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Marriage Green Card (CR-1 / IR-1) Step by Step

Green Card through marriage to a U.S. citizen after you are already married (different from K-1). I-130 + I-485 (in the U.S.) or CR-1/IR-1 through the consulate. Costs, timeline, documents, removing conditions I-751.

If you are already married to a U.S. citizen, the path to a Green Card is different from K-1 (which is before marriage). There are two paths: Adjustment of Status if you are already living in the U.S., or Consular Processing (CR-1/IR-1) if the spouse is still living in Poland.

CR-1 vs IR-1 — Difference

  • CR-1 (Conditional Resident) — marriage less than 2 years at the time of entry/approval. You receive a 2-year Green Card, then you need to remove conditions (I-751).
  • IR-1 (Immediate Relative) — marriage 2+ years. You receive a 10-year Green Card immediately.

Path A: Adjustment of Status (spouse in the U.S. legally)

The immigrant spouse is already in the U.S. on a legal visa (e.g., B-1/B-2, F-1, H-1B). After marriage, you file together:

Forms and Costs (2025)

  • I-130 Petition for Alien Relative — $675
  • I-485 Adjustment of Status — $1,440
  • I-864 Affidavit of Support (sponsor's financial)
  • I-693 medical — approx. $300-500 at panel physician
  • I-765 Employment Authorization (EAD) — FREE with I-485
  • I-131 Advance Parole (permission to leave the U.S.) — FREE with I-485

Total: approx. $2,115 + medical + translations.

AOS Timeline

  1. 0-2 weeks: Submission of the package
  2. 2-4 weeks: Receipt notices
  3. 4-8 weeks: Biometrics
  4. 3-5 months: EAD + Advance Parole (you can work and travel)
  5. 8-14 months: Interview for both spouses + approval
  6. 1-3 months after the interview: Green Card arrives by mail

⚠️ 90-day rule (important!)

USCIS may suspect visa fraud (misrepresentation) if you entered on a tourist visa with the intention of filing AOS within 90 days of entry. The safest approach: enter legally, wait 90+ days, then get married and file AOS. Entering specifically for marriage and AOS may result in denial + ban.

Path B: Consular Processing (spouse in Poland)

The spouse is still living in Poland. This is standard for couples who married in Poland or the U.S. but the spouse has left.

Step 1: I-130 to USCIS (12-15 months)

The U.S. citizen files I-130 ($675). Time: 12-15 months. After approval, the case goes to NVC (National Visa Center).

Step 2: NVC processing (2-4 months)

NVC collects documents: I-864, DS-260 (online application), civil documents, fees.

  • DS-260 — $325
  • I-864 Affidavit fee — $120

Step 3: Consular interview in Warsaw (1-3 months)

After completing the documents, the U.S. consulate in Warsaw schedules an interview. The immigrant spouse comes with:

  • Passport valid for at least 8 months
  • DS-260 confirmation
  • Civil status documents (birth, marriage, divorce certificates)
  • Criminal record certificate from KRK + any country where you lived for 6+ months
  • Medical examination (panel physician — Warsaw: Medicover; Kraków: Scanmed) — approx. 1,200-1,800 PLN
  • U.S. visa format passport photos
  • Affidavit of Support from the U.S.
  • Proof of marriage: photos, correspondence, joint accounts

Step 4: Entry + Green Card

The spouse receives an immigrant visa in the passport and has 6 months to enter the U.S. After entry, the Green Card arrives by mail within 2-6 weeks. Pay the "USCIS immigrant fee" $235 online before entry (otherwise the GC will not be sent).

Affidavit of Support — financial requirements for the sponsor

I-864 is a commitment from the U.S. citizen that you will support the spouse for 10 years (or 40 quarters of work). Income requirement: 125% of the Federal Poverty Line for household size.

For a couple (1 sponsor + 1 sponsored): in 2025, ~$25,700 per year. For 3 people (1+2): ~$32,400.

If the sponsor does not have sufficient income: a joint sponsor is needed (usually a family member in the U.S., parents, siblings) — they fill out a separate I-864.

Removing Conditions — I-751 (after 2 years)

If the marriage was less than 2 years at the time of approval, you receive a 2-year Green Card (conditional). To maintain it:

  • File I-751 ($750) 90 days before expiration
  • File jointly (joint petition) or individually with exceptions (if divorce, death, abuse — VAWA waiver)
  • Documents: joint bank account, joint lease/mortgage, health insurance, taxes MFJ, photos together, vacations, children
  • Processing time: 12-24 months
  • During this time, the GC is "automatically extended" with a letter from USCIS
  • After approval — 10-year Green Card

Interview — what to expect

The interview for both spouses with a USCIS officer (in the field) or consular officer (in Poland):

  • Questions about daily life: what time you wake up, who cooks, what movie sites you watched yesterday
  • Sometimes a "Stokes interview" — they separate you and ask independently, then compare answers
  • The more evidence of a genuine life together, the less chance of a Stokes
  • Evidence: photos from 5+ years, joint accounts, insurance policies, mortgage, witness statements

USCIS Red Flags

  • Large age difference
  • Lack of a common language (intercultural marriages are not excluded, but increase scrutiny)
  • Short acquaintance before marriage
  • Living at separate addresses
  • Lack of joint photos/documents/accounts
  • Sponsor has a history of multiple petitions (4+ Green Cards)
  • Lack of family guests at the wedding / lack of a religious ceremony

Practical Tips

  • Open a joint bank account as early as possible
  • Rent/buy property together (both on lease/mortgage)
  • All insurance with mutual beneficiary
  • File taxes Married Filing Jointly
  • Invite family from Poland to the wedding if possible — photos with family are strong
  • Keep all flight tickets from visits (if LDR)
  • Correspondence: screenshots of chats, letters

Official sources

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