Greencard for wife and daughter based on marriage-Advice needed

cyntrax77

New Member
Hi Everyone,

My husband and I have been living together since 2001 and we have 3 common children together, we just got married on July 24 2009 while waiting for him to become a citizen (much thanks to the very helpful advice on this site we did his citizenship process all on our own)

I entered the US on a visitor visa. I subsequently lost my passport.
I have all police records and I reapplied for a new passport from my consulate however it has no visa or anything.

I recently applied for a replacement i94 which was approved and is being sent out in the mail (I checked my online status)

I am now ready to apply for permanent residence. I am a bit confused about this since I was reading that he has to file I-130 relative petition (is this for only if the relative lives outside of the US)

I will also be filing for my 11 yr old daughter (not his daughter) do we need to separate forms for this or can she file together with me.

Any help will be really appreciated. Thank you.
 
Helpful Guide to you and spouse

These are the forms you/your spouse will need to file:

Your USC Spouse files:

I-130, Petition for Alien Relative (your spouse files this); fee at this time is $355, click to see most current filing fee, download form and instructions.

You (the GC applicant) file:

I-485, Application to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status (this is your main application form); fee at this time is $1010, click to see most current filing fee, download form and instructions.
I-693, Report of Medical Examination and Vaccination Record, to be filed with your I-485 (this has to be filled out by your civil surgeon. If you have had the BCG vaccination, your TB test will most probably be positive, so ask for a chest x-ray at the same time to save time if it is not suggested). This will take about 3-4 days and probably cost between $160-220 depending on your doctor, find an approved doctor here. Click to download form and instructions.
I-864, Affidavit of Support, to be filled out by your spouse and/or another sponsor, filed with your I-485. Check instructions to see if you can use the I-864EZ instead, it is shorter. Make sure you qualify for it. Click to download form and instructions.
I-765, Application for Employment Authorization (this is your ‘work permit’ and is optional, although most people file it); fee is $0 if you file with your I-485 or after your I-485 has been received by USCIS, click to download form and instructions.

I-131, Application for Travel Document (this is your advance parole application, if you want to travel before you have your green card in your passport/in your hand, also optional), fee is $0 if you file with your I-485 or after your I-485 has been received by USCIS, click to download form and instructions.

G-325A, Biographic Information. Fill out 2 copies for the applicant and 1 for the USC spouse, 1 for each goes with I-130 and 2nd applicant form goes with I-485. Click to download form and instructions.

Passport photos- You will need about 7 for the applicant and 1 for the USC spouse, get extras in case you mess up.

My suggestions on how to do this:

- Print out all the forms and instructions from the USCIS website, make sure you are filing close to when you print- check the version date and make sure it is the most recent or acceptable.
- Read the instructions, highlighting what else you need to send along with the form. Make sure you are sending enough documents from each required category.
- Make a list of all these items, and get them together.
- Fill out all the forms, sign and date them.
- Organize each application separately; do not send any original documents other than the forms unless specifically asked to do so.
- Print out cover letters for each application, this will also serve as checklists for yourself. I have attached the templates I used at the bottom. It is YOUR responsibility to check that the fees/forms used are current, and the requirements for supporting documents etc. have not changed. This was accurate at the time I applied for my AOS and as you can see from my timeline I have been successful so far.
- Clip each application securely with a large paper clip/put it in a separate plastic envelope/secure it in a way you like.
- Make sure once again that you have included everything, re-read the instructions at this point to see if you missed anything. This is probably what you would pay an attorney hundreds of dollars to do.
- Put all the applications in 1 big strong folder, seal it and mail it off!! If you are sending all the 4 applications together (and if you can, you should), they should go to the address on the I-130 instructions, i.e. to the Chicago Lockbox.
- Most importantly, READ ALL instructions carefully and more than once, this will save you time in the end.

If this was helpful to you, please give this post 5 stars and hopefully it will become a sticky. It would have made my life easier if I had seen something like this when I was starting my process.
With these instructions and other help on these forums, you should have a pretty easy time. Good luck.


This isn't my creative thoughts, but one of our posters here. I happen to just find it and cut and paste. So kudos to the OP. Lady, follow this guideline and you will be happy at the end of your application process.;)
 
Thanks Al that was awesome help.
I have no idea how to rate you five stars - if you can help there I definitely will do that.
just one more thing though- what about my daughter- do I file all the same forms for her or does she go on my application. I'm guessing i have to do a separate i-130 for her for starters. Thanks so much- this was really a lot of help
 
Thanks Al that was awesome help.
just one more thing though- what about my daughter- do I file all the same forms for her or does she go on my application. I'm guessing i have to do a separate i-130 for her for starters. Thanks so much- this was really a lot of help

Correct. She needs a separate I-130 and I-485.
 
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