| How Do
I Change My Fiance(e)'s Status to Lawful Permanent Resident?
Background
Where Can I Find the Law?
Who is Eligible?
How Do I Apply?
Will My Fiance(e) Be Eligible for a Work Permit?
Can My Fiance(e) Travel Outside of the United
States?
How Can I Check the Application Status?
How Can I Appeal?
Can Anyone Help Me?
Frequently Asked Questions
Background
An immigrant is a foreign national who has been granted the privilege
of living and working permanently in the United States. You must
go through a multi-step process to become an immigrant. One of the
paths to permanent residence is through a Fiance(e)
petition.?After you have been admitted to the United States
as a Fiance(e) and have married your petitioner within the 90-day
time limit, you are now eligible to adjust your status to permanent
resident status.?You may also wish to read How Do
I Remove the Conditions on Permanent Residence Based on Marriage?
For an excellent overview of immigration, please see the chapter
and tables on immigrants in the Immigration
Statistical Yearbook.
Where Can I Find the Law?
The Immigration and Nationality Act is a law that governs immigration
in the United States. For the part of the law concerning permanent
resident status, please see INA
?245.? Fiance(e)s are also subject to the 2-year conditional
residence requirement of INA
?216. The specific eligibility requirements and procedures for
adjusting to permanent residence status are included in the Code
of Federal Regulations [CFR] at 8
CFR ?245.
Who is Eligible?
To find out who may apply for permanent residence in the United
States, please see eligibility
information.
(Please note, as a fiance(e), your permanent residence status will
be conditional because it is based on a marriage that is less than
2 years old on the day that you are given permanent residence. For
more information, please see How Do
I Remove the Conditions on Permanent Resident Based on Marriage?.)
How Do I Apply?
To find out how you can apply for your fianc?e) to become a lawful
permanent resident of the United States, please click here to see
Application
Procedures, which will help you identify what you need to do.
After you submit your application materials, you will be asked to
go to a USCIS office to answer questions about your application.
Will My Fiance(e) Be Eligible for
a Work Permit?
Applicants for adjustment to permanent resident status are eligible
to apply for a work permit while their cases are pending. You should
use Form
I-765 to apply for a work permit. You do not need to apply for
a work permit once you adjust to permanent resident status. As a
lawful permanent resident, you should receive a permanent resident
card that will prove that you have a right to live and work in the
United States permanently. Please see How Do I Get
a Work Permit? for more information.
Can My Fiance(e) Travel Outside the
United States?
If you are applying for adjustment to permanent resident status,
you must receive advance permission to return to the United States
if you are traveling outside the United States. This advance permission
is called Advance Parole. If you do not apply for Advance Parole
before you leave the country, you will abandon your application
with Immigration and you may not be permitted to return to the United
States. For more information, please see How Do
I Get a Travel Document?.
How Can I Check My Application Status?
Please contact the USCIS office that received your application.
You should be prepared to provide Immigration staff with specific
information about your application. Please click here
for complete instructions on checking the status of your application.
Please click here
for more information on Immigration-related offices .
How Can I Appeal?
The only applications for permanent residency (Form
I-485) which can be appealed are those based on a marriage which
took place while the alien's deportation was in process.
Generally, you may appeal within 33 days after the immigration
judge decides to remove you from the country. After your appeal
form and a required fee are processed, the appeal will be referred
to the Board of Immigration Appeals in Washington, D.C. For more
information, please see, How
Do I Appeal A Denial of My Application or Petition?.
Can Anyone Help Me?
If advice is needed, you may contact the District Office near your
home for a list of community-based, non-profit organizations that
may be able to assist you in applying for an immigration benefit.
Please see our field
offices home page for more information on contacting Immigration-related
offices.
Frequently Asked Questions [FAQs]
Do you want further information? Click here for Frequently
Asked Questions.
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