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Filed: Country: Philippines
Timeline
Posted

My fiance and I want to get married in the Philippines because of our family there. However, I've heard from a friend that it can take 2-3 years before my fiance will be able to move here (USA). I've been looking at the processing times and I saw it was an average of 171 days, but I'd like to know from your guys experience currently how your petitions have been coming along..are they being processed fairly quick? Could it really take 2-3 years? My husband and I are planning on getting married April-May..and I'm hoping to send in the petition by May-June..

Baring any problems, which hopefully we won't have any..what is the timeline I should expect? For any of you guys that have used the I-130 recently, please help..thank you guys in advance! :)

Posted

Hard to say at this point. Most people from last year are still waiting to get through the USCIS step. If you want to be together quickly, the K1 route is best at the moment. Could you get married in the US, wait until you get your green card, and then go have a party back with your family?

3/25/2006 - Got Married

3/20/2013 - I130 Priority Date
11/6/2013 - Transferred to Nebraska
1/3/2014 - NOA2
1/6/2014 - Petition shipped to NVC
1/21/2014 - NVC Received
2/24/2014 - Case # & IIN
3/3/2014 - DS-261 Available and Submitted
3/4/2014 - AOS Fee Available and Submitted
3/5/2014 - AOS Fee Paid
3/6/2014 - Received AOS Coversheet and Payment Receipt
3/7/2014 - AOS Package Sent
3/10/2014 - NVC Receives AOS package
3/12/2014 - NVC Acknowledges receipt of AOS package
3/21/2014 - Triangle of Doom appears for IV package
3/24/2014 - IV Fee Available and Submitted
3/25/2014 - IV package overnighted to the NVC
3/26/2014 - IV Fee shows PAID
3/26/2014 - DS260 available & submitted
3/26/2014 - IV package delivered to NVC
3/26/2014 - False checklist for IV fee.
3/26/2014 - AOS documents accepted w/no checklists!
3/28/2014 - IV & DS260 logged into NVC System
4/10/2014 - Case Complete!

Interview Date: June 17, 2014

Approved at Interview!

POE Newark on 6/28/2014! He's finally home!

Got a pending I-130? Tired of waiting for something to happen? Let's make something happen: http://www.visajourn...ners-committee/

We need more Twitter followers:@USCI130Cmte

Join our Facebook Group! https://www.facebook.com/groups/USGreencardpetitionerscommittee/

Filed: Country: Philippines
Timeline
Posted

Hard to say at this point. Most people from last year are still waiting to get through the USCIS step. If you want to be together quickly, the K1 route is best at the moment. Could you get married in the US, wait until you get your green card, and then go have a party back with your family?

Thanks for the response!

I forgot to mention that part.. I will need to use a cosponsor and because of this we thought I-130 is the way to go.. I've read that the chances of being approved for K1 in the Philippines are slim if we use a cosponsor.. unsure.png

Posted

Thanks for the response!

I forgot to mention that part.. I will need to use a cosponsor and because of this we thought I-130 is the way to go.. I've read that the chances of being approved for K1 in the Philippines are slim if we use a cosponsor.. unsure.png

I think I've read as much as well.

In theory, the USCIS is saying that they'll have the processing times down to 5 months by May of this year. However, based on the way they appear to be approving cases, it's almost impossible to tell whether or not that will happen. (Personally, I'm extremely doubtful.) And that's just an average. You might get lucky, and get processed very quickly. You also may be waiting much longer than 5 months for a CR1 visa. We just don't know what's going to happen in between now and May. If they pick up the adjudication rates, then you still have to wait for the majority of the present backlog to get processed before it'll be your turn. Unless, you just get randomly selected to be processed quickly.

3/25/2006 - Got Married

3/20/2013 - I130 Priority Date
11/6/2013 - Transferred to Nebraska
1/3/2014 - NOA2
1/6/2014 - Petition shipped to NVC
1/21/2014 - NVC Received
2/24/2014 - Case # & IIN
3/3/2014 - DS-261 Available and Submitted
3/4/2014 - AOS Fee Available and Submitted
3/5/2014 - AOS Fee Paid
3/6/2014 - Received AOS Coversheet and Payment Receipt
3/7/2014 - AOS Package Sent
3/10/2014 - NVC Receives AOS package
3/12/2014 - NVC Acknowledges receipt of AOS package
3/21/2014 - Triangle of Doom appears for IV package
3/24/2014 - IV Fee Available and Submitted
3/25/2014 - IV package overnighted to the NVC
3/26/2014 - IV Fee shows PAID
3/26/2014 - DS260 available & submitted
3/26/2014 - IV package delivered to NVC
3/26/2014 - False checklist for IV fee.
3/26/2014 - AOS documents accepted w/no checklists!
3/28/2014 - IV & DS260 logged into NVC System
4/10/2014 - Case Complete!

Interview Date: June 17, 2014

Approved at Interview!

POE Newark on 6/28/2014! He's finally home!

Got a pending I-130? Tired of waiting for something to happen? Let's make something happen: http://www.visajourn...ners-committee/

We need more Twitter followers:@USCI130Cmte

Join our Facebook Group! https://www.facebook.com/groups/USGreencardpetitionerscommittee/

Posted

Before we filed i129f but suddenly my fiance decided to marry me so my husband cancelled the first application.

we got married last may2013 and aug2013 file a i130.lucky us just almost 4months we got approved and now waiting for manila case number.

USCIS STAGE:

August 17, 2013 - I-130 sent

August 22, 2013 - noa1

November 22, 2013 - tranferred to TSC

December 16, 2013 - approved

December 19, 2013 - noa2 hardcopy

January 09, 2014 - shipped to NVC

NVC STAGE:

January 17, 2014 - case received

February 24, 2014 - case number received

February 25, 2014 - IIN and BIN received

March 01, 2014 - ds 261 completed

March 05, 2014 - aos invoice and paid (in process)

March 07, 2014 - aos shows paid

March 22, 2014 - iv bill paid (in process)

March 25, 2014 - iv bill shows paid

March 25, 2014 - ds260 completed

March 26,2014 - iv package send to nvc

March 31, 2014 - iv package arrived at NVC 12:05pm (Gary S. Peters - signatory)

April 01, 2014 - aos send (certified mail)

April 03, 2014 - iv docs logged into the system (according to olivia)

April 05, 2014 - aos arrived at nvc but business closed. waiting them (usps) to redeliver it on Monday.

April 07, 2014 - aos finally arrived at NVC 11:50am

April 09, 2014 - aos logged into the the system (according to olivia)

April 24, 2014 - aos checklist (thru phone call)

April 25, 2014 - aos checklist email received

April 29, 2014 - checklist responce

May 02, 2014 - arrived at nvc signed by B. Standish

May 05, 2014 - checklist responce log into the system

May 28, 2014 - CASE COMPLETE .. Thank God

June 04, 2014 - received email (case complete)

June 09-10, 2014 - done advance medical

June 11, 2014 - interview schedule (email received)

July 02, 2014 - interview (APPROVED) Thank you Lord;)

Posted

I will need to use a cosponsor and because of this we thought I-130 is the way to go.. I've read that the chances of being approved for K1 in the Philippines are slim if we use a cosponsor.. unsure.png

^^^. You are correct.

Posted

It may take 2-3 years for those green card holders but not if you're a U.S citizen which is normally just 1 year. Sometimes even just 8 months if you are well prepared and ready and some also take 1 1/2 years because of some RFE(request for evidence) that they received from USCIS or NVC.

Posted

Unfortunately there's not one good answer to how long the wait is. I truely understand your desire to get married as soon as you can, esp there with your family. We studied all of the options for almost two years; I studied the USCIS website (throughly), I purchased immigration hand books from book stores and studied them, and we consulted with three different Immigration attys (free) to make sure everything I was undertanding from all resources was pointing me in the correct direction. The options were:

Visa Waiver Program: come over as a visitor and leave within 90days. that's it, plain and simple. you cannot adjust status from the VWP to any other visa type...not ever. If you were able to come on the VWP and attempted to get married here, you would need to leave the US when your waiver visa expired in 90 days or suffer the consequences later when you are discovered.....meaning at some point you'll attempt to file for permanancy and they'd boot you out of here and very likely you would not be able to re-enter the US for several years. Unfortunately as you might already know, the PI is not part of the US's VWP so travel to/from the PI to the US for vacations while you're waiting for ANY of the visa types to be processed is not applicable.

Anyone from the PI wanting to come to the US for any reason, cannot just come here without actually applying for and being granted a visa...even if just for travel. There in lies the problem Once you start ANY visa process for your spouse to come to the US, you cannot apply for any other type of visa (esp from the PI...there are other countries in the same situation so it's not just the PI...wanted to make sure you know you're not singled out by yourself!). The USCIS site doesnt say you CAN'T apply for any other visa type while you're waiting for your petition to be approved, but everything I've read pretty much says that it VERY VERY likely will throw a flag on the play and cause delays (from one direction or the other) and they VERY VERY likely would deny a travel visa knowing you are already attempting to come to the US.

But.... if you were able to get a "travel visa" to the US, which you would have to wait in line for because, well, you would otherwise have no other (legal) attachment to anyone in the US, that wait time can be over TWO YEARS...that is where the lottery and priority #'s come in to play. People in the PI who are trying to come to the US on their own, in any capacity, are in very very long lines. AND if you were approved for a travel visa, you would have to attend a visa interview with the consulate in Manila and PROVE to them that you were not intending to try to stay in the US. Just wanted to put this out there so you understand why this isn't a viable solution....just in case you might be thinking through this.

Remember this always: The US Govt believes that EVERY non-USC who comes here on vacation or for any other reason, intends to stay, so their responsibility in this game on behalf of the Dept of Homeland Security is to scrutinize absolutely everything to ensure you are not going to either come here as a "marriage of convenience just to get here" nor as a threat to the US. That's pretty much it....but it's a VERY LARGE "IT" and takes time for them to get through all of your documentation, etc.

K1 Fiance visa's (out of the PI) are processing rather quickly for some apparent reason....we initially thought that would be an option for us to just not get married (in Japan where he's living), and just bring him over as my Fiance, get him here, get married here and start the whole process here. However, you still have to do all the same paperwork (including the I-130 petition) and wait that out before you can even get over here on a K1. I-130 petitions apply to everyone (whos doing this legally). So you're wait time for approval of the I-130 for a K1 would clearly be shorter....for the moment....but you would have to wait to be married here, you would still have to do all the prep work from there (interviews, medical exams, etc) and provide all the same documentation (police certificates, NSO birth certs, etc.....and the PI's document collection is PAINFUL).

K3 visas were created with the intent of allowing you to bring your spouse over early while waiting for the I-130/CR1 to be processed. This would have been the best of all worlds. Granted it would have forced all the paperwork and fees to be paid from the US and would cost well over $3k to the end, but hey, to get your spouse over early would clearly outweigh having to pay the extra costs. I did this....we filed our I-130 for a CR-1 then filed the I-129F/K3 visa a month later (when I first realized the wait times had gone over the top). Unfortunately, even tho the govt will not tell you this because they have to make this option available...by law...they aren't processing K3's......they will approve your 129F application and give it a case # and send you all the documents saying they have it and they'll even (half way approve it), but they will join it with the I-130 petition and they'll be adjudicated together; and the K3 will be canceled.

We filed our I-130 petition on 6/25/13. It was sent from the Phoenix Lockbox directly to the NBC in Missouri. It sat there in "the pile" until Nov 27 when our case was transferred to the California Service Center (same time MANY were being transferred out of the NBC). Our I-130 (and the 129F) were both approved on 12/7/13 and transferred to the NVC in New Hampshire. it was checked in at the NVC this past Monday, 1/6. By Weds we had already received the first notices for online processing of the I-864 fees and notice that we have "officially started the visa processing" process. Thank God!

Once you're at the NVC and they assign their case # (which is your consular processing #), it rocks from there and becomes a turnaround of paper between you and them. it's all about how prepared you are and how much information they do or do not need from you and how cuickly you can make it happen on your end.

From a PI planning perspective.....you will without a doubt have to have NSO (red ribbon) certificates for birth, death, divorce, etc as they apply to you. They don't just notarize....everything is translated and has an attached official "red ribbon" certificate attached to it.....just a PI thing....pay very close attention to the bottom of all NSO/DFA certificates....there is an expiration date on them...if they expire while you're in process, the turn around time to get them reissued and returned is not short. Police Certificates from the PI are actually NBI cerificates (which expire in a year so don't be too anxious to get ahead on those). Read the USCIS website for everything you need for NVC processing....you will greatly benefit from being as prepared as you can be from the outset. The more you do in advance, the more prepared and educated you are, the easier this will be for you.

So...your question.....how long it will take for just your I-130 to be approved? As of this month, right now, you are looking at easily 6-14mths, 60% dependent on the documentation you send them and their need to verify your legitimacy (40% based on the line ahead of you). After the I-130 is approved, you have another 2-6 mths to get through the visa application processing, consulate interviews, fee payments, medical exams, etc.

ALL of that being said and me sounding to be a Negative Ned.....a year in any of our lives is too long. it's painful and gruelling and disappointing and madening. But it's gone by pretty quickly (for us anyway). There is so much to do to get through the paperwork process that will make you busy. But someone on VJ gave really good advice.....don't watch VJ every day, don't pay very close attention to what's happening with everyone else because everyone's case is different, there are no "trends", and spend your time preparing for your spouse to come to the US to make everything as easy and comfortable as possible; the transition is challenging; keep your focus on the light at the end....that being your spouse and your life together. It will happen.

(unless the govt has some reason to believe your spouse (if married) is a threat to the US, they MUST issue a visa....regardless of how long that might take....there is no prioritization or lottery for legal "immediate family" members).

Good luck to you....you are way welcome to stay in touch with me if you'd like....not that I KNOW anything, but I could easily write a layman's handbook at this point.....but we all could....and you will too!

God bless

Posted

sorry... a couple of other notes for you.....if you get married in the PI, BEFORE your US spouse comes back to the US, you MUST get all documents translated and notarized. The US Consulate will do this for you. With your petition you will need (photo copies only) of all legal documents FOR BOTH OF YOU. when you get to the NVC processing leg of this, they will request (all) these legal documents again, but they will want either originals or certified copies of the originals (note your birth certificate MUST show your parent's names, dobs, addresses, etc and that that document is an exact replica of the original on file with the PI Govt). ALL of these orginal/certified documents go to the NVC....they gather everything together...then they send them back to the US Consulate in Manila. Goofy, right? yeah, i think so too. Just make sure before you seperate that you both have the same documents....original/certified copies for both of you....and copies of all of those documents. Don't leave anything out of your files.

then.....create a file for each of you with folders for original documents, visa application documents, notes for every time you communicate with the government, etc. STAY ORGANIZED so when the visa interview time comes, you have everything you need and you don't lose or misplace anything.

that's all I've got! this is easy! hah!

Filed: F-2A Visa Country: Philippines
Timeline
Posted

My fiance and I want to get married in the Philippines because of our family there. However, I've heard from a friend that it can take 2-3 years before my fiance will be able to move here (USA). I've been looking at the processing times and I saw it was an average of 171 days, but I'd like to know from your guys experience currently how your petitions have been coming along..are they being processed fairly quick? Could it really take 2-3 years? My husband and I are planning on getting married April-May..and I'm hoping to send in the petition by May-June..

Baring any problems, which hopefully we won't have any..what is the timeline I should expect? For any of you guys that have used the I-130 recently, please help..thank you guys in advance! smile.png

For spouses of US citizens, it will take more or less a year before your spouse can immigrate. good.gif (This is your route!)

For spouses of LPR/green card holders, it will take a year or more depending on the movement of priority dates on the visa bulletin.

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Jordan
Timeline
Posted

Unfortunately there's not one good answer to how long the wait is. I truely understand your desire to get married as soon as you can, esp there with your family. We studied all of the options for almost two years; I studied the USCIS website (throughly), I purchased immigration hand books from book stores and studied them, and we consulted with three different Immigration attys (free) to make sure everything I was undertanding from all resources was pointing me in the correct direction. The options were:

Visa Waiver Program: come over as a visitor and leave within 90days. that's it, plain and simple. you cannot adjust status from the VWP to any other visa type...not ever. If you were able to come on the VWP and attempted to get married here, you would need to leave the US when your waiver visa expired in 90 days or suffer the consequences later when you are discovered.....meaning at some point you'll attempt to file for permanancy and they'd boot you out of here and very likely you would not be able to re-enter the US for several years. Unfortunately as you might already know, the PI is not part of the US's VWP so travel to/from the PI to the US for vacations while you're waiting for ANY of the visa types to be processed is not applicable.

Anyone from the PI wanting to come to the US for any reason, cannot just come here without actually applying for and being granted a visa...even if just for travel. There in lies the problem Once you start ANY visa process for your spouse to come to the US, you cannot apply for any other type of visa (esp from the PI...there are other countries in the same situation so it's not just the PI...wanted to make sure you know you're not singled out by yourself!). The USCIS site doesnt say you CAN'T apply for any other visa type while you're waiting for your petition to be approved, but everything I've read pretty much says that it VERY VERY likely will throw a flag on the play and cause delays (from one direction or the other) and they VERY VERY likely would deny a travel visa knowing you are already attempting to come to the US.

But.... if you were able to get a "travel visa" to the US, which you would have to wait in line for because, well, you would otherwise have no other (legal) attachment to anyone in the US, that wait time can be over TWO YEARS...that is where the lottery and priority #'s come in to play. People in the PI who are trying to come to the US on their own, in any capacity, are in very very long lines. AND if you were approved for a travel visa, you would have to attend a visa interview with the consulate in Manila and PROVE to them that you were not intending to try to stay in the US. Just wanted to put this out there so you understand why this isn't a viable solution....just in case you might be thinking through this.

Remember this always: The US Govt believes that EVERY non-USC who comes here on vacation or for any other reason, intends to stay, so their responsibility in this game on behalf of the Dept of Homeland Security is to scrutinize absolutely everything to ensure you are not going to either come here as a "marriage of convenience just to get here" nor as a threat to the US. That's pretty much it....but it's a VERY LARGE "IT" and takes time for them to get through all of your documentation, etc.

K1 Fiance visa's (out of the PI) are processing rather quickly for some apparent reason....we initially thought that would be an option for us to just not get married (in Japan where he's living), and just bring him over as my Fiance, get him here, get married here and start the whole process here. However, you still have to do all the same paperwork (including the I-130 petition) and wait that out before you can even get over here on a K1. I-130 petitions apply to everyone (whos doing this legally). So you're wait time for approval of the I-130 for a K1 would clearly be shorter....for the moment....but you would have to wait to be married here, you would still have to do all the prep work from there (interviews, medical exams, etc) and provide all the same documentation (police certificates, NSO birth certs, etc.....and the PI's document collection is PAINFUL).

K3 visas were created with the intent of allowing you to bring your spouse over early while waiting for the I-130/CR1 to be processed. This would have been the best of all worlds. Granted it would have forced all the paperwork and fees to be paid from the US and would cost well over $3k to the end, but hey, to get your spouse over early would clearly outweigh having to pay the extra costs. I did this....we filed our I-130 for a CR-1 then filed the I-129F/K3 visa a month later (when I first realized the wait times had gone over the top). Unfortunately, even tho the govt will not tell you this because they have to make this option available...by law...they aren't processing K3's......they will approve your 129F application and give it a case # and send you all the documents saying they have it and they'll even (half way approve it), but they will join it with the I-130 petition and they'll be adjudicated together; and the K3 will be canceled.

We filed our I-130 petition on 6/25/13. It was sent from the Phoenix Lockbox directly to the NBC in Missouri. It sat there in "the pile" until Nov 27 when our case was transferred to the California Service Center (same time MANY were being transferred out of the NBC). Our I-130 (and the 129F) were both approved on 12/7/13 and transferred to the NVC in New Hampshire. it was checked in at the NVC this past Monday, 1/6. By Weds we had already received the first notices for online processing of the I-864 fees and notice that we have "officially started the visa processing" process. Thank God!

Once you're at the NVC and they assign their case # (which is your consular processing #), it rocks from there and becomes a turnaround of paper between you and them. it's all about how prepared you are and how much information they do or do not need from you and how cuickly you can make it happen on your end.

From a PI planning perspective.....you will without a doubt have to have NSO (red ribbon) certificates for birth, death, divorce, etc as they apply to you. They don't just notarize....everything is translated and has an attached official "red ribbon" certificate attached to it.....just a PI thing....pay very close attention to the bottom of all NSO/DFA certificates....there is an expiration date on them...if they expire while you're in process, the turn around time to get them reissued and returned is not short. Police Certificates from the PI are actually NBI cerificates (which expire in a year so don't be too anxious to get ahead on those). Read the USCIS website for everything you need for NVC processing....you will greatly benefit from being as prepared as you can be from the outset. The more you do in advance, the more prepared and educated you are, the easier this will be for you.

So...your question.....how long it will take for just your I-130 to be approved? As of this month, right now, you are looking at easily 6-14mths, 60% dependent on the documentation you send them and their need to verify your legitimacy (40% based on the line ahead of you). After the I-130 is approved, you have another 2-6 mths to get through the visa application processing, consulate interviews, fee payments, medical exams, etc.

ALL of that being said and me sounding to be a Negative Ned.....a year in any of our lives is too long. it's painful and gruelling and disappointing and madening. But it's gone by pretty quickly (for us anyway). There is so much to do to get through the paperwork process that will make you busy. But someone on VJ gave really good advice.....don't watch VJ every day, don't pay very close attention to what's happening with everyone else because everyone's case is different, there are no "trends", and spend your time preparing for your spouse to come to the US to make everything as easy and comfortable as possible; the transition is challenging; keep your focus on the light at the end....that being your spouse and your life together. It will happen.

(unless the govt has some reason to believe your spouse (if married) is a threat to the US, they MUST issue a visa....regardless of how long that might take....there is no prioritization or lottery for legal "immediate family" members).

Good luck to you....you are way welcome to stay in touch with me if you'd like....not that I KNOW anything, but I could easily write a layman's handbook at this point.....but we all could....and you will too!

God bless

if the petitioner is a US citizen it's about a year. If she is an LPR the wait is about 2-3 years. She hasnt told us if she is a citizen or not. but if she is an LPR she she is being realistic in her estimate

My fiance and I want to get married in the Philippines because of our family there. However, I've heard from a friend that it can take 2-3 years before my fiance will be able to move here (USA). I've been looking at the processing times and I saw it was an average of 171 days, but I'd like to know from your guys experience currently how your petitions have been coming along..are they being processed fairly quick? Could it really take 2-3 years? My husband and I are planning on getting married April-May..and I'm hoping to send in the petition by May-June..

Baring any problems, which hopefully we won't have any..what is the timeline I should expect? For any of you guys that have used the I-130 recently, please help..thank you guys in advance! smile.png

you are planning to marry your husband in april/may? dont you mean your fiance? huh.png


Filed: Timeline
Posted

if the petitioner is a US citizen it's about a year. If she is an LPR the wait is about 2-3 years. She hasnt told us if she is a citizen or not. but if she is an LPR she she is being realistic in her estimate

you are planning to marry your husband in april/may? dont you mean your fiance? huh.png

Wondering same...

Filed: Country: Philippines
Timeline
Posted

For spouses of US citizens, it will take more or less a year before your spouse can immigrate. :thumbs: (This is your route!)

For spouses of LPR/green card holders, it will take a year or more depending on the movement of priority dates on the visa bulletin.

if the petitioner is a US citizen it's about a year. If she is an LPR the wait is about 2-3 years. She hasnt told us if she is a citizen or not. but if she is an LPR she she is being realistic in her estimate

you are planning to marry your husband in april/may? dont you mean your fiance? :huh:

Wondering same...

I am a US Citizen.. sorry, I meant I will marry my fiance this April-May..

Filed: Country: Philippines
Timeline
Posted

Unfortunately there's not one good answer to how long the wait is. I truely understand your desire to get married as soon as you can, esp there with your family. We studied all of the options for almost two years; I studied the USCIS website (throughly), I purchased immigration hand books from book stores and studied them, and we consulted with three different Immigration attys (free) to make sure everything I was undertanding from all resources was pointing me in the correct direction. The options were:

Visa Waiver Program: come over as a visitor and leave within 90days. that's it, plain and simple. you cannot adjust status from the VWP to any other visa type...not ever. If you were able to come on the VWP and attempted to get married here, you would need to leave the US when your waiver visa expired in 90 days or suffer the consequences later when you are discovered.....meaning at some point you'll attempt to file for permanancy and they'd boot you out of here and very likely you would not be able to re-enter the US for several years. Unfortunately as you might already know, the PI is not part of the US's VWP so travel to/from the PI to the US for vacations while you're waiting for ANY of the visa types to be processed is not applicable.

Anyone from the PI wanting to come to the US for any reason, cannot just come here without actually applying for and being granted a visa...even if just for travel. There in lies the problem Once you start ANY visa process for your spouse to come to the US, you cannot apply for any other type of visa (esp from the PI...there are other countries in the same situation so it's not just the PI...wanted to make sure you know you're not singled out by yourself!). The USCIS site doesnt say you CAN'T apply for any other visa type while you're waiting for your petition to be approved, but everything I've read pretty much says that it VERY VERY likely will throw a flag on the play and cause delays (from one direction or the other) and they VERY VERY likely would deny a travel visa knowing you are already attempting to come to the US.

But.... if you were able to get a "travel visa" to the US, which you would have to wait in line for because, well, you would otherwise have no other (legal) attachment to anyone in the US, that wait time can be over TWO YEARS...that is where the lottery and priority #'s come in to play. People in the PI who are trying to come to the US on their own, in any capacity, are in very very long lines. AND if you were approved for a travel visa, you would have to attend a visa interview with the consulate in Manila and PROVE to them that you were not intending to try to stay in the US. Just wanted to put this out there so you understand why this isn't a viable solution....just in case you might be thinking through this.

Remember this always: The US Govt believes that EVERY non-USC who comes here on vacation or for any other reason, intends to stay, so their responsibility in this game on behalf of the Dept of Homeland Security is to scrutinize absolutely everything to ensure you are not going to either come here as a "marriage of convenience just to get here" nor as a threat to the US. That's pretty much it....but it's a VERY LARGE "IT" and takes time for them to get through all of your documentation, etc.

K1 Fiance visa's (out of the PI) are processing rather quickly for some apparent reason....we initially thought that would be an option for us to just not get married (in Japan where he's living), and just bring him over as my Fiance, get him here, get married here and start the whole process here. However, you still have to do all the same paperwork (including the I-130 petition) and wait that out before you can even get over here on a K1. I-130 petitions apply to everyone (whos doing this legally). So you're wait time for approval of the I-130 for a K1 would clearly be shorter....for the moment....but you would have to wait to be married here, you would still have to do all the prep work from there (interviews, medical exams, etc) and provide all the same documentation (police certificates, NSO birth certs, etc.....and the PI's document collection is PAINFUL).

K3 visas were created with the intent of allowing you to bring your spouse over early while waiting for the I-130/CR1 to be processed. This would have been the best of all worlds. Granted it would have forced all the paperwork and fees to be paid from the US and would cost well over $3k to the end, but hey, to get your spouse over early would clearly outweigh having to pay the extra costs. I did this....we filed our I-130 for a CR-1 then filed the I-129F/K3 visa a month later (when I first realized the wait times had gone over the top). Unfortunately, even tho the govt will not tell you this because they have to make this option available...by law...they aren't processing K3's......they will approve your 129F application and give it a case # and send you all the documents saying they have it and they'll even (half way approve it), but they will join it with the I-130 petition and they'll be adjudicated together; and the K3 will be canceled.

We filed our I-130 petition on 6/25/13. It was sent from the Phoenix Lockbox directly to the NBC in Missouri. It sat there in "the pile" until Nov 27 when our case was transferred to the California Service Center (same time MANY were being transferred out of the NBC). Our I-130 (and the 129F) were both approved on 12/7/13 and transferred to the NVC in New Hampshire. it was checked in at the NVC this past Monday, 1/6. By Weds we had already received the first notices for online processing of the I-864 fees and notice that we have "officially started the visa processing" process. Thank God!

Once you're at the NVC and they assign their case # (which is your consular processing #), it rocks from there and becomes a turnaround of paper between you and them. it's all about how prepared you are and how much information they do or do not need from you and how cuickly you can make it happen on your end.

From a PI planning perspective.....you will without a doubt have to have NSO (red ribbon) certificates for birth, death, divorce, etc as they apply to you. They don't just notarize....everything is translated and has an attached official "red ribbon" certificate attached to it.....just a PI thing....pay very close attention to the bottom of all NSO/DFA certificates....there is an expiration date on them...if they expire while you're in process, the turn around time to get them reissued and returned is not short. Police Certificates from the PI are actually NBI cerificates (which expire in a year so don't be too anxious to get ahead on those). Read the USCIS website for everything you need for NVC processing....you will greatly benefit from being as prepared as you can be from the outset. The more you do in advance, the more prepared and educated you are, the easier this will be for you.

So...your question.....how long it will take for just your I-130 to be approved? As of this month, right now, you are looking at easily 6-14mths, 60% dependent on the documentation you send them and their need to verify your legitimacy (40% based on the line ahead of you). After the I-130 is approved, you have another 2-6 mths to get through the visa application processing, consulate interviews, fee payments, medical exams, etc.

ALL of that being said and me sounding to be a Negative Ned.....a year in any of our lives is too long. it's painful and gruelling and disappointing and madening. But it's gone by pretty quickly (for us anyway). There is so much to do to get through the paperwork process that will make you busy. But someone on VJ gave really good advice.....don't watch VJ every day, don't pay very close attention to what's happening with everyone else because everyone's case is different, there are no "trends", and spend your time preparing for your spouse to come to the US to make everything as easy and comfortable as possible; the transition is challenging; keep your focus on the light at the end....that being your spouse and your life together. It will happen.

(unless the govt has some reason to believe your spouse (if married) is a threat to the US, they MUST issue a visa....regardless of how long that might take....there is no prioritization or lottery for legal "immediate family" members).

Good luck to you....you are way welcome to stay in touch with me if you'd like....not that I KNOW anything, but I could easily write a layman's handbook at this point.....but we all could....and you will too!

God bless

Thank you so much for taking your time to reply! I'm so happy that I found this site because I am able to meet people like you and everyone who has replied, you all are so helpful! Good luck on your petition and I will keep in touch if in case I have any questions..thank you once again :)

  • 1 month later...
Posted

In my case,...we got married last april 24,2013 with my USC husband and we filed I-130 last june 2013 we got approved after 6 months.we are under CR1.and we are presently in the stage of sending AOS bill.

 
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