YESTERDAY I HAD MY INTERVIEW!!!
This is going to be long and it’s basically everything I went through in my N-400 interview under the 3-year marriage rule (married to a U.S. citizen). I hope it helps someone in a similar situation, especially if you have tax issues or are unsure about whether your spouse needs to be there.
Background
Filed under: 3-year rule (marriage to U.S. citizen)
LPR since: 2019
I also qualify under the 5-year rule, but chose to file under the 3-year marriage rule.
I have an IRS payment plan and still owe taxes, but I’m making payments.
Arrival & Security
I arrived at the field office around 6:30 a.m. and there was already a line outside. I think I was about 10th in line.
At the entrance, a security officer checked:
My appointment notice
My ID
Then we went through airport-style security:
Bags, purses, and folders went through the X-ray machine.
Anything metal could trigger extra screening.
From what I saw, BIG TIP:
Avoid metal belts, high heels with metal pieces, big handbags.
Several women were sent to a small side room for extra screening because of their shoes, belts, or big bags, and they lost their place in line.
I had nothing that triggered extra checks, so I moved ahead of some people who had arrived before me.
After security, there was a first check-in counter:
They took my appointment notice.
Asked for my Green Card.
Took a photo.
Gave me a ticket number for the interview.
Then I waited in the main waiting room. At around 7:15 a.m. I was still sitting, and around 7:20–7:30 a.m. my number was called. I ended up being one of the first interviews of the day.
Meeting the Officer & Oath
The officer called my number and took me through a door that separates the waiting area from the offices.
In his office:
He asked me to remain standing so we could do the oath to tell the truth.
After the oath, he told me to sit down.
He was very kind and friendly. He told me my English was very good and that I shouldn’t worry about the language part. He said that if at any moment I didn’t understand something, I should just let him know. That helped a lot with my nerves.
The order of the interview was:
Civics
N-400 questions
Reading & Writing
1. Civics (First Part)
He started directly with Civics. I don’t remember all six questions exactly, but I do remember some of them:
The two major political parties in the United States
How many years a U.S. Senator is elected for
A question about Louisiana (one of the standard Civics questions related to that state)
A question about World War II – basically who was involved in the war
I passed the Civics portion without any problems.
2. N-400 Questions (Second Part)
After Civics, he went through the N-400 section. He read a lot of questions directly from my form: arrests, memberships, voting, etc. I answered exactly as I had written on the N-400.
Work & Personal Information
He asked me about my work:
I explained that I’m a self-employed realtor, but my license has to be under a brokerage.
He asked which brokerage, where the office is, and if I knew the ZIP code. I did, because the office is very close to my home.
He also asked if it was a physical office or a virtual office. I explained it’s more like a virtual office setup.
He confirmed:
I have how many times I have been married.
children.
If I still have family in my home country.
Passport & Travel
I brought my current passport (issued in 2023), but I did not bring my old passport.
He asked where my previous passport was. I answered honestly:
I don’t know where it is now.
I used it to enter the U.S. back in 2014, and then I never used it again.
I didn’t leave the U.S. until last year, and when I did, it was on a cruise, and I used my new passport, not the old one.
He read the cruise destinations directly from my N-400 and confirmed them with me.
Questions About My Husband (3-Year Rule / Marriage Part)
Because I applied under the 3-year marriage rule, he did ask some questions about my husband and our relationship, but it was not an aggressive or super invasive interrogation.
He asked things like:
What my husband does for work
How I met my husband
Some basic confirmation about my husband’s previous marriages (if he had been married before and how many times)
The officer did ask why my husband wasn’t there. I told him:
I came alone.
The interview notice did not say that my spouse was required to be present.
I hadn’t planned for him to come because the letter didn’t state it was necessary.
The officer was totally fine with that. He did not make it an issue at all.
I also mentioned that:
My husband and I handle taxes together (we work on taxes as a couple).
But he did not dig deeply into the relationship beyond:
What my husband does,
How we met,
Basic marriage history,
Taxes.
There were no uncomfortable or unusual questions beyond what I would consider normal.
So yes, I filed under the 3-year rule, went alone to the interview, and it was still okay.
Taxes & IRS Payment Plan (Most Sensitive Part)
This was definitely the most tense part of the whole interview.
He asked if I owed any taxes. I said yes, and explained I have an active payment plan with the IRS.
He asked to see:
My IRS tax transcripts
The IRS payment plan / agreement
The most recent payment receipts for that plan
I had all of this with me and handed everything over.
He took his time looking at:
How much I owe
The fact that I hadn’t always paid on time in the past
The current payment arrangement
I could see he was concerned about the late payments, but the fact that I now have:
A formal payment agreement with the IRS, and
Proof I am making ongoing payments
seemed to help a lot.
Later, when we were wrapping up, he added a note in the system that:
I still owe taxes, and
The amount owed,
but also that I have a payment plan and I am paying.
We spent the longest time on this section of the interview, and that’s where I felt the most pressure.
3. English: Reading & Writing (Last Part)
After Civics and the N-400 questions, he tested my English.
Reading
He gave me a very short, easy sentence to read out loud. It was simple and not a problem.
Writing
For the writing portion, I had to write something like:
“Citizens can vote.”
The sentence itself was straightforward, but the word “citizens” was the hardest part for me to spell. Still, overall, the English test was very basic.
Final Steps, Signature & Recommendation
At the end, he:
Showed my information on the screen and asked me to verify that everything was correct.
Added a note indicating:
That I owe taxes, and
The amount owed.
Asked me to sign electronically.
Had me sign the decision/oath-related form as well.
He told me:
That he doesn’t make the final decision by himself,
But that he was recommending approval of my N-400.
He also emphasized that:
For the Oath Ceremony, I should bring again all the documents proving:
The IRS payment plan, and
Recent payments,
so there would be no issues at the final step of granting citizenship.
Oath Ceremony Notice (Same Week!)
After the interview, I went back to the waiting room. Someone told me:
To stay inside and wait, and that if there was something for me, they would call my name.
After a short while, someone came out, called my name, and handed me my Oath Ceremony notice.
My Oath is this Friday, in the same week as my interview. 🎉
My Tips (Especially if You Have Taxes or Are Applying under the 3-Year Rule)
Arrive early and keep security simple:
Avoid big handbags, metal belts, high-heel shoes with metal, etc.
If you owe taxes:
Bring your IRS payment plan letter.
Bring tax transcripts.
Bring recent payment receipts.
Be ready to explain calmly.
If you’re applying under the 3-year marriage rule:
Expect some questions about your spouse and marriage, but in my case they were basic and reasonable.
My spouse did not attend the interview, and it was not a problem.
The English part is very basic if you use English regularly.
Emotionally prepare for the tax part if you have an issue there, but remember:
👉 A formal IRS payment plan + proof of ongoing payments can still result in a recommended approval.
Hope this long post helps someone who’s nervous about the 3-year rule, tax issues, or going alone to the interview.