Yes we can. This is how I did it: I first apply for a SECURED credit card at a local bank for $500 dollars. In the following 3 years I had been depositing more money to my secured account until it went from the original $500 to $3,100 dollars. That was the cost of a computer I wanted to pay online. After those three years, I received a letter (I didn't do nothing nor asked for nothing) my bank send me a letter stating that for my good credit handling they were exchanging my secured credit card for a real credit card. Since then I have own a credit card and I kept getting increases in my limit (right now is about $14,000) and even a credit line with the bank which I'm paying. I don't have a social security number, I'm a Mexican, and I live in Mexico, just across the border. My credit card is a MasterCard and my bank is Wells Fargo.
An alien number is issued by the USCIS. A Social Security number is issued by the Social Security Administration. If you are permanent resident in the United States, also referred to as a green card holder, then you must have both an alien number and a Social Security number. You typically can apply for a Social Security card after your application for permanent residence is approved by the USCIS (or the US Embassy if you are overseas).
You may still apply for a social security application. It may be denied until your residency is approved.
It is possible to get social security for lumbar spondylosis it you are unable to work because of it, have the medical documentation and are approved by the social security administration.
You don't buy a social security number. You go to your local social security office and apply to receive your own personal social security number.Buying a social security number is against the law.
Social security number.
Social security number
Social security number
Social security number
You can't. You can only get a valid Social Security number through the Social Security Administration; anything else is fraudulent.
You do not. Use of the Social Security number is the exclusive venue of the Social Security Administration as established by the Social Security Act.
No, your social security number does not change when you get married.
Social security number