This doesn’t appear to even touch on the topic of cost for the process. The fees on paper may only be a couple hundred dollars, but if you want any chance of actually getting through the process correctly without missing paperwork or deadlines resulting in a denial from the bureaucratic machine, you’ll essentially need an immigration attorney, and they are not cheap.
When my dad married a woman from the Phillipines about 9 years ago, it ended up costing around $20k for her and one child. That process took almost 5 years to complete… and this was after they’d already been in the US via a Visa and decided to get married here. So ostensibly a bunch of relevant requirements had to have been already verified with the previously approved Visa.
That’s worse than my story, sorry they had to go through that.
I married my wife while I was living in her country, Georgia. Then I came back to the U.S. and started the process for her to come. It took 17 months. I didn’t need a lawyer for it. We did later try to get a visitor visa for my mother-in-law and it got denied. I always say that if I had it to do over again, it would have probably been cheaper and quicker to fly them both to Mexico and then cross the border.
This doesn’t appear to even touch on the topic of cost for the process. The fees on paper may only be a couple hundred dollars, but if you want any chance of actually getting through the process correctly without missing paperwork or deadlines resulting in a denial from the bureaucratic machine, you’ll essentially need an immigration attorney, and they are not cheap.
When my dad married a woman from the Phillipines about 9 years ago, it ended up costing around $20k for her and one child. That process took almost 5 years to complete… and this was after they’d already been in the US via a Visa and decided to get married here. So ostensibly a bunch of relevant requirements had to have been already verified with the previously approved Visa.
That’s worse than my story, sorry they had to go through that.
I married my wife while I was living in her country, Georgia. Then I came back to the U.S. and started the process for her to come. It took 17 months. I didn’t need a lawyer for it. We did later try to get a visitor visa for my mother-in-law and it got denied. I always say that if I had it to do over again, it would have probably been cheaper and quicker to fly them both to Mexico and then cross the border.