Marriage Green Card

Marriage-Based Permanent Residence

Marriage Green Card Lawyers for Couples in the United States and Abroad

The Messersmith Law Firm represents married couples seeking lawful permanent residence through adjustment of status or consular processing, including cases involving interviews, prior immigration history, waivers, RFEs, NOIDs, and disputed eligibility issues.

A qualifying marital relationship The marriage must be legally valid and entered into in good faith.
The correct immigration process The procedure depends on residence, immigration history, eligibility, and visa availability.
Consistent supporting evidence The forms, documents, prior records, and interview testimony should present a coherent case.

Marriage Green Card Overview

What Is a Marriage Green Card?

A marriage green card allows a qualifying foreign national spouse to become a lawful permanent resident of the United States. The petitioning spouse may be a United States citizen or lawful permanent resident, although the available process and timing can differ.

The process usually begins with a family petition establishing the qualifying marital relationship. The foreign spouse must then complete either adjustment of status inside the United States or immigrant-visa processing through a United States embassy or consulate.

Approval is not based merely on possession of a marriage certificate. The government may examine whether the marriage is genuine, whether the applicant is otherwise eligible, and whether any immigration, criminal, fraud, unlawful-presence, or financial-sponsorship issue affects the case.

Two Principal Filing Paths

Adjustment of Status or Consular Processing

The couple should identify the correct process before preparing the filing because the required forms, government agencies, interview, timing, and risks are different.

01

Adjustment of Status

Adjustment of status is the process used by an eligible foreign spouse seeking permanent residence from inside the United States.

  • Review of the applicant’s entry and current immigration status
  • Preparation of the family petition and adjustment application
  • Financial sponsorship and supporting civil documents
  • Evidence that the marriage is genuine
  • Biometrics, medical examination, and USCIS interview
Explore adjustment of status
02

Consular Processing

Consular processing is generally used when the foreign spouse will complete the immigrant-visa process from outside the United States.

  • Filing and approval of the family petition
  • National Visa Center fees and document processing
  • Affidavit of Support and financial documentation
  • Police certificates, civil documents, and medical examination
  • Immigrant-visa interview at a United States consular post
Explore consular processing

Core Eligibility Issues

What Must Be Established?

1

A Legally Valid Marriage

The marriage must be legally recognized, and prior marriages generally must have been properly terminated.

2

A Bona Fide Marital Relationship

The couple should demonstrate that the marriage was entered into to establish a life together rather than solely to obtain an immigration benefit.

3

Eligibility for Permanent Residence

The foreign spouse must qualify under the applicable process and address any inadmissibility or procedural issue.

4

A Qualifying Financial Sponsor

The petitioner and any joint sponsor must satisfy the applicable Affidavit of Support requirements.

Bona Fide Marriage Evidence

Evidence Should Reflect the Couple’s Actual Life Together

There is no single document that proves every marriage is genuine. The strongest evidence depends on the couple’s living arrangements, finances, family circumstances, relationship history, and available records.

  • Joint residence records
  • Joint bank accounts
  • Insurance policies
  • Joint tax filings
  • Leases or mortgages
  • Shared utility bills
  • Photographs over time
  • Travel records
  • Communications history
  • Birth records of children
  • Beneficiary designations
  • Affidavits from others

Will the Green Card Be Conditional?

When permanent residence is obtained before the couple’s second wedding anniversary, the foreign spouse generally receives conditional permanent residence. Form I-751 is later used to request removal of the conditions.

Learn About Form I-751

Difficult Marriage Green Card Cases

Issues That May Require Additional Legal Analysis

Potential concerns should be evaluated before filing and before the interview. A generic application may fail to explain an issue that USCIS or a consular officer considers important.

Visa Overstay

Prior or current unlawful presence may affect the available process and require review of departure risks.

Unauthorized Employment

The consequences depend on the petitioner’s status, the manner of entry, and the complete immigration history.

Visitor Visa or ESTA Entry

The government may examine the original purpose of entry and any statements made to immigration officers.

Limited Joint Evidence

Separate residences, recent marriages, or unusual financial arrangements may require explanation and alternative evidence.

Prior Marriage Petitions

Earlier filings and statements may be compared with the current case and interview testimony.

RFE, NOID, or Denial

A government challenge should be answered according to the specific factual and legal concerns raised.

Discuss Your Marriage Green Card Case

Contact The Messersmith Law Firm to request an evaluation of the appropriate process, supporting evidence, immigration history, interview concerns, or problems affecting the case.

Request a Case Evaluation

This page provides general information and does not determine eligibility in any individual matter. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.