Benefits of a Green Card for family members! It gives you the opportunity to…

Benefits of a Green Card for family members!

It gives you the opportunity to sponsor your immediate family members and give them the right to stay with you in the United States if you hold a US Green Card. Remember, “Immediate family members” are identified as unmarried children under 21 years of age, parents, and spouses by US Immigration. So if you want to sponsor an extended family member then, that is also possible!

What Documents Do YOU Need for a Marriage Green Card?

The documents needed for the Marriage Green Card vary from case to case but overall these documents are required: a birth certificate, marriage certificate, financial proof, proof of sponsor’s U.S. citizenship or permanent residence, medical examinations, current or expired U.S. visas, prison/court/police records (if needed), police clearance certificate (if needed), prior marriage termination papers (if needed) and proof of lawful U.S. entry and status (also if needed).

How many Green Cards are distributed every year?

About 1 million individuals get green cards per year to reside in the United States. The annual quota is around 220,000 for family-based immigrants. For employment-based immigrants, 140,000 and for the visa lottery, 50,000. Over 4 million people are currently waiting in line for green cards due to these annual quotas and the 7 percent per country cap. However, there is no quota for immediate relatives of U.S. citizens which include parents, spouses and children.

Which Green Card Forms are the most important?

The most commonly used Forms, where the petitioners and the beneficiary needs to file are: Form I-130 (Petition for Alien Relative); Form I-730 (Refugee/Asylee Relative Petition), Form I-589 (Application for Asylum and for Withholding of Removal) and Form I-140 (Immigrant Petition for Alien Worker).

What is the EB-2 Visa?

Employment- Based “Exceptional Ability or Advanced Degree Permanent Residence/Green Card (Second Preference) is the EB-2 which includes foreign nationals holding an advanced degree or its equivalent, or foreign nationals with exceptional ability in sciences, arts, athletics, business, or medicine.

Eligibility for the Asylum Green Card?

To be eligible for a Green Card as an Asylum applicant you need to meet a few requirements. First, you need to file the I-485 Form while you are in the United States. Second, you would have to physically be in the US for at least 1 year after receiving the Asylum Green Card. Third, you need to continue to meet the definition of a refugee. Fourth, you must not be settled in any foreign country and fifth, your asylum grant has not been terminated.

What age can you apply for green card?

There are many different Green Cards, therefore the age eligibility is also different. For unmarried adults, who have at least one US citizen parent, they must be 21 years of age or older. F2A applicants (spouses and unmarried children of a green card holder), the children must be younger than the age of 21 and F2B applicants (unmarried children of a green card holder), should be older than the age of 21.

What is the new law for Green Card holders?

If you have a green card and do not report yourself on your tax return as an immigrant or are out of the country for an extended period of time, the new laws mean that your citizenship application or green card might be declined and you may even be deported.
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