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Posted

Hi there!

I am officially in the 90 day window before my husbands green card needs to be filed to remove the conditional status. We got married in June 2019 but because of COVID delays we didn’t get his green card until June 2021. 

Anyway: we are still happily married but I’m worried about evidence supporting that on paper simply because we have lived with my family since he came to the USA in June 2021. Therefore, we don’t have typical things like a mortgage or lease. I’m planning to do affidavits for that just incase? 
 

I could file now but I am having our second child in a couple weeks and wanted to wait so I could

throw the second birth certificate into the evidence pile when we send along the packet — is this worth waiting to do? 
 

I kind of figure that if I wait and overnight it it’ll still arrive 2+ weeks in advance at least and show a stronger case. I didn’t want to risk that they’d ask for more evidence later when I could just include this big piece right now… 

 

Any advice would be appreciated! I have things like joint credit card statements, health insurance for all 3 soon to be 4 of us, life insurance beneficiary stuff from work, affidavits, photos, 1st child birth certificate, trip receipts we’ve all taken, car insurance with both of us listed, tax returns since 2019 etc. 

 

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Myanmar
Timeline
Posted
15 minutes ago, HKH12345 said:

wanted to wait so I could

throw the second birth certificate into the evidence pile when we send along the packet — is this worth waiting to do? 

Yes.

 

 

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Russia
Timeline
Posted

If you have the package ready to go, I would file it to get the enormously long I751 clock ticking.  Heck, by the time USCIS gets around to adjudicating your petition, you may have had another child and you can add any additional birth certificates to the package if and when you have an interview.  As to evidence, you can only send what you have.  Hopefully you have things like DLs, phone bills, insurance, etc. that show both of your names as well as your address.  You can have you family provide a simple lease or a written statement showing you both reside at their home.

 

Good Luck!

Visa Received : 2014-04-04 (K1 - see timeline for details)

US Entry : 2014-09-12

POE: Detroit

Marriage : 2014-09-27

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I-485 Approved: 2015-03-13

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I-751 ROC Submitted: 2016-12-20

I-751 NOA Received:  2016-12-29

I-751 Biometrics Appt.:  2017-01-26

I-751 Interview:  2018-04-10

I-751 Approved:  2018-05-04

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N400 Biometrics:  2018-02-22

N400 Interview:  2018-04-10

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Taiwan
Timeline
Posted
31 minutes ago, HKH12345 said:

Anyway: we are still happily married

Make sure you file before your GC expires.  Good luck.  It could be a long wait.

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In summary, it took 13 months for approval of the CR-1.  It took 44 months for approval of the I-751.  It took 4 months for approval of the N-400.   It took 172 days from N-400 application to Oath Ceremony.   It took 6 weeks for Passport, then 7 additional weeks for return of wife's Naturalization Certificate.. 
 

Posted (edited)
2 hours ago, HKH12345 said:

Hi there!

I am officially in the 90 day window before my husbands green card needs to be filed to remove the conditional status. We got married in June 2019 but because of COVID delays we didn’t get his green card until June 2021. 

Anyway: we are still happily married but I’m worried about evidence supporting that on paper simply because we have lived with my family since he came to the USA in June 2021. Therefore, we don’t have typical things like a mortgage or lease. I’m planning to do affidavits for that just incase? 
 

I could file now but I am having our second child in a couple weeks and wanted to wait so I could

throw the second birth certificate into the evidence pile when we send along the packet — is this worth waiting to do? 
 

I kind of figure that if I wait and overnight it it’ll still arrive 2+ weeks in advance at least and show a stronger case. I didn’t want to risk that they’d ask for more evidence later when I could just include this big piece right now… 

 

Any advice would be appreciated! I have things like joint credit card statements, health insurance for all 3 soon to be 4 of us, life insurance beneficiary stuff from work, affidavits, photos, 1st child birth certificate, trip receipts we’ve all taken, car insurance with both of us listed, tax returns since 2019 etc. 

 

I am giving you the advice based on my experience.  I inherited my parents’ house before I ever got married.  When my husband and I got married, we decided to stay here so we could take care of my parents.  We have no lease and mortgage - ever.  We sent everything you have - except the child certificate because we do not have children.

 

To me, it appears your case is strong enough to submit with what you have now and then have the second birth certificate for the next round.

 

To establish the cohabitation further, you can include copies of DLs or IDs where it clearly shows you both live at the same address.  Also, other things like your taxes, bills, etc. are likely to show the shared address.

 

Other than that, most of your evidence seems solid AND you already have proof of one child together.  From my POV, it is not worth risking a late submission over waiting on a second birth certificate that you can submit later.  For starters, a lot goes on near a birth and you don’t want to feel overwhelmed.

 

As others have said, the ROC takes a while to get looked at.

Edited by Fe.Ta
Na

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November 2010 - Met/Just Friends

June 2017 - I caught feelings, you want to try this?  Yes.
June 2018 - Do you want to get married?  Yes.
November 2018 - K1 filed

May 2019 - K1 interview scheduled and packet sent to embassy

June 2019 - K1 interview, approved, and moved to USA

August 2019 - Married

September 2019 - AOS/EAD/AP filed

October 2019 - Biometrics Appointment

January 2020 - AOS RFE for birth certificate received and sent back

February 2020 - EAD/AP approved and got the card

October 2020 - EAD/AP renewal filed

November 2020 - EAD/AP renewal approved and got the card - AOS interview date issued

December 2020 - AOS interview, approved, and GC received

September 2022 - ROC filed
June 2024 - Biometrics Reused
July 2024 - Approved (NO INTERVIEW) and GC received.

Filed: Citizen (pnd) Country: Brazil
Timeline
Posted
On 3/27/2023 at 9:20 AM, HKH12345 said:

Hi there!

I am officially in the 90 day window before my husbands green card needs to be filed to remove the conditional status. We got married in June 2019 but because of COVID delays we didn’t get his green card until June 2021. 

Anyway: we are still happily married but I’m worried about evidence supporting that on paper simply because we have lived with my family since he came to the USA in June 2021. Therefore, we don’t have typical things like a mortgage or lease. I’m planning to do affidavits for that just incase? 
 

I could file now but I am having our second child in a couple weeks and wanted to wait so I could

throw the second birth certificate into the evidence pile when we send along the packet — is this worth waiting to do? 
 

I kind of figure that if I wait and overnight it it’ll still arrive 2+ weeks in advance at least and show a stronger case. I didn’t want to risk that they’d ask for more evidence later when I could just include this big piece right now… 

 

Any advice would be appreciated! I have things like joint credit card statements, health insurance for all 3 soon to be 4 of us, life insurance beneficiary stuff from work, affidavits, photos, 1st child birth certificate, trip receipts we’ve all taken, car insurance with both of us listed, tax returns since 2019 etc. 

 

What are the exact dates of marriage and green card issuance?

Posted
8 hours ago, Ayrton said:

What are the exact dates of marriage and green card issuance?

 We got married June 22 2019. Applied for the green card right after that by going the I130 route — petition for alien relative.

 

Got our interview in Montréal in May 2021. Greencard approved. Exp Date on the greencard is June 7 2023..

 

We were a few weeks short of the 2 year mark of marriage when we got the greencard so still had the conditional status and now need to renew.

 
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