Can a fiancee help in my application for US visa?
Answer:
if your fiancee is a US citizen then yes she can help you for visa processing, she can apply for you a fiancee K1 visa and you two should get married here in US within 90 days...
One other option is the fiancé(e) visa if your fiancé(e) is
overseas and you want to get married in the U.S., or he/she is in the U.S. and wants to depart the U.S. and return to get married. This visa acts as a bridge to permanent residence for your fiancé(e) —it lets him or her enter the U.S. for 90 days so your marriage ceremony can take place here. Once you are married, your new spouse can apply for permanent residence and remain in the U.S. while we process the application. If you choose this option, file a Form I-129F, Petition for Alien Fiancé(e). The I-129F is available
from our website. If you choose this option and if we approve the I-129F, we will send it to the U.S. Embassy or Consulate nearest your fiancé(e)’s foreign place of residence. The Consulate will then invite him or her to apply for the actual fiancé(e) visa. What are the basic eligibility requirements
for a fiancé(e) petition? Only a U.S. citizen can file a fiancé(e) petition. In your petition you must prove that:
• You are a U.S. citizen; and • You and your fiancé(e) intend to marry within 90 days of your fiancé(e) entering the U.S.; and • You are both free to marry; and
• You have met each other in person within two years before you file this petition unless: 1. The requirement to meet your fiancé(e) in person would violate strict and long-established customs of your or your fiancé(e)’s foreign culture or social practice; or 2. You prove that the requirement to personally meet your fiancé(e) would result in extreme hardship to you.
What if my fiancé(e) is already in the U.S. in another
status and we decide to get married now?
A fiancé(e) visa is only available to a person who is outside the U.S.,
or will be leaving the U.S. and then returning as a fiancé(e).
If your fiancé(e) is in the U.S. and entered using a visa other than
a fiancé(e) visa, and you marry, then you may file an I-130 relative
petition for him or her as your husband or wife. He/she may be able
to file Form I-485, Application to Register Permanent Residence or
to Adjust Status, along with your petition. For more information
about the I-130 relative petition, please see Fact Sheet A1.
1If your fiancé(e) is in the U.S. and entered unlawfully, while you can get
married and file the I-130 for him or her, in most cases he/she will not be
able to adjust his/her status to that of a permanent resident while in the
U.S. In this situation, he/she will have to pursue an immigrant visa at a U.S.
Consulate/Embassy overseas.
You need to come to America on your own ability, not anyone else's. If you already have the fiancee, sorry for the comment. If not, how dare you use a US citizen to further your cause!
The immigration information post by website user , MyTend.com not guarantee correctness
