Hi, my boyfriend's divorce (he is a U.S. citizen) will be final over the summer. How long after that do we have to wait in order to get married and apply for my adjustment of status, EAD, etc.?
Usually 24-48 hrs. I am just messing with you. It's always better to wait after his divorce is over and then get married. Looks good.... that this guy didn't leave his ex-wife just to get married to you and secondly if you can't wait and want to get married right away, I would get married but wait and not apply for your Green card right away. I'd wait few months. This way the marriage will look genuine and will carry some weight. You don't want to put the officer in doubts if you married him to obtain a GC. That's my opinion. Lets see what other have to say on this. Good luck.
Thank you Atlanta Brother! My only issue is that my LC through my employer didn't go well because I will be laid off very soon, and my H1-B will expire in September 2008 (7th year renewal). So I actually need to get married and file for adjustment of status right away in order to be able to work..or, as you suggested, relax for a couple of months and then apply Thanks again!
Frankly, it doesnt matter what looks bad or good or whatever,as long as you follow the requirements, ie you could probably get married the day after the divorce and file for Adjustment, BUT YOU SHOULD Probably get an ATTORNEY first dont do anything that may screw you in the long run ie when you file for citizenship where they really scrutinize your records
rubinop, did your boyfriend sponsor his wife for a GC or is she American?
The only thing that you must follow if is there a rule to apply for a marriage license after divorce. There are some states that required a 30 days period...you know, for re-thinking issues.
Anyway, there is nothing about "looks good" if you wait to marry a person...you marry when you want to, period. The only thing that immigration cares is that when you meet, how you met, if somebody was marry before and they will ask for your spouse's marriage and divorce and you must put the divorce decree and the marriage certificate on the package (copies pls). There is no such thing of "save window" to get re-marry.
Immigration should not denied your immigration benefits based if you were the lover or the "other" in your future-to-be-spouse marriage.
The only thing that you must follow if is there a rule to apply for a marriage license after divorce. There are some states that required a 30 days period...you know, for re-thinking issues.
Anyway, there is nothing about "looks good" if you wait to marry a person...you marry when you want to, period. The only thing that immigration cares is that when you meet, how you met, if somebody was marry before and they will ask for your spouse's marriage and divorce and you must put the divorce decree and the marriage certificate on the package (copies pls). There is no such thing of "save window" to get re-marry.
Immigration should not denied your immigration benefits based if you were the lover or the "other" in your future-to-be-spouse marriage.
What do you have to say on that 30-60-90 day rule? If you meet a person within a month of his/her entry into US on a tourist visa and decide to marry right away coz it was love at first sight, would you rush and do it or think about it twice from immigration point of you as well and plan it accordingly. If you ask me, I would not take any chances with immigration and wait for about 90 days and play it safe rather than getting married coz there is no such thing as "looks good" in your books.
She did not meet her BF while on a tourist visa. She is here on H1-B and it's a different story.
People can get divorced and married whenever they want and feel ready, it’s a free country.
I got married to my husband exactly 30 days after my divorce became final. And we would have done it sooner, but had to wait a month, here in FL.
I have GC already, nobody questioned my motives during the interview.
Plus, I already had a pending I-485 in a different category, which I later withdrew and filed new application, based on my marriage to US citizen, about 6 months later, but that’s my story.
For her – if she can prove that her marriage is genuine with enough strong evidence then why wait? 30… 90 days… a year? There is never “look good” or “safe timeframe” when it comes to immigration. All they care is evidence, most importantly mingled accounts and taxes.
By now I am sure rubinop must have read everybody's point of you and different suggestions from different people.I could be right or I could be wrong... vise versa.
It's rubinop who has to make up her mind and make the final decision on who she really thinks makes more sense and ofcourse follow her heart. I am not convinced at all with your story. Doesn't seem real, as if I am reading a boring novel.....With that said, rubinop is wise enough to get everybody's opinions and take it from there.