Which Forms should a Petitioner file for your Green Card? When applying for a…

Which Forms should a Petitioner file for your Green Card?

When applying for a Green Card, in most cases applicants need someone else in the United States to file a petition for them and complete a few Forms. The most common Forms are: Form I-130 (Petition for Alien Relative); Form I-730 (Refugee/Asylee Relative Petition), Form I-589 (Application for Asylum and for Withholding of Removal) and Form I-140 (Immigrant Petition for Alien Worker). Other Forms which are less common are: Form I-918 (Petition of U Nonimmigrant Status); Form I-929 (Petition for Qualifying Family Member of a U-1 Nonimmigrant); Form I-360 (Petition for Amerasian, Widow(er), or Special Immigrant) and Form I-526 (Immigrant Petition by Alien Entrepreneur).

What Forms are required for the Family Green Card application?

The required Forms for the Family-based Green Card are: Family Sponsorship Form (I-130), Green Card Application Form (I-485), Online Green Card Application Form (DS-260), Financial Support Form (I-864), Work Permit Application Form (I-765) and Travel Permit Application Form (I-131).

Who can Apply for Asylum?

If you are at a port of entry or in the United States, you may request asylum. Regardless of your immigration status, and within one year of your arrival in the United States, you can apply for asylum.

What are 5 ways to apply for a Green Card?

The most common and best ways to apply and receive a Green Card is through family, employment, refugee or asylee status, as a special immigrant and through a registry (diversity visa lottery).

How does Green Card Lottery work?

To summarize the procedure there are five steps: 1. Applicants apply; 2. Applicants are selected at random using a computer; 3. The selected applicants are then screened through an interview process; 4. Those that pass the screening process are awarded immigrant visas and 5. Upon entry into the U.S., they are awarded their green card.

Why should you apply for a Green Card?

There are many reasons why you should apply for a Green Card, some of them being: if you are a green card holder then you can apply for a US citizenship after 5 years or 3 if you are married to a United States citizen, you can travel in and out easily, you can sponsor your relatives, spend less on university or college tuitions and much more!

Who is eligible for the EB-3 Visa?

These Green Cards are available to 3 groups of workers who are very different from one another. 1. Skilled workers, are employees that need to have at least two years of training or work experience, which is not temporary or seasonal. In order to be eligible, they must do the work of qualified workers who are not available in the United States. 2. Professionals, are foreign nationals whose job required a U.S. bachelor degree or a foreign equivalent diploma. They also must work a job that qualified workers in the U.S. are unavailable to do. And 3. Other workers, which is a subcategory for foreign nationals that perform unskilled labor, which requires less than 2 years of training/experience. In all three cases a PERM is required and a waiver of interest in not available!

How do green card holders become citizens?

By naturalization, a lawful permanent resident (green card holder) may become a U.S. citizen. A permanent resident must be at least 18 years old in order to be eligible. Even if married to a U.S. citizen, the green card holder must have been a permanent resident for at least five years, or three years in the United States.
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