage to an alien beneficiary ends in divorce or separation.

Medical Examination
A medical examination conducted by an approved Civil Surgeon along with proof of proper vaccination records is required before a Beneficiary of a family-based petition is allowed to adjust status to Legal Permanent Resident.

Conditional Permanent Residence
Conditional Permanent Resident (CR) status will be granted to spouses of U.S. Citizens and LPR’s where the marriage was entered into less than 24 months before the alien beneficiary was conditionally granted permanent residence status. CR status lasts for two years and a petition must be submitted to remove the status so that the alien beneficiary becomes an LPR. Children and step-children who petition along with an alien beneficiary parent based on a marriage of less than two years to a U.S. Citizen or LPR will also be granted CR status. The request to remove CR status of children can be included on the petition made by the CR alien parent after two years.

THE INFORMATION CONTAINED IN THIS BROCHURE DOES NOT CONSTITUTE LEGAL ADVICE. CONSULT AN IMMIGRATION LAW ATTORNEY ABOUT YOUR INDIVIDUAL SITUATION.


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