How Do I Bring
My Fiancé(e) to the United States?
Background
Where Can I Find the Law?
Who is Eligible?
How Do I Apply?
Will I Get a Work Permit?
How Can I Check the Status of My Application?
How Can I Appeal?
Can Anyone Help Me?
Frequently Asked Questions [FAQs]
Background
If your fiancé(e) is not
a citizen of the United States and you plan to get married in the United
States, then you must file a petition with USCIS on behalf of your
fiancé(e). After the petition is approved, your fiancé(e) must obtain a
visa issued at a U.S. Embassy or consulate abroad. The marriage must take
place within 90 days of your fiancé(e) entering the United States. If the
marriage does not take place within 90 days or your fiancé(e) marries
someone other than you (the U.S. citizen filing USCIS Form I-129F -
Petition for Alien Fiancé), your fiancé(e) will be required to leave the
United States. Until the marriage takes place, your fiancé(e) is
considered a nonimmigrant. A nonimmigrant is a foreign national seeking to
temporarily enter the United States for a specific purpose. A fiancé(e)
may not obtain an extension of the 90-day original nonimmigrant admission.
If your fiancé(e) intends to live and work permanently in the United
States, your fiancé(e) should apply to become a permanent resident after
your marriage. (If your fiancé(e) does not intend to become a permanent
resident after your marriage, your fiancé(e)/new spouse must leave the
country within the 90-day original nonimmigrant admission.) For more
information, please see
How Do I Become
a Legal Permanent Resident While in the United States?. Please
note, your fiancé(e) will initially receive conditional permanent
residence status for two years. Conditional permanent residency is granted
when the marriage creating the relationship is less than two years old at
the time of adjustment to permanent residence status. For more
information, please see
How Do I Remove the
Conditions on Permanent Residence Based on Marriage?.
Please note: Your fiancé(e) may enter the United States only one
time with a fiancé(e) visa. If your fiancé(e) leaves the country before
you are married, your fiancé(e) may not be allowed back into the United
States without a new visa. (Please see
How Can I Get a
Travel Document? for additional travel information if your
fiancé(e) will apply to become a legal permanent resident after you are
married.)
For an excellent overview of immigration issues, please see the chapters
and tables on temporary admissions and immigrants in the
Immigration Statistical Yearbook.
Where Can I Find the Law?
The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) is a law that
governs the admission of people into the United States. For the part of
the law concerning fiancé(e) (K-1) visas, please see
INA § 214.
The specific eligibility requirements and procedures for applying for the
fiancé(e) (K-1) classification are included in the Code of Federal
Regulations [CFR] at
8 CFR
§ 214.2(k).
Who is Eligible
U.S. citizens who will be getting married to a foreign
national in the United States may petition for a fiancé(e) classification
(K-1) for their fiancé(e). You and your fiancé(e) must be free to marry.
This means that both of you are unmarried, or that any previous marriages
have ended through divorce, annulment or death. You must also have met
with your fiancé(e) in person within the last two years before filing for
the fiancé(e) visa. This requirement can be waived only if meeting your
fiancé(e) in person would violate long-established customs, or if meeting
your fiancé(e) would create extreme hardship for you. You and your
fiancé(e) must marry within 90 days of your fiancé(e) entering the United
States.
You may also apply to bring your fiancé(e)'s unmarried children, who are
under age 21, to the United States.
How Do I Apply?
To find out how you can apply to bring your fiancé(e) to the
United States, please click here to see
Application
Procedures, which will help you identify what you need to do.
Fiancé(e) petitions are filed at the
USCIS
Service Center serving your area of residence.
Will I Get a Work Permit?
After arriving in the United States, your fiancé(e) will be eligible to
apply for a work permit. (You should note that USCIS might not be able to
process the work permit within the 90-day time limit for your marriage to
take place.) Your fiancé(e) should use
Form I-765
to apply for a work permit. Please see
How Do I Get a Work
Permit? for more information. If your fiancé(e) applies for
adjustment to permanent resident status, your fiancé(e) must re-apply for
a new work permit after the marriage.
How Can I Check the Status of My Application?
Please contact the USCIS office that received your
application. You should be prepared to provide the USCIS staff with
specific information about your application. Please click here for
complete instructions on checking the
status of your
visa petition. Click here for information on specific
USCIS offices.
How Can I Appeal?
If your petition for a fiancé(e) visa is denied, the denial letter will
tell you how to appeal. Generally, you may appeal within 33 days of
receiving the denial by mail. Your appeal must be filed on USCIS Form
I-290B. The appeal must be filed with the office that made the original
decision. After your appeal form and a required fee are processed, the
appeal will be referred to the Administrative Appeals Unit (AAU) in
Washington, DC. (Sending the appeal and fee directly to the AAU will delay
the process.) For more information, please see,
How Do I
Appeal the Denial of My Petition or Application?.
Can Anyone Help Me?
If advice is needed, you may contact the USCIS District Office near your
home for a list of community-based, non-profit organizations that may be
able to assist you in applying for an immigration benefit. Please see our
USCIS field
offices home page for more information on contacting USCIS
offices. In addition, please see our Webpage that provides information on
obtaining free
legal advice.
Frequently Asked Questions [FAQs]
Do you want further information? Click here for access to our
Frequently Asked Questions
on immigration. Also, please see the
State Department Website for more information on bringing your
fiancé(e) to the United States.