Visas for Fiancé(e)s of U.S. Citizens (2024)

If you are a U.S. citizen who wants to bring your foreign fiancé(e) to the United States in order to get married, you will need to file a Form I-129F, Petition For Alien Fiancé(e). This is the first step to obtaining a K-1 nonimmigrant visa for your fiancé(e). The K-1 nonimmigrant visa is also known as a fiancé(e) visa.

In order to obtain a K-1 fiancé(e) visa, you and your fiancé(e) must intend to marry each other within 90 days of your fiancé(e) entering the U.S as a K-1 nonimmigrant. Your marriage must be valid, meaning both you and your fiancé(e) have a bona fide intent to establish a life together and the marriage is not for the sole purpose of obtaining an immigration benefit.

If your fiancé(e) marries you within 90 days of being admitted to the United States as a K-1 nonimmigrant, he or she may apply for lawful permanent resident status in the United States (a Green Card).

If you have already married, plan to marry outside the United States, or your fiancé(e) is already residing legally in the United States, your spouse or fiancé(e) is not eligible for a fiancé(e) visa. Go to the Bringing Spouses to Live in the United States as Permanent Residents page for more information about how to help your foreign spouse apply for a Green Card.

Eligibility for Fiancé(e) Visas

You may be eligible to bring your fiancé(e) to the United States on a fiancé(e) visa if you meet the following requirements:

  • You are a U.S. citizen;
  • You and your fiancé(e) intend to marry one another within 90 days of your fiancé(e)’s admission to the United States on a K-1 nonimmigrant visa;
  • You and your fiancé(e) are both legally free to marry (this means you both are legally able to marry in the United States and any previous marriages have been legally terminated by divorce, death, or annulment); and
  • You and your fiancé(e) met each other in person at least once within the 2-year period before you file your petition. You may request a waiver of this in-person meeting requirement if you can show that meeting in person would:
    • Violate strict and long-established customs of your fiancé(e)’s foreign culture or social practice; or
    • Result in extreme hardship to you, the U.S. citizen petitioner.

Process for Bringing your Fiancé(e) to the United States

The process for bringing your fiancé(e) to the United States involves USCIS, the U.S. Department of State (DOS), and U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP). At each stage in the process, background and security checks may be conducted on both you and your fiancé(e). This may include checks in various databases for national security, criminal history, and other information about you and your fiancé(e). These checks are conducted using fingerprints, names, or other biographic or biometric information.

Step 1: Petition for Fiancé(e) – USCIS

  1. You file Form I-129F, Petition for Alien Fiancé(e) according to the form instructions. This form asks USCIS to recognize the relationship between you and your fiancé(e).
  2. We review your Form I-129F and the documents you submitted. We may mail you a request for evidence if we need additional documentation or information.
  3. If you establish your eligibility, we approve your Form I-129F and recognize the claimed fiancé(e) relationship. Otherwise, we deny your Form I-129F and notify you of the reasons for denial.
  4. We send the approved Form I-129F to the DOS National Visa Center (NVC).

For additional information about filing the petition, see the Form I-129F and form instructions.

Step 2: Visa Application – DOS

  1. The NVC forwards the approved Form I-129F to the U.S. Embassy or consulate where your fiancé(e) will apply for a K-1 nonimmigrant visa. This is generally the U.S. Embassy or consulate where your fiancé(e) lives.
  2. The U.S. Embassy or consulate notifies you when the visa interview for your fiancé(e) is scheduled.
  3. Your fiancé(e) applies for the K-1 nonimmigrant visa and brings the required forms and documents to the visa interview.
  4. The DOS consular officer determines whether your fiancé(e) qualifies for the K-1 nonimmigrant visa.
    • If the consular officer grants the K-1 nonimmigrant visa, it is valid for up to 6 months for a single entry.
    • If the consular officer does not find the relationship to be bona fide, DOS will not issue a K-1 nonimmigrant visa and instead will return the Form I-129F to USCIS. Generally, if DOS returns a Form I-129F to us after it has expired, we will allow it to remain expired. However, you may choose to file a new Form I‑129F.

For additional information about applying for a visa, see the DOS Nonimmigrant Visa for a Fiancé(e) page.

Step 3: Inspection at a Port of Entry – CBP

If DOS issues a K-1 nonimmigrant visa, your fiancé(e) travels to the United States and seeks admission at a port of entry while the K-1 nonimmigrant visa is valid. As with any visa, a K-1 nonimmigrant visa does not guarantee admission to the United States. A CBP officer at the port of entry will make the ultimate decision about whether to admit your fiancé(e).

Step 4: Marriage

If your fiancé(e) is admitted as a K-1 nonimmigrant, you and your fiancé(e) have 90 days to marry each other.

Step 5: Adjustment of Status – USCIS

  1. If you marry within 90 days, your fiancé(e)—now your spouse—may apply for a Green Card by filing Form I-485, Application to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status.
  2. We review Form I-485 and the documents your spouse submitted. We may mail a request for evidence to your spouse if we need additional documentation or information.
  3. You and your spouse will usually be required to appear for an interview.
  4. If you were married for less than two years at the time the Form I-485 is approved, USCIS will grant your spouse conditional permanent resident status and issue a Green Card valid for 2 years. Your spouse will need to remove the conditions on his or her residence by filing Form I-751, Petition to Remove Conditions on Residence in the 90 days before his or her Green Card expires.

For additional information about applying for a Green Card, see the Form I-485 and instructions and the Green Card for Fiancé(e) of U.S. Citizen page.

For additional information about removing the conditions on your spouse’s conditional permanent residence, see the Form I-751 page and the Remove Conditions on Permanent Residence Based on Marriage page.

Each case is different and the length of the process varies. USCIS processes fiancé(e) petitions in the order we receive them. For more information about current processing times for the Form I-129F, see the Check Processing Timespage.

Children of Fiancé(e)s

If your fiancé(e) has a child who is under 21 and unmarried, the child may be eligible to come to the United States on a K-2 nonimmigrant visa. You must include the names of your fiancé(e)’s children on the Form I-129F if you wish to bring them to the United States. The children must continue to be unmarried and under 21 in order to be admitted to the United States as K-2 nonimmigrants. They may travel with your fiancé(e) or later, but they cannot travel to the U.S. before your fiancé(e).

If you and your fiancé(e) married within 90 days of your fiancé(e)’s admission into the U.S., your fiancé(e)’s children who were admitted as K-2 nonimmigrants may also apply for a Green Card by filing Form I-485 with USCIS. However, K-2 nonimmigrant children must remain unmarried in order to be eligible for a Green Card. K-2 nonimmigrant children should apply for a Green Card at the same time or after your fiancé(e).

Permission to Work

After being admitted to the U.S. on a K-1 nonimmigrant visa, your fiancé(e) may immediately apply for evidence of work authorization by filing Form I-765, Application for Employment Authorization. In this case, your fiancé(e)’s work authorization is valid for only 90 days after his or her entry into the U.S.

Your fiancé(e) may also apply for work authorization at the same time he or she applies for a Green Card. In this case, your fiancé(e) can file Form I-765 together with the Form I-485. In this case, your fiancé(e)’s work authorization is valid for one year and may be extended in one-year increments.

Failure to Marry Within 90 Days

K-1 and K-2 nonimmigrant status automatically expires after 90 days and cannot be extended. Generally, your fiancé(e) and his or her children must leave the United States at the end of the 90 days if you do not marry. If they do not depart, they will be in violation of U.S. immigration law. This may result in removal (deportation) and could affect their future eligibility for U.S. immigration benefits.

However, if you marry your fiancé(e) after the 90 day period, you may file a Form I-130, Petition for Alien Relative. Go to the Bringing Spouses to Live in the United States as Permanent Residents page for more information about how to help your foreign spouse get a Green Card. Generally, your fiancé(e) may not apply for a Green Card on any other basis besides marriage to you.

Related Links

Forms

  • I-129F,Petition for Alien Fiance(e)
  • I-765,Application for Employment Authorization
  • Family Based Forms

Other USCIS Links

  • Green Card (Permanent Residence)
  • Working in the US
  • Check Processing Times

Non-USCIS Links

Visas for Fiancé(e)s of U.S. Citizens (2024)

FAQs

Can a U.S. citizen apply for fiance visa? ›

If you are a U.S. citizen, you may bring your fiancé(e) to the United States to marry and live here, with a nonimmigrant visa for a fiancé(e) (K-1). An I-129F fiancé(e) petition is required.

How hard is it to get a fiance visa approved? ›

It is understandable to feel stressed out when trying to petition for your loved one and trying to figure out if you submitted your Form I-129F (Petition for Alien Fiancé) application correctly. However, according to recent statistics, about 85% of K-1 visas are approved.

What evidence is needed for a fiance visa? ›

Birth Certificate. Divorce decrees or death certificates (if previously married) Police certificates from countries where you've lived for more than six months. Evidence of your relationship with your U.S. citizen fiancé(e)

How do I prove my relationship is real for a fiancé visa? ›

You should submit proof of a valid fiancé/fiancée relationship with the petitioner. It is often helpful to bring documents such as letters, photographs, or other evidence of your engagement. If you are applying for a K3 visa, please bring your original marriage certificate or a copy certified by the issuing authority.

What is the approval rate for US fiance visa? ›

K1 Visa Approval and Refusal Rates Worldwide by Fiscal Year
Fiscal Year*Approval RateRefusal Rate
201469.4%NaN%
201570.5%NaN%
202182.22%17.78%
202286.99%13.01%
2 more rows

Can a US fiance visa be denied? ›

If either you as the applicant and/or your hopeful fiancée are ineligible to be married, your K-1 visa application may be denied. A common scenario is when one or both of the fiancees are still in another marriage.

Which is faster, a spouse or fiance visa? ›

Application Process and Timeline for Fiancé(e) and Spousal Visa. If your main goal is to get to the U.S. as quickly as possible, then the K-1 fiancé(e) visa is likely the fastest option. But if your goal is to get an actual green card as soon as possible, then a marriage-based visa will be quicker.

Can I marry my fiancé while waiting for K-1 visa? ›

Long and the short of it is, don't get married if you have a pending fiance case. And that's true whether it's pending at USCIS, pending at the National Visa Center briefly, or pending at the embassy itself.

How long are fiancé visas taking right now? ›

How Long Does It Take USCIS To Process Form I-129F for a K-1 Fiancé Visa? The processing time for a K-1 fiancé visa ranges from 12–18 months, and involves U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the National Visa Center, and a U.S. embassy or U.S. consulate in your foreign fiance's country of residence.

What questions are asked in fiancee visa? ›

Questions About Your Relationship and Wedding Plans. You will likely be asked about your wedding plans and how you met, fell in love, and why you decided to get married.

How much money do you need to sponsor a K-1 visa? ›

As of 2024, the minimum income requirement for K-1 visa applications is $20,440 for a household size of two — 100% of the Federal Poverty Guidelines income level.

How to prove a relationship for a visa? ›

You can do this by providing evidence that you:
  1. communicate regularly with each other.
  2. support each other financially.
  3. care for any children you have together.
  4. spend time together as a couple, for example on holiday or at events.

What is a valid proof of relationship? ›

Joint credit card statements showing the name of each spouse as either account holder or authorized user. Joint auto, health, and/or home insurance policies showing coverage for both spouses under the same plan or policy. Life insurance policies listing each other as your primary beneficiary.

How do I prove my relationship is real and continuing? ›

  1. Evidence of living together such as joint leases, mail to the same address, joint utilities or bills etc.
  2. Statements about how you share housework and your living arrangements.
  3. mail or emails addressed to you both.
  4. documents that show joint responsibility for children.

How do I prove my marriage is good faith for immigration? ›

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) considers some documents more convincing proof than others. For USCIS, strong evidence includes joint bank accounts, life insurance, wills, joint lease agreements, joint utility bills, and joint ownership of property.

Can a U.S. citizen marry someone with a visa? ›

The short answer to this complex question is yes, you can get married to someone who has entered the U.S. on a visitor visa. Generally, anyone from a foreign country enters the U.S. with a visa.

How long does it take to get a visa for a fiancé in the US? ›

Applying for an immigrant or fiancé(e) visa is a comprehensive process involving several stages and agencies. It can take anything from six months to many years. The first step is to check the list of visa categories to find out about the eligibility criteria and how a petition is filed or how to submit a DV entry.

Can my fiancé visit me in the US while waiting for a fiance visa? ›

Can my fiancé visit me in the US while waiting for a K-1 fiancé visa? Yes – your fiancé may visit the US, so long as they have a valid B-1/B-2 visa or ESTA. However, your fiancé should expect more scrutiny at the border.

What is the income requirement to sponsor a fiance visa? ›

The K-1 visa income requirement increases by 125% when the future US visa holder applies for permanent resident status. For a two-person household, the sponsoring fiancé must have an annual income of at least $22,185. The exact amount increases for each dependent involved.

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