Your Family Immigration Lawyer

RESOURCES . USCIS IMMIGRATION FORMS

USCIS Immigration Forms, Explained by a Family Immigration Lawyer

A working reference to every form a family-based case touches – I-130, I-485, I-864, N-400, I-129F, I-601, I-601A, I-751, and more. Each entry is written the way an immigration attorney briefs a client: what the form actually does, who signs it, what it costs, where it goes, and the mistakes that cause RFEs and denials.


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Browse Forms by Category

Family immigration runs on six categories of paperwork. Jump to the one that fits your case.

Always confirm the current edition at uscis.gov before filing.

Family-Based Petitions

The petitions are filed by a US citizen or lawful permanent resident files to sponsor a spouse, child, parent, or sibling for a green card.

Adjustment of Status

Forms used when the beneficiary is already inside the United States and is converting to lawful permanent resident status without leaving.

Consular Processing & Travel

Forms tied to immigrant visa interviews at a US embassy abroad, plus travel and reentry documents for pending cases.

Citizenship & Naturalization

Forms for becoming a US citizen, replacing a certificate, and proving citizenship for children born abroad to US parents.

Waivers & Removal of Conditions

Forms that ask USCIS to forgive a ground of inadmissibility, lift conditional residence, or restore an immigration benefit.

Affidavits, Evidence & Support

Supporting forms that almost every family case requires - financial sponsorship, biographic data, address changes, and FOIA.

THE LIBRARY

Every Form a Family Immigration Attorney Files

Each card explains what the form does in plain English, who must sign it, the current USCIS fee, where it goes, and the filing pitfalls that immigration lawyers most often see.

The petition is filed by a US citizen or lawful permanent resident to sponsor a spouse, child, parent, or sibling for a green card.

SPOUSE

PARENT

CHILD

SIBLING

Form I-130
Petition for Alien Relative

Establishes the qualifying family relationship between a US citizen or lawful permanent resident petitioner and a foreign national relative. The I-130 does not by itself grant any status – it reserves a place in line under the immigrant visa system.

WHO FILES

US citizens and lawful permanent residents petitioning for a spouse, parent, child (married or unmarried, under or over 21), or sibling.

EDITION

Use the edition listed on uscis.gov on the day you sign.

FILED WITH

USCIS lockbox (paper) or USCIS online account. Filed with proof of petitioner status, the qualifying relationship, and any prior marriage terminations.

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

SPOUSE

REQUIRED

Form I-130A
Supplemental Information for Spouse Beneficiary

Collects address, employment, and parental history for the foreign-national spouse named on an I-130. Required attachment for every spousal I-130 – not optional.

WHO FILES

The foreign-national spouse beneficiary of an I-130. The spouse signs only if they are inside the United States.

EDITION

Match the edition date of your I-130 filing.

FILED WITH

Same lockbox or online intake as the underlying I-130.

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

K-1

FIANCE

US CITIZENS ONLY

Form I-129F
Petition for Alien Fiance(e)

Begins the K-1 fiancée visa process so a US citizen’s foreign-national fiancée can enter the United States to marry within 90 days. Also used for K-3 spouse visas in narrow circumstances.

WHO FILES

US citizens (not green card holders) engaged to a foreign national, where the couple has met in person within the last two years (or qualifies for a cultural waiver).

EDITION

Latest USCIS edition; rejections for old editions are common.

FILED WITH

USCIS lockbox, with evidence of US citizenship, intent to marry within 90 days, and the in-person meeting requirement.

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

Forms used when the beneficiary is already inside the United States and is converting to lawful permanent resident status without leaving.

GREEN CARD

CONCURRENT FILING

MARRIAGE CASES

Form I-485
Application to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status

The application that converts an eligible person inside the United States into a lawful permanent resident (green card holder). Filed once a visa number is available.

WHO FILES

Immediate relatives of US citizens, preference-category beneficiaries with current priority dates, asylees, and other qualifying applicants physically present in the US.

EDITION

Use the current USCIS edition – rejected if outdated.

FILED WITH

USCIS lockbox or online, typically concurrently with I-130 for immediate relatives. Includes medical exam (I-693), I-864 affidavit of support, and supporting civil documents.

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

EAD

WORK PERMIT

Form I-765
Application for Employment Authorization

Requests an Employment Authorization Document (EAD) so the applicant can work lawfully while a pending immigration benefit is adjudicated.

WHO FILES

Most commonly I-485 applicants (category (c)(9)), K-1 entrants, asylum applicants, DACA recipients, and certain dependents.

EDITION

Match the latest USCIS edition.

FILED WITH

USCIS lockbox or online, with the correct eligibility category code in Question 27.

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

ADVANCE PAROLE

TRAVEL

Form I-131
Application for Travel Document

Used to request Advance Parole (so an I-485 applicant can travel internationally without abandoning the application), a reentry permit for LPRs traveling 1+ years, or a refugee travel document.

WHO FILES

Pending I-485 applicants, LPRs planning extended travel, asylees, and refugees.

EDITION

Current USCIS edition.
 

FILED WITH

USCIS lockbox; biometrics may be required.

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

MEDICAL EXAM

CIVIL SURGEON

Form I-693
Report of Immigration Medical Examination and Vaccination Record

Documents the required medical examination performed by a USCIS-designated civil surgeon. Required for almost every adjustment of status case.

WHO FILES

I-485 applicants. Completed and sealed by a civil surgeon – never opened by the applicant.

EDITION

Current USCIS edition.

FILED WITH

Submitted with the I-485 or in response to an RFE. Sealed envelope retains validity indefinitely once signed under the current policy.

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

Forms tied to immigrant visa interviews at a US embassy abroad, plus travel and reentry documents for pending cases.

NVC

EMBASSY

CONSULAR

Form DS-260
Immigrant Visa Electronic Application

The State Department online application for an immigrant visa interview at a US embassy or consulate abroad. Used in consular processing instead of I-485.

WHO FILES

Beneficiaries of approved I-130, I-140, or other petitions whose case has been assigned to the National Visa Center.

EDITION

Online form at ceac.state.gov – always current.

FILED WITH

Department of State / National Visa Center, after the NVC sends the welcome letter.

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

K-1

NONIMMIGRANT

EMBASSY

Form DS-160
Online Nonimmigrant Visa Application

The State Department application for nonimmigrant visas, including K-1 fiancé visas, K-3 spouses, and B-1/B-2 visitors.

WHO FILES

Anyone applying for a nonimmigrant US visa at a consulate abroad.

EDITION

Online at ceac.state.gov – must be filed per applicant.

FILED WITH

US embassy or consulate handling the interview.

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

Forms for becoming a US citizen, replacing a certificate, and proving citizenship for children born abroad to US parents.

CITIZENSHIP

NATURALIZATION

Form N-400
Application for Naturalization

The application a lawful permanent resident files to become a US citizen. Tests good moral character, continuous residence, physical presence, English, and civics.

WHO FILES

LPRs eligible under the five-year rule, the three-year marriage-to-USC rule, or military service provisions.

EDITION

Current USCIS edition.

FILED WITH

USCIS online account or lockbox.

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

DERIVATIVE CITIZENSHIP

CHILD

Form N-600
Application for Certificate of Citizenship

Documents that a child already acquired or derived US citizenship from a US-citizen parent – typically under INA Section 320 (Child Citizenship Act).

WHO FILES

US citizens born abroad or who became citizens automatically as minors and need documentary proof.

EDITION

Current USCIS edition.

FILED WITH

USCIS online or lockbox.

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

REPLACEMENT

CITIZENSHIP DOCUMENT

Form N-565
Application for Replacement Naturalization/Citizenship Document

Replaces a lost, stolen, or damaged naturalization certificate, certificate of citizenship, or repatriation document.

WHO FILES

US citizens whose original certificate is unusable.

EDITION

Current USCIS edition.

FILED WITH

USCIS lockbox or online.

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

Forms that ask USCIS to forgive a ground of inadmissibility, lift conditional residence, or restore an immigration benefit.

WAIVER

INADMISSIBILITY

HARDSHIP

Form I-601
Application for Waiver of Grounds of Inadmissibility

Asks USCIS to waive specific grounds of inadmissibility – unlawful presence, fraud/misrepresentation, certain crimes, prior removal – so an immigrant visa or adjustment can be granted.

WHO FILES

Applicants who have a qualifying U.S. citizen or LPR relative who would suffer extreme hardship if the waiver is denied.

EDITION

Current USCIS edition.

FILED WITH

USCIS, sometimes through the consulate after a 212(a) finding.

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

PROVISIONAL WAIVER

UNLAWFUL PRESENCE

Form I-601A
Provisional Unlawful Presence Waiver

Let certain applicants get an unlawful presence waiver approved before leaving the US for consular processing, dramatically reducing family separation.

WHO FILES

Immediate relatives and preference beneficiaries with a U.S. citizen or LPR spouse or parent as a qualifying relative, with an approved I-130 and NVC fee paid.
 

EDITION

Current USCIS edition.

FILED WITH

USCIS – never the consulate.

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

REMOVAL OF CONDITIONS

MARRIAGE GREEN CARD

Form I-751
Petition to Remove Conditions on Residence

Removes the two-year condition from a marriage-based green card so the spouse becomes a 10-year LPR.

WHO FILES

Conditional residents – jointly with the US-citizen spouse, or alone with a waiver of the joint filing requirement (divorce, abuse, hardship).

EDITION

Current USCIS edition.

FILED WITH

USCIS, within the 90-day window before the conditional card expires.

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

Supporting forms that almost every family case requires – financial sponsorship, biographic data, address changes, and FOIA.

SPONSORSHIP

REQUIRED

INCOME

Form I-864
Affidavit of Support Under Section 213A

A legally enforceable contract by which the petitioner (and any joint sponsor) promises to support the immigrant at 125% of the Federal Poverty Guidelines until citizenship, 40 quarters of work, or death.

WHO FILES

Every family-based immigrant case. Petitioner must file even if income is zero; joint sponsor steps in if income is short.

EDITION

Current USCIS edition.

FILED WITH

Submitted with I-485 or to NVC during consular processing.

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

HOUSEHOLD

SPONSORSHIP

Form I-864A
Contract Between Sponsor and Household Member

Allows the sponsor to use the income of a household member to meet the 125% poverty threshold.

WHO FILES

Household members of the petitioner (or joint sponsor) who agree to be jointly liable.

EDITION

Current USCIS edition.

FILED WITH

Always filed with the underlying I-864.
 

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

REQUIRED

ADDRESS

Form AR-11
Change of Address

Mandatory notice to USCIS of any address change within 10 days. Required by federal law for every non-citizen.

WHO FILES

All non-citizens with a pending or approved immigration matter.

EDITION

Online at uscis.gov – always current.

FILED WITH

USCIS online – and update each pending case in your USCIS online account.

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

FOIA

RECORDS

Form G-639
Freedom of Information / Privacy Act Request

Requests a copy of an immigration file from USCIS – essential before refiling a denied case, preparing for naturalization with a complex history, or reconstructing prior filings.

WHO FILES

The record subject, their attorney with a G-28, or an authorized representative.

EDITION

Current USCIS edition.

FILED WITH

USCIS FOIA office (online portal preferred).

ATTORNEY PITFALLS

adjustment of status attorney filing case

FOUR PRINCIPLES BEHIND EVERY STRONG FILING

How a family immigration lawyer reads a USCIS form

The forms are public. The judgment is not. These are the principles an immigration attorney applies to every package that leaves the office.

Form selection drives the case

The first decision in any family-based matter is which form opens the file: I-130 with concurrent I-485, I-130 alone for consular processing, I-129F for a fiance, or N-400 for a citizen track. An immigration attorney chooses the form that fits the facts, not the form the client expects.

Evidence is the form's other half

USCIS forms are intake. The evidence package - civil documents, financial proof, bona fide marriage exhibits, hardship narratives - is what an officer actually adjudicates. A family immigration lawyer builds the evidence index before drafting answers.

Edition, signature, and fee win the lockbox

Most rejections are clerical: wrong edition, missing signature, wrong fee, missing initial evidence. Catching those before the package leaves the office is the single highest-leverage thing an immigration attorney does on a filing day.

Every answer is testimony

Once a form is signed and filed, every answer locks in. Inconsistent addresses, undisclosed arrests, omitted prior marriages - they all surface later at the interview or in the FOIA file. Forms get filed once; defending them lasts the life of the case.

INTAKE – APPROVAL

How a Family Immigration Attorney Files These Forms

A repeatable six-step workflow built around the USCIS form set that your case requires.

Eligibility audit

Status, priority date, prior filings, criminal and travel history. The form choice flows from the audit, not the other way around.

Form selection & strategy

Pick the right form set: concurrent vs. consular, K-1 vs. CR-1, I-601 vs. I-601A, N-400 timing under the 3- or 5-year rule.

Evidence build

Civil documents, certified translations, financials for I-864, bona fide marriage exhibits, hardship narrative for waivers.

Drafting & signatures

Forms drafted on the current USCIS edition, signed in the right places, and assembled with a tabbed evidence index.

Filing & receipt

Online or lockbox filing, fee paid correctly, receipt tracked, G-28 in place so the immigration attorney receives every notice.

Post-filing defense

Biometrics, RFE/NOID responses, interview prep, and decision review - including any appeal or motion if needed.

FROM THR FILE ROOM

Six Mistakes a Family Immigration Lawyer Sees Every Week

The same handful of filing errors generate most rejections, RFEs, and avoidable denials. If any of these match your case, treat it as a sign to talk to an immigration attorney before signing.

Send us your draft package. A family immigration lawyer will flag the issues above before anything reaches USCIS.

 

Using a retired form edition

USCIS rejects packages that use an outdated edition. The fix is simple - check the edition date on uscis.gov the day you sign and the day you mail.

Skipping Form I-130A on a spousal petition

The most common avoidable RFE on marriage cases. I-130A is required, not optional, and it must be included even when the beneficiary is abroad.

Borderline I-864 income with no joint sponsor

If the petitioner's most recent tax year is below 125% of the poverty line, a joint sponsor I-864 (and often I-864A) belongs in the package on day one.

Filing I-485 before the priority date is current

Preference-category cases (F1, F2A, F2B, F3, F4) can only adjust when the Visa Bulletin says they can. Filing early gets the package returned.

Traveling on a pending I-485 without Advance Parole

Departure without an approved I-131 is treated as abandonment of the I-485 in most cases. The form sequence matters.

Not disclosing arrests on N-400 or I-485

Expunged and dismissed cases still must be disclosed and documented. Non-disclosure is treated as a good-moral-character problem far worse than the underlying record.

PRO SE VS. REPRESENTED

What an Immigration Attorney Adds to a USCIS Filing

The forms themselves are free. The judgment is what changes outcomes.

FILING STEP PRO SE WITH A FAMILY IMMIGRATION LAWYER
Form selection Pick what looks right on uscis.gov Selected against eligibility, timing, and risk profile
Evidence package Whatever the instructions list Indexed brief with cross-references to each form question
Edition & lockbox compliance Check once before mailing Verified on signing day and filing day; rejection-proofed
RFE / NOID response Answer the questions Reframe the legal issue and rebuild the evidentiary record
USCIS notices Sent only to the applicant G-28 routes every notice to the immigration attorney in parallel
Interview prep Self-study Mock interview keyed to the exact forms and answers on file

Family Immigration Forms FAQs

Legally, yes – almost every USCIS form can be filed pro se. Practically, the question is what is at stake. A clean naturalization case with no travel issues, no arrests, and no tax problems is often a do-it-yourself filing. A marriage green card with a prior denial, a fiancé visa with a long-distance relationship, or any case touching unlawful presence, fraud, or criminal history is the kind of file where a family immigration lawyer earns the fee back many times over by avoiding a denial that is far harder – and more expensive – to fix later.

Open uscis.gov, find the form page, and check the edition date in the lower-left corner of the PDF against the date listed online. USCIS rejects filings that use a retired edition, even by one revision. An immigration attorney’s office checks the edition on the day of signing and again on the day of mailing – both matter, because USCIS sometimes changes editions between drafting and filing

A rejected filing is returned uncashed, which means there is no receipt date and no protection against priority-date loss, age-out, or status expiration. Common reasons are missing signatures, wrong fee, wrong edition, and missing initial evidence, such as Form I-130A. The remedy is to refile correctly, but the lost time can cost months of work authorization or visa availability. A family immigration lawyer reviews the package end-to-end specifically to prevent lockbox rejections.

Requests for Evidence and Notices of Intent to Deny are the moments where most family cases are won or lost. The response window is short, the evidence must be organized to the officer’s exact concern, and a weak response often locks in a denial that is harder to appeal than to fix the first time. If the underlying issue is hardship, fraud, marriage bona fides, or a criminal record, an immigration lawyer should be reviewing the response before it is sent.

No. USCIS filing fees are paid for adjudication, not for approval, and they are not refunded if the case is denied or withdrawn. That is part of why proper form selection matters – filing the wrong form, or the right form on the wrong facts, is an expensive way to learn the rules.

Yes. USCIS has expanded online filing to most family-based forms, including I-130, I-485, I-765, I-131, N-400, N-600, and others. An attorney files Form G-28 to enter as your representative inside your USCIS online account, so all notices, RFEs, and decisions arrive in both portals at once. Online filing also gives faster receipt notices and clearer status tracking – useful in time-sensitive marriage and naturalization cases.