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  • Medical Examination and Vaccination Requirements
  • Proof of Financial Support and Affidavit of Support Forms
  • Do the Same Income Requirements Apply to Form I-134 as Apply to Form I-864?
  • Fees - How Much Does a K Visa Cost?
  • My Petition Expired - Can It Be Extended?
  • Ineligibilities for Visas - What if I Am Ineligible for a K visa?
  • How Long Will It Take to Get My K Visa?
  • After You Receive a K-1 Fiancé(e) Visa
  • Does My U.S. Citizen Fiancé(e) Need to File Separate Petitions for My Children?
  • Are My Children Required to Travel with Me?
  • Entering the United States - Port of Entry
  • Adjustment of Status, Working in the United States, and Traveling Outside of the United States
  • How to Apply for a Social Security Number Card
  • Further Questions
  • Overview: What Is a K-1 Visa?

    The fiancé(e) K-1 nonimmigrant visa is for the foreign-citizen fiancé(e) of a United States (U.S.) citizen. The K-1 visa permits the foreign-citizen fiancé(e) to travel to the United States and marry his or her U.S. citizen sponsor within 90 days of arrival. The foreign-citizen will then apply for adjustment of status to a permanent resident (LPR) with the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). Because a fiancé(e) visa permits the holder to immigrate to the U.S. and marry a U.S. citizen shortly after arrival in the United States, the fiancé(e) must meet some of the requirements of an immigrant visa. Eligible children of K-1 visa applicants receive K-2 visas.

    What Is a “Fiancé(e)”?

    Under U.S. immigration law, a foreign-citizen fiancé(e) of a U.S. citizen is the recipient of an approved Petition for Alien Fiancé(e), Form I-129F, who has been issued a nonimmigrant K-1 visa for travel to the United States in order to marry his or her U.S. citizen fiancé(e). Both the U.S. citizen and the K-1 visa applicant must have been legally free to marry at the time the petition was filed and must have remained so thereafter. The marriage must be legally possible according to laws of the U.S. state in which the marriage will take place.

    In general, the foreign-citizen fiancé(e) and U.S. citizen sponsor must have met in person within the past two years. USCIS may grant an exception to this requirement, based on extreme hardship for the U.S. citizen sponsor to personally meet the foreign-citizen fiancé(e), or, for example, if it is contrary in the U.S. citizen sponsor’s or foreign-citizen fiancé(e)’s culture for a man and woman to meet before marriage.

    The International Marriage Broker Regulation Act of 2005 (IMBRA)

    Detailed information about IMBRA requirements is contained in the Form I-129F, Petition for Alien Fiancé(e), instructions.

    The First Step: Filing the Petition

    The Second Step: Applying for a Visa

    Once the U.S. Embassy or Consulate where you, the foreign-citizen fiancé(e), will apply receives the petition from NVC, it will provide you with specific instructions, including where to go for the required medical examination. During your interview, ink-free, digital fingerprint scans will be taken. Some visa applications require further administrative processing, which takes additional time after the visa applicant’s interview by a Consular Officer.

    Eligible children of K-1 visa applicants may apply for K-2 visas. Separate applications must be submitted for each K visa applicant, and each K visa applicant must pay the visa application fee.

    Required Documentation

    You, the foreign-citizen fiancé(e), (and eligible children applying for K-2 visas) will be required to bring the following forms and documents to the visa interview: