Documents for Visa Application
All applicants must submit certain personal documents such
as passports, birth certificates, police certificates, and
other civil documents, as well as evidence that they will
not become public charges in the United States. The U.S.
consular office will inform visa applicants of the documents
needed as their applications are processed.
Medical Examinations
Before the issuance of an
immigrant visa, every applicant, regardless of age, must
undergo a medical examination. The examination will be
conducted by a doctor designated by the consular officer.
Examination costs must be borne by the applicant, in
addition to the visa fees.
Visa Fees
The cost of each formal
immigrant visa application is US$260 for application and
US$65 for issuance. Fees must be paid for each intending
immigrant regardless of age, and are not refundable. Local
currency equivalents are acceptable. Fees should not be sent
to the consular office unless requested specifically. The
INS charges additional fees for filing petitions.
Numerical
Limitations
Whenever there are more
qualified applicants for a category than there are available
numbers, the category will be considered oversubscribed, and
immigrant visas will be issued in the chronological order in
which the petitions were filed until the numerical limit for
the category is reached. The filing date of a petition
becomes the applicant's priority date. Immigrant visas
cannot be issued until an applicant's priority date is
reached. In certain heavily oversubscribed categories, there
may be a waiting period of several years before a priority
date is reached. Check the Visa
Bulletin for the latest priority dates.
Family Members
An immigrant religious
worker's spouse and unmarried children under 21 years of age
may be granted derivative immigration status.
Miscellaneous
Since no advance assurances
can be given that a visa will be issued, applicants are
advised not to make final travel arrangements, not to
dispose of their property, and not to give up their jobs
until visas have been issued to them. An immigrant visa can
be valid for six months from date of issuance.
With few exceptions, a person
born in the United States has a claim to U.S. citizenship.
Persons born in countries other than the U.S. may have a
claim, under United States law, to U.S. nationality if:
-- Either parent was born or
naturalized in the United States, or
-- Either parent was a United States citizen at the time of
applicant's birth.
Any applicant believing that
he or she may have a claim to U.S. citizenship should not
apply for a visa until his or her citizenship has been
determined by the consular office.