Permanent Residency through Family Sponsor
Immigration through a Family Member
Overview and Process
A lawful permanent resident is a foreign national who has been
granted the privilege of permanently living and working in the United States. If
you want to become a lawful permanent resident based on the fact that you have a
relative who is a citizen of the United States, or a relative who is a lawful
permanent resident, you must go through a multi-step process.
The USCIS must approve an immigrant visa petition, I-130 Petition for Alien
Relative, for you. This petition is filed by your relative (sponsor) and must be
accompanied by proof of your relationship to the requesting relative.
The Department of State must determine if an immigrant visa
number is immediately available to you, the foreign national, even if you are
already in the United States. When an immigrant visa number is available, it
means you can apply to have one of the immigrant visa numbers assigned to you.
You can check the status of a visa number in the Department of State's Visa
Bulletin.
If you are already in the United States, you may apply to change
your status to that of a lawful permanent resident after a visa number becomes
available to you. This is one way you can apply to secure an immigrant visa
number. If you are outside the United States when an immigrant visa number
becomes available, you must then go to the U.S. consulate servicing the area in
which you reside to complete your processing. This is the other way to secure an
immigrant visa number.
Eligibility
In order for a relative to sponsor you to immigrate to the United
States, they must meet the following criteria:
They must be a citizen or lawful permanent resident of the U.S. and be able to
provide documentation providing that status. They must prove that they can
support you at 125% above the mandated poverty line, by filling out an Affidavit
of Support. The relatives which may be sponsored as an immigrant vary depending
on whether the sponsor is a U.S. Citizen or a lawful permanent resident.
If the sponsor is a U.S. Citizen, they may petition for the following foreign
national relatives to immigrate to the U.S:
-
Husband or wife
-
Unmarried child under 21 years of age
-
Unmarried son or daughter over 21
-
Married son or daughter of any age
-
Brother or sister, if the sponsor is at least 21 years old,
or
-
Parent, if the sponsor is at least 21 years old.
If the sponsor is a lawful permanent resident, they may petition
for the following foreign national relatives to immigrate to the U.S.:
Preference Categories
If you wish to immigrate as a relative of a U.S. Citizen or lawful
permanent resident, you must obtain an immigrant visa number based on the
preference category in which you fall.
People who want to become immigrants are classified into categories based on a
preference system. The immediate relatives of U.S. citizens, which includes
parents, spouses and unmarried children under the age of 21, do not have to wait
for an immigrant visa number to become available once the visa petition filed
for them is approved by USCIS. An immigrant visa number will become immediately
available. The relatives in the remaining categories must wait for an immigrant
visa number to become available according to the following preferences:
-
First preference: Unmarried, adult sons and daughters of
U.S. citizens. Adult means 21 years of age or older.
-
Second Preference: Spouses of lawful permanent residents,
their unmarried children (under twenty-one), and the unmarried sons and
daughters of lawful permanent residents.
-
Third Preference: Married sons and daughters of U.S.
Citizens.
-
Fourth Preference: Brothers and sisters of adult U.S.
Citizens.
Once USCIS receives your visa petition (Form I-130, Petition for
Alien Relative), it will be approved or denied. USCIS notifies the person who
filed the visa petition of the petition was approved. USCIS will then send the
approved visa petition to the Department of State's National Visa Center, where
it will remain until an immigrant visa number is available. The Center will
notify the foreign national when the visa petition is received and again when an
immigrant visa number is available. You do not need to contact the National Visa
Center, unless you change your address or there is a change in your personal
situation, or that of your sponsor, that may affect eligibility for an immigrant
visa, such as reaching age 21, marriage, divorce, or death of a spouse.

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