After marrying a U.S. citizen, an F1 visa student can apply for a green card through the adjustment of status process. This process can take anywhere from 10 months to over a year, depending on various factors such as application processing times and individual circumstances. Once the application is submitted, the student can typically obtain a Social Security card shortly after receiving a work permit, which is usually granted within a few months of applying.
If you are a US Citizen, legally divorced or widowed, you can request permanent residency for your spouse, regardless of how you gained your citizenship.
They are officially married. One spouse can sponsor the other for immigration to his or her country.
No, he is no longer married to a citizen so no longer has citizen status; unless he has applied for and completed the citizenship process to become a citizen in his own right.
yes. it can, but not always is.
It depends on the extent of time you have been a resident. If you are permanent resident, you will not lose your visa. However, if you are on a work permit issued due to marriage to a US Citizen or if you are on a temporary resident permit (this is given while awaiting the permanent card), these can be revoked and the person sent back to their country of origin
Even if you are a Canadian citizen and now you have gone and married a permanent U.S citizen and he is a missdemenor , it is possible, as you may not know at the time of marrige and he is only a suspect of murder.
Yes a K1 visa is classified as a non imigrant visa. It allows a non US citizen to come into the country to marry his/ her US citizen fiance. After the two are married, the non US citizen receives permanent resident status from the department of homeland security.
pose the question to US immigration
Yes they retain citizenship.
After 3 years of legally married with a Romanian citizen, you can apply for a parmanent residence (Romanian Passport).
=An immigrant is NOT an alien.==The immigrant would still be legal because they were married to a US citizen.=
If you're living in the US and you are a US citizen, you can apply for a CR-1/IR-1 spouse visa. That will allow your spouse to live in the US permanently (at least as long as they're married to you). After three years, assuming you stay married, they can apply for naturalization and become a US citizen. If you are not a US citizen but are living in the US on a permanent resident visa ("Green card"), you can still apply for a spouse visa, but it will be an F class instead. It will take longer to get approval for it because those are lower priority than those for US citizens. If you are not a US citizen and you are also not on a permanent resident visa (you don't have a "green card"), then nothing happens. You'd have to find a way to stay legally or run the risk of deportation if/when your temporary visa ends.