Immigration is based on a preference system, where the sponsor's status and your
relationship determines which category you are assigned and how long
the process will last. Each immigrant must have an immigrant visa number, which
are divided among countries of origin and categories based on a quota system.
Immigrant visa numbers are immediately made available for spouses, parents, and
unmarried children (under the age of 21) of US citizens, once their I-130
petition is approved.
All other relatives must wait in line for a visa number to
become available. If your I-130 petition is approved, the filing date becomes
your priority date - your place in line - for an immigrant visa number.
The State Department issues a monthly
Visa Bulletin with
updated availability for each category based on priority dates. For family-based
applications, the categories are:
|
(1) |
unmarried sons and daughters of U.S. citizens; |
|
(2a) |
spouses and children of permanent residents; |
|
(2b) |
unmarried sons and daughters (over 21) of permanent residents; |
|
(3) |
married sons and daughters of U.S. citizens; and |
|
(4) |
brothers and sisters of adult U.S. citizens. |
Sustained demand and limited supply under the quotas have resulted in 5 to 20
year wait times in some categories.
So, how long does it take? USCIS management asks the same question and
prioritizes case loads to handle applications that will soon become current
based on the filing date and category. Which means in addition to watching the
monthly Visa Bulletin, you should also watch the
processing reports
from the various USCIS offices to determine when your application may be
decided. Processing delays are often blamed on incomplete security checks, but
if your case is beyond the published processing dates, contact our office to
explore options for expediting a decision.