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Marriage-based green card

Marriage Adjustment of Status Green Card Timeline: A Realistic Overview

You just got married, and you are ready to build your life together in the United States. But when you started researching the timeline, you likely found estimates ranging from several months to several years to receive a green card,with little explanation for the difference.
The truth is,there is no single timeline for marriage-based adjustment of status and the timelines can change based on USCIS policy updates, visa availability, and other external factors that can add delays. The marriage-based green card process moves through distinct stages,and the total time depends on factors specific to your situation.This guide walks through each stage clearly, including where delays typically occur and what you can do to keep your case moving.

The First Question: Citizen or Permanent Resident Spouse?

Whether your spouse is a U.S. citizen or a lawful permanent resident adjusts the timeline of your adjustment of status process.
Spouse of a U.S. citizen. You are considered an immediate relative under U.S. immigration law. Once your petition is approved, a visa number is available to you immediately. There is no waiting queue.
Spouse of a lawful permanent resident. You fall into the Family Preference category, which is subject to numerical limits. This means there can be a waiting period between petition approval and when a visa number becomes available. Depending on your country of birth and the current backlog, this wait can add time to your overall timeline before the next steps even begin. Additionally, it’s difficult to predict how long the waiting period will be and is contingent on your priority date and the visa bulletin, a monthly publication by the U.S. Department of State that indicates who is eligible to apply for or finalize their U.S. permanent residency (green card).
Everything else in the process is largely the same, but this distinction is worth understanding at the outset.

Eligibility Requirements

A legally valid marriage. Your marriage must be valid in the jurisdiction where it took place and recognized under U.S. law. Common-law marriages, proxy marriages, and marriages entered into while a prior marriage was still legally intact raise concerns about your eligibility. Additionally, any domestic partnerships need to be evaluated for their legality and impact on the qualifying marriage of your USCIS petition.
A qualifying petitioner. Your spouse must be a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident at the time of filing.
A bona fide marriage. USCIS must be satisfied that your marriage was entered into in good faith, not for the purpose of obtaining an immigration benefit. You must be able to document your continued, bona fide marriage with your spouse. You must demonstrate you live together, share assets, and have a life together.

The Timeline, Stage by Stage

Concurrent Filing (Form I-130 with Form I-485, Adjustment of Status)

Stage 1: Filing the Petition (1 to 3 months to prepare and file)

Marriage-based adjustment of status process begins with Form I-130, the Petition for Alien Relatives. This is your spouse’s formal request to USCIS to recognize your relationship and establish your eligibility for an immigrant visa.
Form I-130 alone is not your green card application. It is the eligibility basis for your green card application. Filing it correctly, with complete and well-organized supporting documentation, matters more than most couples initially expect.
When filing concurrently, Form I-130 is submitted together with Form I-485, Application to Adjust Status, along with applications for work authorization and advance parole. This allows you to remain in the United States throughout the process.

Stage 2: Biometrics and Background Checks (1 to 3 months)

After filing, USCIS will schedule a biometrics appointment and conduct background checks on the applicant. This stage typically runs concurrently with the adjudication of the underlying petition, Form I-130.

Stage 3: USCIS Adjudication of the I-130 and I-485 (5 to 14 months)

Once filed, your I-130 enters USCIS’s processing queue. Processing times vary by service center and fluctuate with overall USCIS workload. This is typically the longest single stage in the concurrent filing process.
If you submitted an application for work authorization and advance parole, these may come in within a few months. In some cases, your work authorization may come soon but the advance parole may not come in before your marriage interview.

Stage 4: The Interview (timing varies by location)

Most concurrent filing cases require an in-person interview at a USCIS field office. The officer will review both the I-130 and I-485 together and ask both spouses questions about their relationship, their life together, and their plans. In many cases, the I-130 and I-485 are adjudicated together at this interview.
Scheduling wait times vary considerably by location. Some USCIS field offices move relatively quickly, whereas others have queues that stretch for several months. This is one of the harder aspects of the timeline to predict in advance.

Stage 5: Decision and Green Card Issuance (Within about six months after final interview)

Following a successful interview, approval typically follows within days to a few weeks and your green card arrives by mail. If additional documentation is requested or further review is needed, the timeline extends accordingly.

Filing Form I-130 and Form I-485 Separately

Stage 1: Filing the I-130 Petition (1 to 3 months to prepare and file)

The process begins with Form I-130, filed on its own without a concurrent I-485. This is common when the beneficiary is outside of the United States or when the couple is not yet ready to file the full adjustment of status package. As with concurrent filing, the I-130 establishes eligibility and is not the green card application.

Stage 2: USCIS Adjudication of the I-130 (5 to 14 months)

Once filed, the I-130 enters USCIS’s processing queue. Processing times vary by service center and fluctuate with overall caseload. This wait is typically the longest single stage in the separate filing process.

Stage 3: The I-130 Interview

When the I-130 is filed separately, USCIS may schedule an interview at a local field office to assess the validity of the marriage before approving the petition. Not every separately filed I-130 requires an interview, and USCIS has discretion over when to schedule one. Both spouses are typically asked to attend.

Stage 4: Filing Form I-485 (1 to 3 months to prepare and file)

Once the I-130 is approved, the beneficiary, if eligible and present in the United States, may file Form I-485, Application to Register Permanent Residence. Work authorization and advance parole can be filed concurrently at this stage.

Stage 5: Biometrics and Background Checks

USCIS will schedule a biometrics appointment and conduct background checks on the applicant. This stage typically runs concurrently with the I-485 adjudication.

Stage 6: The I-485 Interview (timing varies by location)

Once the I-485 is filed and biometrics are complete, USCIS will schedule an in-person interview at a local field office. The officer will review the full application and ask both spouses questions about their relationship and life together. Some cases are approved at this stage. Others may be continued pending additional documentation or further review.

Stage 7: Decision and Green Card Issuance (Within about six months after final interview)

Following a successful interview, approval typically follows within days to a few weeks and your green arrives by mail. In some cases, it takes closer to six months for the Green Card to arrive. If a request for evidence or additional review is required, the timeline extends accordingly.

Required Documentation

The marriage-based green card process requires documentation at multiple stages, from the initial I-130 filing through the interview. The main categories include:

  • Proof of the petitioner’s U.S. Citizen or Permanent Resident status
  • Proof of a valid marriage
  • Evidence of a bona fide marriage
  • Civil documents
  • Financial support documentation

Frequently Asked Questions.

Can I work while my application is pending? If you are adjusting status inside the United States, you can file for an Employment Authorization Document concurrently with your green card application. Once approved, you are authorized to work for any U.S. employer while your case remains pending.

What if my spouse and I live in different countries? If the spouse who seeks a Green Card is not living in the U.S. they cannot pursue Adjustment of Status. An I-130 must first be filed with USCIS and once approved, the spouse abroad can file an immigrant visa application and undergo consular processing.

Will USCIS be concerned if we married quickly? A short courtship does not automatically raise concerns. What matters is the quality and consistency of your documentation and how you present your relationship at the interview. Couples who met online, married within months, or have significant age differences tend to receive more careful scrutiny, but approval is achievable with thorough preparation.

What if one of us has a prior immigration violation? Prior visa overstays, entries without inspection, prior removal orders, or misrepresentation in a previous immigration application do not automatically bar eligibility for a marriage-based green card, but they do add complexity to the process. These situations benefit from an honest early assessment of what the prior history means for your specific case.

How long after getting a green card can I apply for citizenship? If you obtained your green card through marriage to a U.S. citizen and have been living in marital union with that spouse, you may be eligible to apply for naturalization after three years of permanent residence rather than the standard five years.

Strategic Considerations

Filing strategy and concurrent applications. For spouses already in the United States, the ability to file the I-130 and I-485 concurrently, along with applications for work authorization and advance parole, is a meaningful practical advantage. It consolidates the process and allows you to remain in the U.S. and work while your case is pending. Whether this is available to you depends on how you entered the country and your current status, making early case evaluation worthwhile.

Documenting a genuine marriage from the beginning. The bona fide marriage requirement runs through every stage of the process, from the initial filing through the interview. Couples who approach this documentation thoughtfully from the start, rather than assembling evidence at the last minute, tend to have a stronger overall case. This is especially true for couples with unconventional circumstances, such as long-distance relationships, recent marriages, or significant age differences.

Prior immigration history. If either spouse has a prior immigration violation or complication in their history, understanding how that affects the current case is important before filing. Some prior history creates bars to certain forms of relief or triggers additional procedural steps. Additionally, if your attorney needs to obtain your immigration records from an immigration agency prior to filing your case, this can add to the timeline as it could take months to over a year to receive records from some agencies. Knowing this in advance allows for better planning.

The three-year naturalization pathway. For spouses of U.S. citizens, the path to citizenship can begin three years after receiving a green card rather than five, provided you remain in marital union with your U.S. citizen spouse. For couples building long-term lives in the U.S., this is worth factoring into the broader immigration picture early.

Working With an Immigration Strategist

No two marriage-based green card cases are alike. The variables in your specific situation, where you are located, your spouse’s immigration status, any prior history on either side, and your long-term plans in the U.S., all shape both the process and the strategy.
At Khalique Law, we recognize that a marriage green card case is not a transaction. It is your family. We approach it accordingly with an honest assessment of where you stand, a clear explanation of what the process involves, and a strategy built around your specific circumstances.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Immigration law is fact-specific, and outcomes depend on individual circumstances. Please consult a qualified immigration attorney regarding your specific situation.