AM I ELIGIBLE TO IMMIGRATE TO THE UNITED STATES
?
Have you ever wondered if there is any way you
could immigrate to the United States? Here are some
very broad and general grounds under which this
may be possible. If you feel you fall under any
of these and would require your case to be specifically
studied, please contact an Immigration lawyer.
If your son or daughter, over
the age of 21, were a U.S. citizen
then you would qualify as an immediate relative
and be eligible for a green card.
If your mother or father has U.S. citizenship,
regardless of whether you are a minor or over the
age of 21, you would be eligible. Even if you are
married, you and your spouse and children would
be eligible but in a lower preference category and
so would have to wait a longer time to get admission.
If you are the spouse of a U.S. citizen,
once again you would qualify as an immediate relative
and be eligible for a green card once your petition
was approved.
If you are the fiancé of a U.S.
citizen, you would be eligible to enter
on a special fiancé visa and, provided you
got married within 90 days of entry, you would be
eligible for a 2 year conditional green card. (See
Fiancé)
If you are the spouse of a Green Card holder
you would be eligible. Your unmarried or
minor children would also be eligible.
So also would the unmarried and minor children
of a Green Card holder.
If you have a brother or sister
who is a U.S. citizen you would
be eligible. Again, so too would your spouse and
minor children.
The waiting period for all these family sponsored
petitions is often many years and even if you are
eligible on the basis of any of the above family
relationships you must be prepared for a long and,
often, frustrating wait. (See Family
Based Immigration.)
Please note that a Green Card Holder cannot
sponsor parents, brothers, sisters or even his/her
own married children. Only a U.S. Citizen can.
(See Green Cards)
Family relations are not your only hope of entry.
You could also get a green card if you have a U.S.
based employer who would be willing to sponsor you
for a job. (See Employment
Based Immigration) The process is lengthy and
complex and again you could have to wait many years
before all approvals are obtained. Outstanding researchers
and professors with job offers from a U.S. employer,
as well as managers or executives of multinational
companies, who may need to be transferred, have
an easier route of entry. (See Employment
Based First Preference – Priority Workers)
A special category exists for persons of ‘extraordinary
ability’. If you feel you have some
national or international recognition in a particular
field (arts, science, business education, athletics
etc) which would give you a chance to be recognized
by the U.S. authorities as someone who ‘has
reached the very top of his field’ then you
might fall under these provisions of the law and
be eligible to obtain a green card even without
a job offer. (See Extraordinary
Ability)
Not to be forgotten is the category for persons
willing to invest, as capital, a minimum
of $500,000 in any business in
a declared ‘economically depressed’
area in the U.S. and hire at least 10 employees
OR $ 1,000,000 in any business
in other areas in the U.S. and hire at least 10
employees (not including family members). (See Investment
Based Immigration)
Often, the easiest route for entry is on an H-1B
nonimmigrant work visa. If you are a professional,
with at least a Bachelor’s degree in a specified
field and have a job offer from a U.S. based company,
you could be eligible to obtain an approval for
an H-1B visa. As an H-1B visa holder you would be
legally permitted to remain in the U.S. with your
sponsoring employer for a maximum period of 6 years,
during which time you would also be legally permitted
to change your status from nonimmigrant to immigrant,
provided, of course, your employer agrees to sponsor
you for a green card. During this time you could
also conceivably get married, (see marriage)
though this would entitle you to a conditional green
card until such time as the INS is satisfied that
the marriage entered into was not a sham. (See H-1B
Visas)
For more details and explanations of the law, please
check the links provided.