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malloryelise

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Posts posted by malloryelise

  1. This is my understanding....

    In order to qualify you and your hubby will need approx. $60,000 in assets (cars do not count unless they are the second or third car in the family) and other assets only count if they could be sold within a year.

    The Brazilian citizen's income does not count and the U.S. citizens income does not count if it will not be continuous once you return to the states. I have read one instance in Asia where the AOS was accepted based on a USC's job in the foreign country. I think she was a University teacher. Her income was not going to be continuous. Otherwise all of the other instances imply you need a joint sponsor. A person with domicile in the states that meets the income requirements. (U.S. citizen? I think.)

    You can apply from Brazil without returning to the states if you can prove intent to re-domicile in the states.

    There are tons of other little details that you will find as you are reading through the forums.

    I am getting married next month here in Brazil and will start my journey then :) so none of this is real life experience

    hey thanks! yeah that's what i was told--that there are some cases where the foreign income is considered during the interview (the lawyer told me he had a citizen client who didnt work outside the country (a mother with small children) so they considered the husband's foreign income. he said it was really tense but worked in the end. i know it's assets that they need (savings account works) and i already knew i would need a co sponsor which will probably be my parents. i will have to use their address anyway since we are not going to move to the US and get a house or anything like that until after the consulate interview. period. other americans in brazil who i've talked to who have since gone back to the US pretty much all used parents as co sponsors and as the address. they didn't rent/buy or "set up a domicile." i will use my parents house as the "domicile."

    my main deal with all of this is finding the best way (with co sponsors and parents address) to get all the immigration stuff done with without quitting any jobs or selling any cars or properties until we are absolutely ready to go. no limbo space. if it's not possible, then we'll stay here. this is why i have to get a lawyer involved though :/ but will be spending christmas in seatte so i will get legal help while we are there :D

  2. Your money in Brazil won't count unless that same income will carry over when you are livinging in the US, therefore you will either needs to come to the US and get a job that will give you the requored income of $18,929.00 or you'll will need someone to sponsor your husband.

    You need to look at how DCF works, you will need to show that you are domcile in the US.which means you will need to leave your husband there and set up living arrangement in the US.

    Hi, that's not what my lawyer told me. He advised that many people acquire the green card before moving to the US (before having an address, before having an US income) so i have to prove my assets here (can be in brazil) to the consulate. And prove it with my tax returns. So, again my question is if anyone has applied through this route. THIS IS NOT A K-1 visa like all the other questions on this page....this application is spousal (not K-3) and is concluded through the consulate.

    Has anyone here gone through this specific situation? thanks.

    Also, im going to be speaking in person with my lawyer in Seattle in December but i am impatient and wanted to hear from others on this site (was recommended to me by a friend). :P

  3. Hi everyone, i'm an american citizen and i've been living in brazil for the past three years with my brazilian husband. we've decided to immigrate to the us.

    we are going to do it all outside of the country (consulate application) so that my husband can get his green card before actually moving there (so he can keep his job here while simultaneously applying for jobs in the us). he has a very good career and so we only want to move once he has a job lined up.

    After speaking with a lawyer on the phone the process seems doable (despite the fact that it could take 1-1.5 years to finish) but the only thing that bothered me was the proving financial sponsorship part (i think he was trying to scare the ###### out of me, really). I don't make very much money here in brazil (devalued currency to the usd) so maximum i make about 14000 a year usd (which is what i will file my US 2012 tax return as). my husband makes around 70 usd here. but the lawyer told me that I HAVE TO BE THE ONE to earn at least 20k usd in order for them to approve our application, his income doesn't count. (logically this doesnt make any sense seeing as both of us will leave brazil so why the hell does my salary here even matter?)

    but immigration doesn't make sense. now does it.

    so do any of you have experience with this? one of the reasons we want to leave brazil is so that i (personally) can earn a better annual salary (im a bloody english teacher like all the other immigrants are here). but now im scared that i won't personally be able to prove that i make on my own 20 thousand a year. even writing this it sounds extremely ridiculous.

    If anyone has tips on how they got through this financial sponsorship part of the interview i would be grateful to hear them.

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