Jump to content
EatBulaga

AOS interview date past 2-year of marriage

 Share

16 posts in this topic

Recommended Posts

Hello AOS gurus,

I'm following the visajourney timeline for K1 to AOS

https://www.visajourney.com/guides/k1-fiance-visa-flowchart/

 

Since many of the AOS Field Offices processing times are over 2 years

https://egov.uscis.gov/processing-times/

And if the interview date is after the 2-years of marriage from K-1 and AOS is approved, is the 10-year green card granted or the 2-year green card? 

 

If the 10-year green card is granted, then it would save a Removal Of Condition process, and we should be rooting for the AOS interview delays?

 

Thanks for any responses.

Edited by EatBulaga
Link to comment
Share on other sites

What matters is that the AOS was filed timely.

 

The 2yr/10yr card depends on when it is approved and not the interview day.  Approval can be the interview date or a later date.

March 2, 2018  Married In Hong Kong

April 30, 2018  Mary moves from the Philippines to Mexico, Husband has MX Permanent Residency

June 13, 2018 Mary receives Mexican Residency Card

June 15, 2018  I-130 DCF Appointment in Juarez  -  June 18, 2018  Approval E-Mail

August 2, 2018 Case Complete At Consulate

September 25, 2018 Interview in CDJ and Approved!

October 7, 2018 In the USA

October 27, 2018 Green Card received 

October 29, 2018 Applied for Social Security Card - November 5, 2018 Social Security Card received

November 6th, 2018 State ID Card Received, Applied for Global Entry - Feb 8,2019 Approved.

July 14, 2020 Removal of Conditions submitted by mail  July 12, 2021 Biometrics Completed

August 6, 2021 N-400 submitted by mail

September 7, 2021 I-751 Interview, Sept 8 Approved and Card Being Produced

October 21, 2021 N-400 Biometrics Completed  

November 30,2021  Interview, Approval and Oath

December 10, 2021 US Passport Issued

August 12, 2022 PHL Dual Nationality Re-established & Passport Approved 

April 6,2023 Legally Separated - Oh well

Link to comment
Share on other sites

36 minutes ago, carmel34 said:

There is no way to avoid ROC after a K-1, even if the AOS is delayed for years.  AOS approval always results in a 2-year green card, regardless of the marriage date.  Research the process a bit more.  For example, if you got married after entering the US via a K-1 on May 1, 2022 (your timeline is not up to date so just guessing based on K-1 approval in April), and filed the AOS package on May 15, 2022, then you wait for the conditional, 2-year green card.  This is taking a year or more right now, so maybe the conditional green card will arrive May 15, 2023.  Then you file for ROC 2 years less 90 days before the date on the conditional green card.  That would be around February of 2025.  Then you wait for the ROC process and after that is approved (1+ years), you get the 10-year green card in 2026.  Good luck!

Some of the AOS field offices are taking 2-3 years to process. For example, K1 gets married and AOS sent by May 15, 2022. Interview is August 2024, and approval is sometimes in 2025. The green card arrives in 2025 is still 2-year till 2027? And have to remove condition 90-days before expiration in 2027? All this time the original beneficiary has been in the US about 5-years, so could start the Naturalization process concurrently with the Removal of Conditions?

Edited by EatBulaga
Link to comment
Share on other sites

You can not file for naturalization as a just a conditional green card holder.  You must at least have filled for ROC.   

 

Get married and file the AOS and get the process started.  The only control that you have in the immigration process is filing on time and correctly. Everything else is conjecture at this time.

March 2, 2018  Married In Hong Kong

April 30, 2018  Mary moves from the Philippines to Mexico, Husband has MX Permanent Residency

June 13, 2018 Mary receives Mexican Residency Card

June 15, 2018  I-130 DCF Appointment in Juarez  -  June 18, 2018  Approval E-Mail

August 2, 2018 Case Complete At Consulate

September 25, 2018 Interview in CDJ and Approved!

October 7, 2018 In the USA

October 27, 2018 Green Card received 

October 29, 2018 Applied for Social Security Card - November 5, 2018 Social Security Card received

November 6th, 2018 State ID Card Received, Applied for Global Entry - Feb 8,2019 Approved.

July 14, 2020 Removal of Conditions submitted by mail  July 12, 2021 Biometrics Completed

August 6, 2021 N-400 submitted by mail

September 7, 2021 I-751 Interview, Sept 8 Approved and Card Being Produced

October 21, 2021 N-400 Biometrics Completed  

November 30,2021  Interview, Approval and Oath

December 10, 2021 US Passport Issued

August 12, 2022 PHL Dual Nationality Re-established & Passport Approved 

April 6,2023 Legally Separated - Oh well

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"Your permanent resident status is conditional if it is based on a marriage that was less than two years old on the day you became a permanent resident." USCIS (link below) For an I-485 applicant, that day would be the day your green card is approved. So if you are married for more than two years when your green card is approved, you receive the ten-year green card.
https://www.uscis.gov/green-card/after-we-grant-your-green-card/conditional-permanent-residence/removing-conditions-on-permanent-residence-based-on-marriage

Link to comment
Share on other sites

*** Moved from AOS Progress Reports to AOS from K1 Visas forum ***

 

16 hours ago, EatBulaga said:

And if the interview date is after the 2-years of marriage from K-1 and AOS is approved, is the 10-year green card granted or the 2-year green card? 

 

10-yr GC if AOS approval date is after 2 years from wedding date.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 hours ago, carmel34 said:

There is no way to avoid ROC after a K-1, even if the AOS is delayed for years.  AOS approval always results in a 2-year green card, regardless of the marriage date.  Research the process a bit more.  For example, if you got married after entering the US via a K-1 on May 1, 2022 (your timeline is not up to date so just guessing based on K-1 approval in April), and filed the AOS package on May 15, 2022, then you wait for the conditional, 2-year green card.  This is taking a year or more right now, so maybe the conditional green card will arrive May 15, 2023.  Then you file for ROC 2 years less 90 days before the date on the conditional green card.  That would be around February of 2025.  Then you wait for the ROC process and after that is approved (1+ years), you get the 10-year green card in 2026.  Good luck!

As per Matter of Sesay a K-1 who's I-485 is adjudicated after 2 years since marriage is not subject to conditional residency. So, in cases where it takes over 2 years for USCIS to get to it, they should receive a 10 year green card. If you know of someone who did they should be filing an I-90 to make USCIS fix their error.

Edited by Demise

Contradictions without citations only make you look dumb.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Citizen (pnd) Country: Germany
Timeline
8 hours ago, carmel34 said:

There is no way to avoid ROC after a K-1, even if the AOS is delayed for years.  AOS approval always results in a 2-year green card, regardless of the marriage date.  Research the process a bit more.  For example, if you got married after entering the US via a K-1 on May 1, 2022 (your timeline is not up to date so just guessing based on K-1 approval in April), and filed the AOS package on May 15, 2022, then you wait for the conditional, 2-year green card.  This is taking a year or more right now, so maybe the conditional green card will arrive May 15, 2023.  Then you file for ROC 2 years less 90 days before the date on the conditional green card.  That would be around February of 2025.  Then you wait for the ROC process and after that is approved (1+ years), you get the 10-year green card in 2026.  Good luck!

This would be new. If AOS approval is 2 years past marriage one very well gets a 10 year card.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

depend on the local field office. atlanta is quite slow, so ( probably) you will get the interview past 2 years of marriage ( u will get 10 years GC) but i wont hold AOS just to avoid ROC. who knows what happened during the AOS interview anyway, many people are not approved on spot and they waited for weeks, months, years.  in my friend case, it's been 3 years 7 months since he did AOS interview in Virginia and up to this date he never get his GC believe it or not

Edited by Misscloud
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Citizen (pnd) Country: Germany
Timeline
5 hours ago, carmel34 said:

The answer to both of your questions is yes.  This is one of the biggest disadvantages of the K-1 vs. CR-1.  Plus the delay in being eligible to naturalize, and 8 or more months trapped in the US not being able to leave the country or work after filing the AOS package.

Well no. One would get a unconditional 10 year card and can skip ROC.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: F-2A Visa Country: Nepal
Timeline

If the AOS interview date or the approval date is after the 2-year anniversary, 10 year GC will be issued. How the person married or how it got to AOS  doesn't matter. Sometimes uscis does make mistakes and may issue 2 yr card but then once can replace it for free to 10 yr card in such mistaken cases.

Edited by arken

Spouse:

2015-06-16: I-130 Sent

2015-08-17: I-130 approved

2015-09-23: NVC received file

2015-10-05: NVC assigned Case number, Invoice ID & Beneficiary ID

2016-06-30: DS-261 completed, AOS Fee Paid, WL received

2016-07-05: Received IV invoice, IV Fee Paid

2016-07-06: DS-260 Submitted

2016-07-07: AOS and IV Package mailed

2016-07-08: NVC Scan

2016-08-08: Case Complete

2017-06-30: Interview, approved

2017-07-04: Visa in hand

2017-08-01: Entry to US

.

.

.

.

Myself:

2016-05-10: N-400 Sent

2016-05-16: N-400 NOA1

2016-05-26: Biometrics

2017-01-30: Interview

2017-03-02: Oath Ceremony

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Taiwan
Timeline

my wife just recently did the interview for AOS. not sure why my case is done so fast i submit all paperwork end of Jan and got interview on 5/31. when we finish the interview the examiner told me she will receive conditional gc due to less than 2 yrs marriage, otherwise will be 10 yrs gc

Edited by hope inmyheart
Link to comment
Share on other sites

It seems that there are differing opinions about this K1-to-AOS past 2-year marriage green card issuance.

It is very possible that whichever green card is issued (2-year or 10-year) could be dependent on the field office interviewer at the time?

Some may consider if the marriage is beyond the 2-year, and some may not?

 

I guess if any AOS'ers that have over 2-year wait and did receive the 10-year green card, please share so that we at least have some cases to refer to? Thanks much to all who responded!

 

Edited by EatBulaga
Link to comment
Share on other sites

 
Didn't find the answer you were looking for? Ask our VJ Immigration Lawyers.
Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
- Back to Top -

Important Disclaimer: Please read carefully the Visajourney.com Terms of Service. If you do not agree to the Terms of Service you should not access or view any page (including this page) on VisaJourney.com. Answers and comments provided on Visajourney.com Forums are general information, and are not intended to substitute for informed professional medical, psychiatric, psychological, tax, legal, investment, accounting, or other professional advice. Visajourney.com does not endorse, and expressly disclaims liability for any product, manufacturer, distributor, service or service provider mentioned or any opinion expressed in answers or comments. VisaJourney.com does not condone immigration fraud in any way, shape or manner. VisaJourney.com recommends that if any member or user knows directly of someone involved in fraudulent or illegal activity, that they report such activity directly to the Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement. You can contact ICE via email at Immigration.Reply@dhs.gov or you can telephone ICE at 1-866-347-2423. All reported threads/posts containing reference to immigration fraud or illegal activities will be removed from this board. If you feel that you have found inappropriate content, please let us know by contacting us here with a url link to that content. Thank you.
“;}
×
×
  • Create New...