Form N-400 should be used for applying for US citizenship. It's filing fee is $595.Additionally $85 biometric fee and totals to $680, where applicable. No fee is required for military applicants filing under Section 328 and 329 of the INA. Applicants 75 years of age or older are not charged a biometric fee.
The current filing fee for filing in your naturalization application(N-400) is $595. An additional $85 should be sent in for biometrics. So a total of $680 is the filing fee. In case you are a military personnel, then this is not applicable for you. Also if you are 75 yrs or older than that, then you need not send in the fee for biometrics. This filing fee is not refundable even if your application gets denied by the USCIS. This filing fee is applicable only for naturalization cases .
You can apply for US citizenship through naturalization process using the Form N-400 with filing fee of $595.Add $85 biometric fee.Total amount is $680.
If you apply for citizenship in another country your US citizenship is automatically revoked. The US does not recognize dual citizenship. You revoke it in writing at a US embassy, outside the US.
Yes, The residents of US territories have US citizenship
The US recognizes dual citizenship.
No. The US president MUST have US citizenship only.
If you are born in the US you obtain US citizenship by birth. Another way to obtain citizenship is through the naturalization process by applying for US citizenship using Form N-400 if you are eligible.
Yes dual citizenship is allowed for US citizens.
US citizenship can only be renounced in writing at a US embassy (i.e. outside the U.S.). Be sure you have citizenship in another country before doing this.
NoSee US Citizenship and Moving Abroad.http://www.richw.org/dualcit/faq.html
Yes only if that person is a American applying for dual citizenship in Brazil. A person from Brazil would be unable to keep citizenship in Brazil if they wanted US citizenship. because the US requires you to give up your citizenship to all other countries except Canada citizenship.
If he is a US citizen that happens to be in Turkey, then yes. If he has Turkish citizenship, he will need to attain US citizenship (either dual citizenship or give up his Turkish citizenship for an American one).
If the parents are US citizens, then the child gets duel citizenship (citizenship in the country he/she is born in [depending on local laws], and US citizenship). Any person naturalized in the US or by American parents is a US citizen.
Only if you are born in the US.