Driving and Turnpike Access
The facility is near SW 120th Street and SW 147th Avenue, with Florida’s Turnpike nearby. Check real-time traffic, toll-road conditions, construction, and the final approach before departing.
The Messersmith Law Firm prepares couples for I-130 and I-485 marriage interviews, Form I-751 interviews, second interviews, separate questioning, and difficult cases scheduled at the Kendall USCIS Field Office.
Attorney attendance at the Kendall office may be arranged after review of the complete filing, prior immigration history, relationship evidence, possible inadmissibility, interpreter needs, and facts that could lead to additional questioning or denial.
The Messersmith Law Firm is based in Orlando, Florida and does not maintain an office inside or at the Kendall USCIS facility. Travel is subject to case acceptance, attorney availability, scheduling, and agreed travel arrangements.
Adequate time is needed to review the complete filing, obtain missing records, prepare both spouses, organize updated evidence, address interpreter needs, and determine whether attorney travel can be arranged.
Always follow the exact address, date, time, service, and entrance instructions printed on the USCIS appointment notice.
USCIS also identifies an Application Support Center at 14675 SW 120th Street. A biometrics appointment and a marriage green card interview are different services even when they occur at the same address. Follow the appointment type, entrance, date, and check-in instructions on the specific notice.
Plan the route and parking before the appointment date. Arriving late can create serious problems even when the delay was caused by traffic, an incorrect address, or difficulty finding the entrance.
The facility is near SW 120th Street and SW 147th Avenue, with Florida’s Turnpike nearby. Check real-time traffic, toll-road conditions, construction, and the final approach before departing.
Customer parking is currently identified at the property. Availability, access lanes, security controls, and the correct entrance may change, so allow time to park and locate the check-in area.
Public transportation may require transfers and walking. Use the current Miami-Dade trip planner or GO Miami-Dade Transit application to confirm nearby stops and real-time service.
USCIS currently advises appointment visitors to arrive approximately 15 minutes before the scheduled time and not substantially earlier. Leave enough travel time to manage South Florida traffic and parking, while following the notice regarding when to enter the building.
The forms involved, case history, prior evidence, and reason for the appointment determine what USCIS may review at the Kendall office.
USCIS may review the legal marriage, bona fide relationship, adjustment eligibility, entry history, status, financial sponsorship, admissibility, and updated evidence.
Review marriage interview helpUSCIS may examine the marriage since conditional residence was granted, including shared residence, finances, separation, divorce, waiver eligibility, and updated records.
Review Form I-751 helpThe spouses may be questioned separately when USCIS identifies unresolved discrepancies, conflicting addresses, weak evidence, prior statements, or suspected fraud.
Review marriage fraud concernsThe officer may focus on documents and explanations submitted in response to a request for evidence or proposed adverse finding.
Review NOID assistanceUSCIS may investigate a former spouse petition, prior marriage, earlier denial, divorce chronology, former spouse statement, or possible INA §204(c) issue.
Review prior marriage issuesQuestions may involve visa statements, fraudulent documents, unlawful presence, unauthorized employment, criminal history, removal, or another possible inadmissibility ground.
Review waiver issuesAn unusual fact does not automatically prove marriage fraud or inadmissibility. The issue should be evaluated before testimony is given or new records are submitted.
The spouses live separately because of work, education, finances, caregiving, family obligations, immigration circumstances, or marital difficulties.
Leases, licenses, taxes, insurance, employment records, banking records, or immigration forms contain inconsistent residential addresses.
The couple has separate finances, no joint lease, limited insurance, few shared bills, or recently created joint documentation.
The applicant remained beyond an authorized stay, failed to maintain status, violated visa terms, or is uncertain about current status.
The applicant worked without authorization, received cash income, used inaccurate employment information, or has inconsistent tax records.
The applicant entered without inspection, was paroled, lacks a clear admission record, or has an unusual border or airport history.
Either spouse previously filed or benefited from an I-130, I-129F, I-485, immigrant visa, or another relationship-based case.
A DS-160, consular interview, border statement, asylum filing, student record, or employment petition may contain inaccurate information.
The spouses remember relationship dates, travel, household routines, relatives, prior addresses, finances, or important events differently.
A present or prior filing may involve altered, purchased, borrowed, fabricated, or unreliable identity, school, employment, financial, or immigration records.
The applicant or petitioner has an arrest, domestic incident, citation, charge, conviction, diversion, expungement, or incomplete court record.
The applicant has a removal order, immigration-court case, expedited removal, voluntary departure, border refusal, detention, or ICE history.
A pre-interview review can determine whether the concern is legally significant, whether records should be obtained, whether a correction or explanation is appropriate, and whether attorney attendance is advisable.
Reviewing only common marriage interview questions may be insufficient. The officer may compare each spouse’s testimony with the pending forms, prior applications, government records, public information, and evidence already contained in the file.
A legal review should identify contradictions before the appointment and determine whether an apparent discrepancy is minor, explainable, material, or potentially related to inadmissibility or marriage fraud.
The goal is not to memorize matching answers. Each spouse should understand the filing, know the genuine relationship history, and answer truthfully based on personal knowledge.
Language and accommodation planning should occur before the appointment. An applicant should not guess, agree without understanding, or allow a misunderstood question to create an inaccurate record.
When USCIS permits an interpreter, the interpreter must accurately convey the complete questions and answers between English and the interviewee’s language.
Do not assume that the attorney should also serve as the interpreter. Separate interpretation allows counsel to focus on legal issues, questioning, and the accuracy of the record.
A person requiring an accommodation should use the current USCIS procedure before the appointment rather than wait until arriving at the building.
An interpreter should translate the actual question and response without changing, improving, shortening, or supplying an answer. Language problems should be raised promptly during the interview.
Changes should be identified before the interview so the forms, testimony, and updated records remain accurate and consistent.
Review address changes, leases, identification, mail, USCIS updates, and the chronology of the new residence.
Determine whether the marriage continues, why the spouses live apart, and what evidence documents the relationship and present intentions.
A pending or completed divorce may affect an I-130, I-485, or I-751 case differently depending on its procedural stage.
Updated sponsorship documents or a joint sponsor may be necessary when income, employment, taxes, or household circumstances changed.
Obtain police and certified court records and evaluate the immigration consequences before discussing the incident with USCIS.
Determine whether and how to correct an omission, misunderstanding, date, address, employment entry, prior marriage, or other statement.
Updated family records may support the relationship and may affect household size, sponsorship, and other case information.
A petitioner who became a U.S. citizen after filing may need to update USCIS and document the changed classification.
Interview-only representation may be considered when adequate time remains to review the file, enter an appearance, and arrange travel.
The appointment notice controls. Bring every item specifically requested by USCIS together with the documents needed to update and support the case.
Bring the original notice, government-issued identification, current and expired passports, and immigration documents requested by USCIS.
Bring Forms I-130, I-130A, I-485, I-864, supporting forms, prior responses, and all exhibits previously submitted.
Bring original or properly certified marriage, birth, divorce, death, adoption, and name-change records when requested.
Include current residence, banking, tax, insurance, travel, communication, photograph, family, and household records created after filing.
Bring recent tax records, pay statements, employment confirmation, proof of status, and joint-sponsor documentation where applicable.
Bring required medical documentation or proof of prior submission according to the appointment notice and current USCIS requirements.
Bring certified dispositions and related records for arrests, citations, diversion, expungement, probation, or criminal proceedings.
Foreign-language documents should include complete certified English translations satisfying USCIS requirements.
Bring targeted documentation concerning separate residences, work travel, limited finances, marital difficulties, or prior filings.
Counsel generally appears through Form G-28. Any interpreter or accommodation documents should also be coordinated before the appointment.
An attorney cannot answer personal relationship questions for the spouses or guarantee approval. Counsel can review the complete case, prepare the couple, attend in person, address legal and procedural issues, and help protect the record.
Interview-only representation may be considered when the couple filed without counsel, used an online filing service, worked with a document preparer, or has an attorney who will not attend.
New counsel must have enough time to review the complete petition and application, prior immigration history, government notices, supporting records, language issues, and possible legal problems before agreeing to appear.
A lawyer should not enter the case merely to sit in the interview room without understanding the record. Serious issues may require certified records, prior applications, written explanations, corrections, additional evidence, or waiver analysis.
USCIS may decide the case quickly or continue reviewing it. A favorable conversation or verbal statement is not a final written approval.
USCIS may approve the I-130, I-485, or I-751 after completing the interview and remaining review.
The matter may remain pending while USCIS reviews the record, completes checks, or obtains information.
USCIS may request marriage, sponsorship, medical, civil, criminal, entry, or other documentation.
USCIS may schedule further or separate questioning when significant concerns remain.
USCIS may verify the residence, employment, public records, former relationships, or submitted evidence.
USCIS may provide adverse findings and a deadline to rebut derogatory evidence or legal conclusions.
USCIS may deny for insufficient evidence, abandonment, ineligibility, inadmissibility, credibility, or marriage fraud.
USCIS may identify a waivable ground requiring Form I-601 or another form of relief.
Review the page that most closely matches the notice, allegation, or decision in the case.
The appointment notice and complete case record must be reviewed before determining the proper preparation strategy.
The Kendall USCIS facility is currently listed at 14675 SW 120th Street, Miami, Florida 33186. The appointment notice controls the location, date, time, service, and entrance instructions.
USCIS identifies a Kendall Application Support Center at the same address. Biometrics and marriage interviews remain different appointments, so follow the service and check-in instructions on the specific notice.
Public mapping currently identifies customer parking at the facility. Parking availability, access lanes, entrances, and security procedures may change.
The facility is near SW 120th Street and SW 147th Avenue, with a nearby Florida’s Turnpike interchange. Check current traffic and toll-road conditions before departing.
Current USCIS guidance generally instructs visitors to arrive approximately 15 minutes before the scheduled time for security screening and check-in and not substantially earlier.
An attorney may generally attend after entering an appearance through Form G-28. Counsel should review the complete case before agreeing to appear.
Interview-only representation may be considered after review of the complete filing, immigration history, notices, evidence, legal risks, interview date, interpreter needs, and attorney availability.
When USCIS permits an interpreter, the interpreter must accurately interpret between English and the interviewee’s language. Interpreter arrangements should be reviewed before the appointment.
No. Couples may live separately for legitimate reasons. They should explain the arrangement and provide evidence of the genuine marriage and ongoing relationship.
USCIS may interview the petitioner and beneficiary together or separately when unresolved relationship, residence, credibility, or fraud concerns exist.
A lawyer may review a self-filed case for inaccurate answers, omissions, inconsistent histories, missing documents, sponsorship issues, and legal concerns before the interview.
New counsel may consider entering the case, but enough time must remain to obtain and review the record, prepare the spouses, address the existing representation, and arrange travel.
Forms and testimony must be truthful. The legal effect depends on the petitioner, immigration category, manner of entry, procedural history, and other facts. Obtain legal advice rather than conceal the issue.
The statement should be reviewed to determine what was represented, whether it was false, whether it was willful and material, and whether correction, rebuttal, or waiver analysis is required.
Do not submit another false document or create a misleading explanation. The document, knowledge, purpose, immigration benefit, government record, and possible inadmissibility should be reviewed before testimony.
The case may remain under review. USCIS may later approve it, request evidence, schedule another interview, investigate further, issue a NOID, or deny the matter.
No. Counsel can evaluate the law and evidence, prepare the spouses, attend the interview, and advocate concerning legal and procedural issues. USCIS controls the adjudication.
Contact The Messersmith Law Firm for case-specific interview preparation, evidence review, mock questioning, interpreter planning, inadmissibility analysis, and possible attorney attendance at the Kendall USCIS Field Office.
Submitting an inquiry does not create an attorney-client relationship, confirm case acceptance, reserve attorney travel, or make the firm responsible for the interview or another deadline.
Attorney Advertising. The Messersmith Law Firm, P.A. maintains its bona fide office in Orlando, Florida and does not maintain an office at 14675 SW 120th Street or inside the USCIS Kendall Field Office. Attorney travel may be arranged based on case acceptance, attorney availability, scheduling, and agreed travel arrangements. MarriageGreenCards.com is a private law-firm website and is not affiliated with USCIS or another government agency. Office locations, parking, transit, entrances, security rules, appointment procedures, interpreter policies, closures, and government practices may change. The official appointment notice and current USCIS instructions control. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.