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Post-Visa working outside the US

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline

Hi there, I wanted to know if anyone has any information or experience of working in a foreign country after you have received your visa.

In my particular case, I am working in Canada now pending my CR-1 Visa, but I may continue to work in Canada until my contract expires or until I get an equal or better opportunity in the US. I will most likely just travel back and forth every few weeks or once a month back to my wife in the US. Will this create an issue for me in terms of taxes, immigration etc? I know I will have to report all World Income earned and may be taxed on the difference of what is owing to the IRS if I don't get taxed enough in the foreign country.

I am not quite at the interview process yet but it shouldn't be long and I want to know what your experiences are so I can plan accordingly. Ideally, I would like to find employment in the US that is equivalent to my current position / salary.

Thanks for all your input in advance.

History

12/2000 Met Online

02/14/2001 Started dating

04/20/2001 Met in person

03/2002 Moved in together in the US

2002 - 2007 working in US on TN-1 Visa

05/2005 Registered as Common-law

06/2005 Proposed and Engaged

08/30/2007 - Married

I-130 (156 Days)

02/20/2008 I-130 Filed

03/10/2008 NOA1 - CSC confirmation sent

03/12/2008 date on online tracking - Touched

08/11/2008 - NOA2 - I-130 APPROVED!!! USCIS page updated. (156 Days)

NVC

08/14/2008 - NVC received my application and has assigned me a case number. Waiting for Beneficiary letter.

08/15/2008 - e-mailed the NVC for choice of Agent DS-3032, not sure if I was suppose to do this before actually getting paperwork sent to me.

08/25/2008 - AOS Fee Bill and DS-3032 Generated

08/30/2008 - Letter Recieved

09/02/2008 - AOS Fee Bill Paid and DS-3032 Choice of Agent e-mail sent

09/03/2008 - AOS Fee Bill Recorded as Paid

09/10/2008 - NVC sends DS-3203 Receipt Confirmation

09/10/2008 - IV Fee Bill Available and Paid

09/11/2008 - IV Fee Bill Processed - PAID, Coversheet Generated

09/11/2008 - Following directions on James' Shortcuts for creating DS-230 Package

09/18/2008 - Sent in I-864 and DS-230 (FedEx Overnight)

09/29/2008 - NVC Case Completed!

09/??/???? - Packet never received (sent in with James' Shortcuts as soon as bill was paid)

12/03/2008 - Interview - APPROVED!

12/04/2008 - Visa Received

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Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Philippines
Timeline

You will not have problems, but you might have complexities as it relates to taxes.... In addition, short and even frequent visits outside the US are not problems and might only be complexities when and if you decide to become a citizen

YMMV

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline
You will not have problems, but you might have complexities as it relates to taxes.... In addition, short and even frequent visits outside the US are not problems and might only be complexities when and if you decide to become a citizen

Ok thanks for the info. I'm not intending on working outside of the US indefinitely, but if I cannot find an equivalent job south of the border (in the US of course) I'll continue to work in Canada for up to a year. Since there's no way I can move to the US and be unemployed and taking a job for a lot less doesn't make sense.

History

12/2000 Met Online

02/14/2001 Started dating

04/20/2001 Met in person

03/2002 Moved in together in the US

2002 - 2007 working in US on TN-1 Visa

05/2005 Registered as Common-law

06/2005 Proposed and Engaged

08/30/2007 - Married

I-130 (156 Days)

02/20/2008 I-130 Filed

03/10/2008 NOA1 - CSC confirmation sent

03/12/2008 date on online tracking - Touched

08/11/2008 - NOA2 - I-130 APPROVED!!! USCIS page updated. (156 Days)

NVC

08/14/2008 - NVC received my application and has assigned me a case number. Waiting for Beneficiary letter.

08/15/2008 - e-mailed the NVC for choice of Agent DS-3032, not sure if I was suppose to do this before actually getting paperwork sent to me.

08/25/2008 - AOS Fee Bill and DS-3032 Generated

08/30/2008 - Letter Recieved

09/02/2008 - AOS Fee Bill Paid and DS-3032 Choice of Agent e-mail sent

09/03/2008 - AOS Fee Bill Recorded as Paid

09/10/2008 - NVC sends DS-3203 Receipt Confirmation

09/10/2008 - IV Fee Bill Available and Paid

09/11/2008 - IV Fee Bill Processed - PAID, Coversheet Generated

09/11/2008 - Following directions on James' Shortcuts for creating DS-230 Package

09/18/2008 - Sent in I-864 and DS-230 (FedEx Overnight)

09/29/2008 - NVC Case Completed!

09/??/???? - Packet never received (sent in with James' Shortcuts as soon as bill was paid)

12/03/2008 - Interview - APPROVED!

12/04/2008 - Visa Received

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Russia
Timeline
You will not have problems, but you might have complexities as it relates to taxes.... In addition, short and even frequent visits outside the US are not problems and might only be complexities when and if you decide to become a citizen

Ok thanks for the info. I'm not intending on working outside of the US indefinitely, but if I cannot find an equivalent job south of the border (in the US of course) I'll continue to work in Canada for up to a year. Since there's no way I can move to the US and be unemployed and taking a job for a lot less doesn't make sense.

If you are planning to apply for US citizenship you will have some difficulties, as they require total count and exact dates outside the US to be on the application. Also there is a total days residence requirement. I do not remember anymore, but you should look into this.

Marriage : 2001-09-26

CSC:

I-130 Sent : 2008-03-01

I-130 NOA1 : 2008-03-12

I-130 Approved : 2008-07-24

NVC:

NVC Received: 2008-07-30

DS-3032 and AOS bill generated: 2008-08-04

DS-3032 e-mailed (with autoreply): 2008-08-05

AOS fee paid online: 2008-08-06

AOS fee received in AVR and online: 2008-08-07

DS-3032 accepted with e-mail notice: 2008-08-15

IV fee bill paid online: 2008-08-16

IV fee bill generated in AVR: 2008-08-18

IV fee bill Accepted (PAID online): 2008-08-19

I-864 Express Mailed: 2008-08-19

IV fee and 864 received at NVC, called to confirm: 2008-08-22

DS-230 Express Mailed to NVC: 2008-08-25

RFE issued (864): 2008-09-2, sent correction: 2008-09-03

RFE Checklist received: 2008-09-08

Case Complete: 2008-09-16

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline
You will not have problems, but you might have complexities as it relates to taxes.... In addition, short and even frequent visits outside the US are not problems and might only be complexities when and if you decide to become a citizen

Ok thanks for the info. I'm not intending on working outside of the US indefinitely, but if I cannot find an equivalent job south of the border (in the US of course) I'll continue to work in Canada for up to a year. Since there's no way I can move to the US and be unemployed and taking a job for a lot less doesn't make sense.

If you are planning to apply for US citizenship you will have some difficulties, as they require total count and exact dates outside the US to be on the application. Also there is a total days residence requirement. I do not remember anymore, but you should look into this.

Will this be an issue if I am only going to be working outside of the US for the first several months, up to possibly a year? I would of course be traveling to and from the US during this time. Not on a daily basis but I would expect to travel several times a month.

History

12/2000 Met Online

02/14/2001 Started dating

04/20/2001 Met in person

03/2002 Moved in together in the US

2002 - 2007 working in US on TN-1 Visa

05/2005 Registered as Common-law

06/2005 Proposed and Engaged

08/30/2007 - Married

I-130 (156 Days)

02/20/2008 I-130 Filed

03/10/2008 NOA1 - CSC confirmation sent

03/12/2008 date on online tracking - Touched

08/11/2008 - NOA2 - I-130 APPROVED!!! USCIS page updated. (156 Days)

NVC

08/14/2008 - NVC received my application and has assigned me a case number. Waiting for Beneficiary letter.

08/15/2008 - e-mailed the NVC for choice of Agent DS-3032, not sure if I was suppose to do this before actually getting paperwork sent to me.

08/25/2008 - AOS Fee Bill and DS-3032 Generated

08/30/2008 - Letter Recieved

09/02/2008 - AOS Fee Bill Paid and DS-3032 Choice of Agent e-mail sent

09/03/2008 - AOS Fee Bill Recorded as Paid

09/10/2008 - NVC sends DS-3203 Receipt Confirmation

09/10/2008 - IV Fee Bill Available and Paid

09/11/2008 - IV Fee Bill Processed - PAID, Coversheet Generated

09/11/2008 - Following directions on James' Shortcuts for creating DS-230 Package

09/18/2008 - Sent in I-864 and DS-230 (FedEx Overnight)

09/29/2008 - NVC Case Completed!

09/??/???? - Packet never received (sent in with James' Shortcuts as soon as bill was paid)

12/03/2008 - Interview - APPROVED!

12/04/2008 - Visa Received

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Russia
Timeline
You will not have problems, but you might have complexities as it relates to taxes.... In addition, short and even frequent visits outside the US are not problems and might only be complexities when and if you decide to become a citizen

Ok thanks for the info. I'm not intending on working outside of the US indefinitely, but if I cannot find an equivalent job south of the border (in the US of course) I'll continue to work in Canada for up to a year. Since there's no way I can move to the US and be unemployed and taking a job for a lot less doesn't make sense.

If you are planning to apply for US citizenship you will have some difficulties, as they require total count and exact dates outside the US to be on the application. Also there is a total days residence requirement. I do not remember anymore, but you should look into this.

Will this be an issue if I am only going to be working outside of the US for the first several months, up to possibly a year? I would of course be traveling to and from the US during this time. Not on a daily basis but I would expect to travel several times a month.

You should look for and read the N-400 instructions and "Naturalization Guide", I do not remember exact requirements. Working outside the US by itself is not a problem, but he total days outside US is what they will be looking for. I think you can not be out of the country for over 6 months while on green card, but also there is a cumulative days out requirement. When you will be filing N-400 citizenship, you will have to list ALL dates out of the country for the last 3 or 5 years.. So they do add them up, and ask again right before the oath to provide them with dates out if any additional travel took place. Just look into the N-400 guides.

Marriage : 2001-09-26

CSC:

I-130 Sent : 2008-03-01

I-130 NOA1 : 2008-03-12

I-130 Approved : 2008-07-24

NVC:

NVC Received: 2008-07-30

DS-3032 and AOS bill generated: 2008-08-04

DS-3032 e-mailed (with autoreply): 2008-08-05

AOS fee paid online: 2008-08-06

AOS fee received in AVR and online: 2008-08-07

DS-3032 accepted with e-mail notice: 2008-08-15

IV fee bill paid online: 2008-08-16

IV fee bill generated in AVR: 2008-08-18

IV fee bill Accepted (PAID online): 2008-08-19

I-864 Express Mailed: 2008-08-19

IV fee and 864 received at NVC, called to confirm: 2008-08-22

DS-230 Express Mailed to NVC: 2008-08-25

RFE issued (864): 2008-09-2, sent correction: 2008-09-03

RFE Checklist received: 2008-09-08

Case Complete: 2008-09-16

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline
You will not have problems, but you might have complexities as it relates to taxes.... In addition, short and even frequent visits outside the US are not problems and might only be complexities when and if you decide to become a citizen

Ok thanks for the info. I'm not intending on working outside of the US indefinitely, but if I cannot find an equivalent job south of the border (in the US of course) I'll continue to work in Canada for up to a year. Since there's no way I can move to the US and be unemployed and taking a job for a lot less doesn't make sense.

If you are planning to apply for US citizenship you will have some difficulties, as they require total count and exact dates outside the US to be on the application. Also there is a total days residence requirement. I do not remember anymore, but you should look into this.

Will this be an issue if I am only going to be working outside of the US for the first several months, up to possibly a year? I would of course be traveling to and from the US during this time. Not on a daily basis but I would expect to travel several times a month.

You should look for and read the N-400 instructions and "Naturalization Guide", I do not remember exact requirements. Working outside the US by itself is not a problem, but he total days outside US is what they will be looking for. I think you can not be out of the country for over 6 months while on green card, but also there is a cumulative days out requirement. When you will be filing N-400 citizenship, you will have to list ALL dates out of the country for the last 3 or 5 years.. So they do add them up, and ask again right before the oath to provide them with dates out if any additional travel took place. Just look into the N-400 guides.

Ok thanks for the info and the reference. I'll look to see what I can find. It takes 10 years of permanent residency to get citizenship though right? So since this will be the first 2 year process before I switch to the actual permanent resident status is there any other "gotchas" you can recall seeing. I don't foresee myself being out of the US for 6 month long stretches, it will most likely be 2-3 week stretches, I just don't want them to all add up to bite me in the butt in the end. And it will be a temporary condition until I can get a job or contract in the US, but if I get the visa in Nov-Jan timeframe it's going to be hard to find a new job around the holiday season. And I just can't afford to be without work.

History

12/2000 Met Online

02/14/2001 Started dating

04/20/2001 Met in person

03/2002 Moved in together in the US

2002 - 2007 working in US on TN-1 Visa

05/2005 Registered as Common-law

06/2005 Proposed and Engaged

08/30/2007 - Married

I-130 (156 Days)

02/20/2008 I-130 Filed

03/10/2008 NOA1 - CSC confirmation sent

03/12/2008 date on online tracking - Touched

08/11/2008 - NOA2 - I-130 APPROVED!!! USCIS page updated. (156 Days)

NVC

08/14/2008 - NVC received my application and has assigned me a case number. Waiting for Beneficiary letter.

08/15/2008 - e-mailed the NVC for choice of Agent DS-3032, not sure if I was suppose to do this before actually getting paperwork sent to me.

08/25/2008 - AOS Fee Bill and DS-3032 Generated

08/30/2008 - Letter Recieved

09/02/2008 - AOS Fee Bill Paid and DS-3032 Choice of Agent e-mail sent

09/03/2008 - AOS Fee Bill Recorded as Paid

09/10/2008 - NVC sends DS-3203 Receipt Confirmation

09/10/2008 - IV Fee Bill Available and Paid

09/11/2008 - IV Fee Bill Processed - PAID, Coversheet Generated

09/11/2008 - Following directions on James' Shortcuts for creating DS-230 Package

09/18/2008 - Sent in I-864 and DS-230 (FedEx Overnight)

09/29/2008 - NVC Case Completed!

09/??/???? - Packet never received (sent in with James' Shortcuts as soon as bill was paid)

12/03/2008 - Interview - APPROVED!

12/04/2008 - Visa Received

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Share on other sites

You will not have problems, but you might have complexities as it relates to taxes.... In addition, short and even frequent visits outside the US are not problems and might only be complexities when and if you decide to become a citizen

Ok thanks for the info. I'm not intending on working outside of the US indefinitely, but if I cannot find an equivalent job south of the border (in the US of course) I'll continue to work in Canada for up to a year. Since there's no way I can move to the US and be unemployed and taking a job for a lot less doesn't make sense.

If you are planning to apply for US citizenship you will have some difficulties, as they require total count and exact dates outside the US to be on the application. Also there is a total days residence requirement. I do not remember anymore, but you should look into this.

Will this be an issue if I am only going to be working outside of the US for the first several months, up to possibly a year? I would of course be traveling to and from the US during this time. Not on a daily basis but I would expect to travel several times a month.

You should look for and read the N-400 instructions and "Naturalization Guide", I do not remember exact requirements. Working outside the US by itself is not a problem, but he total days outside US is what they will be looking for. I think you can not be out of the country for over 6 months while on green card, but also there is a cumulative days out requirement. When you will be filing N-400 citizenship, you will have to list ALL dates out of the country for the last 3 or 5 years.. So they do add them up, and ask again right before the oath to provide them with dates out if any additional travel took place. Just look into the N-400 guides.

Ok thanks for the info and the reference. I'll look to see what I can find. It takes 10 years of permanent residency to get citizenship though right? So since this will be the first 2 year process before I switch to the actual permanent resident status is there any other "gotchas" you can recall seeing. I don't foresee myself being out of the US for 6 month long stretches, it will most likely be 2-3 week stretches, I just don't want them to all add up to bite me in the butt in the end. And it will be a temporary condition until I can get a job or contract in the US, but if I get the visa in Nov-Jan timeframe it's going to be hard to find a new job around the holiday season. And I just can't afford to be without work.

Spouses of American citizens can apply for citizenship 2 years and 9 months after initial receipt of the green card, provided enough days are spent here. If I were you I would keep a log and a running tally of days you are in the US versus Canada. It will make figuring out where you stand easier later on.

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline
Spouses of American citizens can apply for citizenship 2 years and 9 months after initial receipt of the green card, provided enough days are spent here. If I were you I would keep a log and a running tally of days you are in the US versus Canada. It will make figuring out where you stand easier later on.

Ok I'll keep that in mind. Thanks for the advice.

History

12/2000 Met Online

02/14/2001 Started dating

04/20/2001 Met in person

03/2002 Moved in together in the US

2002 - 2007 working in US on TN-1 Visa

05/2005 Registered as Common-law

06/2005 Proposed and Engaged

08/30/2007 - Married

I-130 (156 Days)

02/20/2008 I-130 Filed

03/10/2008 NOA1 - CSC confirmation sent

03/12/2008 date on online tracking - Touched

08/11/2008 - NOA2 - I-130 APPROVED!!! USCIS page updated. (156 Days)

NVC

08/14/2008 - NVC received my application and has assigned me a case number. Waiting for Beneficiary letter.

08/15/2008 - e-mailed the NVC for choice of Agent DS-3032, not sure if I was suppose to do this before actually getting paperwork sent to me.

08/25/2008 - AOS Fee Bill and DS-3032 Generated

08/30/2008 - Letter Recieved

09/02/2008 - AOS Fee Bill Paid and DS-3032 Choice of Agent e-mail sent

09/03/2008 - AOS Fee Bill Recorded as Paid

09/10/2008 - NVC sends DS-3203 Receipt Confirmation

09/10/2008 - IV Fee Bill Available and Paid

09/11/2008 - IV Fee Bill Processed - PAID, Coversheet Generated

09/11/2008 - Following directions on James' Shortcuts for creating DS-230 Package

09/18/2008 - Sent in I-864 and DS-230 (FedEx Overnight)

09/29/2008 - NVC Case Completed!

09/??/???? - Packet never received (sent in with James' Shortcuts as soon as bill was paid)

12/03/2008 - Interview - APPROVED!

12/04/2008 - Visa Received

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