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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: England
Timeline

I am filing for AOS. I don't meet the poverty lines so my mother is co-sponsoring. Me and my husband are currently living with my mother to get financially on our feet. What forms does my mom (co-sponsor) file? Should we just go ahead and file:

i-864= me

i-864= mom

i-864a= mom

I've heard stories of how people got RFE's if they don't file all.

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Canada
Timeline

moving to the correct forum section - adjustment of status from family based visa as this is adjustment from a K-1 not from a tourist visa/student/work.

-------------------------------------------- as1cE-a0g410010MjgybHN8MDA5Njk4c3xNYXJyaWVkIGZvcg.gif

Your I-129f was approved in 5 days from your NOA1 date.

Your interview took 67 days from your I-129F NOA1 date.

AOS was approved in 2 months and 8 days without interview.

ROC was approved in 3 months and 2 days without interview.

I am a Citizen of the United States of America. 04/16/13

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Australia
Timeline

I am filing for AOS. I don't meet the poverty lines so my mother is co-sponsoring. Me and my husband are currently living with my mother to get financially on our feet. What forms does my mom (co-sponsor) file? Should we just go ahead and file:

i-864= me

i-864= mom

i-864a= mom

I've heard stories of how people got RFE's if they don't file all.

I-864A for your mother, I-864 for you.

**Edit - Don't forget the evidence of your mothers LPR/USC status, as well as tax returns for you AND your mother.

Edited by Vanessa&Tony
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I would recommend I-864 if she qualifies on her own. If you are a dependent of your mother, then she is not your household member, you are in her household, not the other way around, so household count gets tricky. I have read they might not accept a I-864A from someone who is responsible for the first sponsor, and prefer a I-864.

AOS for my husband
8/17/10: INTERVIEW DAY (day 123) APPROVED!!

ROC:
5/23/12: Sent out package
2/06/13: APPROVED!

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: England
Timeline

haha now im confused all over again! It seems that theres not really a certain answer... hence why i thought about filing both. I'm thinking it may be best just to file a separate i-864 for my mom.

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If she qualifies on her own to be the co-sponsor, then I-864 is the best bet. It's cleaner and easier, all the way around.

AOS for my husband
8/17/10: INTERVIEW DAY (day 123) APPROVED!!

ROC:
5/23/12: Sent out package
2/06/13: APPROVED!

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haha now im confused all over again! It seems that theres not really a certain answer... hence why i thought about filing both. I'm thinking it may be best just to file a separate i-864 for my mom.

I agree with Harpa. Two I-864 forms. There are indeed two ways. Print the I-864 and look at it while you read this, particularly page 4, #24. You need to see the reason for the difference to understand.

Here's the two ways:

  1. I-864 you, I-864 Mom
    You do I-864 and leave p.4 #24 blank (income from household members, ie Mom). Mom does I-864 also, presenting her income. Both send tax return, any other proof of income, and mom's proof of citizenship or greencard.
  2. I-864 you, I-864A Mom
    You do I-864. Because you live in the house with mom, you could add her income to yours on p.4, #24. If you do, then the number on line 24c is the total household income they go by. (you + mom all lumped into one pot on one I-864 form.) Then Mom doesn't do I-864 because her income is on your form. But you can't just use mom's income without her permission. That's where I-864A comes in. She fills out I-864A to give permission and also swear to help the immigrant. Both send tax return, any other proof of income, and mom's proof of citizenship or greencard. You also have to send proof of living at same address (driver's licenses) and that you are closely related (ie, your birth certificate would have Mom's name on it proving relationship).

Edited by Nich-Nick

England.gifENGLAND ---

K-1 Timeline 4 months, 19 days 03-10-08 VSC to 7-29-08 Interview London

10-05-08 Married

AOS Timeline 5 months, 14 days 10-9-08 to 3-23-09 No interview

Removing Conditions Timeline 5 months, 20 days12-27-10 to 06-10-11 No interview

Citizenship Timeline 3 months, 26 days 12-31-11 Dallas to 4-26-12 Interview Houston

05-16-12 Oath ceremony

The journey from Fiancé to US citizenship:

4 years, 2 months, 6 days

243 pages of forms/documents submitted

No RFEs

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  • 11 months later...
 
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