The more I read @Anthony42 question, the more I think it's about removal of conditions. Anthony, she cannot skip I-751, if she has a conditional card!
Or does she have 10 year GC and wasn't eligible for N-400 due to break of continuous residency / physical presence?
My answer included I-751, thank you very much for rechecking with OP.
The more I read @Anthony42 question, the more I think it's about removal of conditions. Antony, she cannot skip I-751, if she has a conditional card!
I would only take one copy, but it's your call. I typically like being bullet proof, but two copies feel like an overkill. You have one alien file in the system, I'm sure they can share this evidence?
Others can suggest.
Name change requires a judicial naturalization. And those tend to be less frequent, so if it was same day, he must have been super lucky. Do you have a link to that post?
Good points. I think waiting for other agencies to complete background check is part of the wait. Though I think most delay comes from USCIS themselves and the backlog of cases that sit on a shelf waiting for their turn.
Yes, it's likely going to affect B1/B2.
Participation in DV is not a problem. The issue is you got selected and received immigrant visa in passport which means you showed immigrant intent. It will be somewhat difficult to prove you don't have that intent of immigranting.
Because local field office will decide on both I-751 and N-400.
If I-751 is not decided when N-400 interview concludes, local field office decides both.
Always take originals of documents to the interview.
When filing the forms, copies are OK unless it's a document that you can get many copies of easily (certified marriage certificate, bank statements etc).
If you haven't had any trips lasting more than 180 days per trip, you're good to fill and file (filling is an action of completing the form and filing is action of submitting the form) 90 days before your 5 year anniversary or being a resident.
I would not recommend filing strictly 90 days before the anniversary. Better to wait a week to ensure you're well within the window.
In short, you're OK filling the form prior to this date, but not filing until you get closer than 90 days to your anniversary.
Good luck!
Once somebody applies for N-400 they get 24 months extension letter:
https://www.uscis.gov/newsroom/alerts/uscis-updates-policy-to-automatically-extend-green-cards-for-naturalization-applicants
I-90 is an additional expense, in my opinion, unnecessary. Though she can apply, it's a hit or miss whether she'd ever see new green card before she becomes a citizen.
P.S. I hope she doesn't have a 2 year conditional green card? Because she must file I-751 in this case.
Yes, you called up USCIS and spoke to Tier 1 support person. They told you whatever you want to hear to finish the caller sooner and reply to next person. I would not believe anything Tier 1 says.
Think logically... For packet to be accepted with old fees, it should have been post marked before April 1 2024. Now the packet will be post marked after April 1. How do you expect USCIS to apply old fees? Rejected packet is almost the same as the packet that was never filed really.
I understand the desire not to pay increased fees, but I'm 99% sure your new packet will be rejected if you don't pay new fees. You can try and update us here.
I think I recall reading on VJ about somebody trying to argue cat is a tie to home country... I don't think I agree it is a strong tie, however cruel it may sound.
It's common to receive reminder letter for I-751 in the mail.
If @Zumbadaddy moved from the address during process he must have missed the reminder (was sent to old address).
The reminder does not belong to any particular active case so I don't expect to see it online.
This is pretty typical for USCIS.
You can try suing USCIS, but that unlikely is going to result in anything meaningful.
Essentially, you made mistakes when filing I-751 and got penalized for that by losing time.
Based on everything else (not filing I-751 on time etc) I think in your case hiring a lawyer can make the process go smoother.
Good luck and let us know how it goes.
Sorry I'm a bit lost. What are you trying to do?
If you want to file taxes jointly and get a standard deduction, you should. The green card test (IRS rule) says if you were a LPR for 1 day of a year, you're treated as tax resident for entire year.
https://www.irs.gov/individuals/international-taxpayers/us-tax-residency-green-card-test
I don't recall sending any statement after adjusting status. For deduction and had no issues neither with IRS nor USCIS.
However, certain individuals who were nonresident aliens or dual status aliens during the year may take the standard deduction in the following cases:
You are a nonresident alien who is married to a U.S. citizen or resident alien at the end of the tax year and make a joint election with your spouse to be treated as a U.S. resident for the entire tax year;
You are a nonresident alien at the beginning of the tax year who is a U.S. citizen or resident by the end of the tax year, is married to a U.S. citizen or resident at the end of such tax year, and make a joint election with your spouse to be treated as a U.S. resident for the entire tax year; and
Students and business apprentices who are residents of India and are eligible for benefits under paragraph 2 of Article 21 (Payments Received by Students and Apprentices) of the United States-India Income Tax Treaty
As mentioned in different thread, give it few weeks. You'll likely receive receipt in the mail within 4-6 weeks of filing. Then you'll be able to track it.