I'm looking at the forms I need to fill and send off to apply for petition and permanent residency in the next few days.My fiancée and I are having a civil ceremony in the next few days (applied for the marriage license last week!) with family in attendance, and want to get the forms off soon!I am aware of the fact that a I-130 needs filed, but I'm getting confused at what else. I will need to adjust status from VWP to permanent, but, if that's not included, is it the I-485 I need to submit? And do I only do that after the 130 has been accepted/pending or can I send them all off at once?I'm just getting a little confused here. I haven't spotted anything that just says 'fill out these forms if you're in this situation'.So, we're having the ceremony in the next few days (bigger one in the summer for everyone
), and my VWP runs out in the second week of March or so, so we want to get this stuff filed quite soon...
You're running into very dangerous waters if you decide to try to adjust status while on the VWP. It's lawyer territory.
I'll give you the three major reasons why:
1. First of all, it's technically not possible since you're not on a visa. In their eyes, you cannot adjust from no visa to a visa while in the US. I know this is not really true. I've spoken to at least two very experienced lawyers who said it's generally frowned upon, but they usually just accept it now. But, the other two reasons are more serious.
2. It is
very illegal to enter the United States as a tourist with the intention to get married
and adjust status. Simply put, you're free to get married, you're not free to adjust status if that was your intention when entering. When you arrived in the US, you told the immigration officer that you were entering to visit friends/family, or for vacation or business purposes. You may have said to get married. All fully legit reasons. Had you said "I'm here to get married and then adjust status" you wouldn't be eligible for the VWP and you would have been sent back to the UK.
This is where the problem kicks in. Adjusting from F-1 (student) or H-1b (skilled worker) is easy. They've often been in the US for 2, 3, 4, even 5 years and can easily claim that they didn't intent to adjust status 4 years ago. When you enter on the VWP you have 90 days. You'll basically have to convince the USCIS that you entered for up to 90 days, but you had absolutely no intention of adjusting status. Basically, you'll be trying to prove that this happened "on a whim."
If they don't believe you, they'll assume you lied to the immigration officer when you entered, and you'll be charged with immigration fraud. This is a
very serious charge, and is pretty much equal to a lifetime bar from ever entering the US.
Simply put, you need a lawyer.
3. If you do this, it will be
a lot more expensive than going the safe route (CR-1). First of all, you
will need a good immigration attorney so expect $3,000 - $4,000 in legal fees. Second of all, adjusting status costs about $1,400 in filing fees. Third, you cannot work until about 3 months after filing, so expect 3 months of lost income if you currently have a job in the UK that you'd be quitting.
In comparison, if you go the safe route, you'll be stuck in the UK for about 7 - 10 months after you leave, but you can still visit on the VWP.
You'll get married, go home. Your husband will file an I-130 petition on your behalf. This will be approved in 4 - 6 months, and you may then apply for a CR-1 visa. The CR-1 visa will allow you to enter the US as a legal permanent resident. You get a temporary green card stamped in your passport upon entry. This is also much much cheaper than adjusting status. First off, you won\t need a lawyer cause it's a relatively easy process. Second, you may work back home and not have to wait 3 months for work authorization. Third, the filing fees themselves are about $400 cheaper than filing for adjustment of status.
The catch? You'll be separated for the next 7 - 10 months. Whatever you decide to do, best of luck!
And my advise, do not venture into trying to adjust status without a lawyer.