Forms
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Did you get a text or email message from us letting you know that you can file Form I-90 online? Our text and email messages will always include a link that takes you directly to the USCIS website, and the link will always end in .gov. The email message would have come from uscis@public.govdelivery.com. We did not ask for any personal information in these messages.
Use this form to replace a Green Card.
DO NOT submit this form if you are a conditional resident seeking to remove conditions on your Green Card. If you are a conditional resident, you must submit one of the following:
- Form I-751, Petition to Remove Conditions on Residence, to remove conditions on a Green Card obtained through marriage
OR
- Form I-829, Petition by Entrepreneur to Remove Conditions, to remove conditions on a Green Card obtained through financial investment in a U.S. business.
If you need evidence of your lawful permanent resident status while waiting to receive a replacement Green Card, we may issue you an Alien Documentation, Identification & Telecommunications (ADIT) stamp after you file this form. Additionally, if you applied for naturalization at least six months before your Green Card expired, you may be able to receive an ADIT stamp instead of filing a Form I-90. If you need assistance, contact the USCIS Contact Center.
As a lawful permanent resident, you must have a valid, unexpired Permanent Resident Card or equivalent document with you at all times. Applying for naturalization does not change this requirement.
Go to the I-90 | Application to Replace Permanent Resident Card page to find detailed information.
Use this form to provide biographic information and include it with the application or petition you are submitting to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS).
Go to the G-325A | Biographic Information (for Deferred Action) page to find detailed information.
Use this to petition to bring your fiancé(e) (K-1) and that person’s children (K-2) to the U.S. for marriage to you, or to bring your spouse (K-3) and that person’s children (K-4) to the U.S. to apply for lawful permanent resident status.
How to report suspected marriage fraud
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has an online tip form to report suspected benefit/marriage fraud or other violations.
Help for immigration crime victims
Different types of support are available through ICE’s Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement (VOICE) Office.
Go to the I-129F | Petition for Alien Fiancé(e) page to find detailed information.
Use this form if you are a citizen or lawful permanent resident of the United States who needs to establish their relationship to certain alien relatives who wish to immigrate to the United States.
Note: Filing a Form I-130 is only the first step in helping a relative immigrate to the United States. Eligible family members must wait until there is a visa number available before they can apply to become a lawful permanent resident.
How to report suspected marriage fraud: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has an online tip form to report suspected benefit/marriage fraud or other violations.
Help for immigration crime victims
Different types of support are available through ICE’s Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement (VOICE) Office.
Go to the I-130 | Petition for Alien Relative page to find detailed information.
Use this form to apply for a re-entry permit, refugee travel document, or advance parole travel document, to include parole into the U.S. for humanitarian reasons.
Go to the I-131 | Application for Travel Document page to find detailed information.
Use this form to petition for an alien worker to become a permanent resident in the United States.
Go to the I-140 | Immigrant Petition for Alien Workers page to find detailed information.
You may file Form I-191 if you are a lawful permanent resident and you believe you are eligible for relief under former INA section 212(c).
Congress repealed former INA section 212(c) effective April 1, 1997. However, the U.S. Supreme Court decided in 2001 that the repeal does not apply to lawful permanent residents who pleaded guilty to a crime before April 1, 1997 (INS v. St. Cyr, 533 U.S. 289). In Matter of Abdelghany, 26 I&N Dec. 254 (BIA 2014), the Board of Immigration Appeals held that relief under former INA section 212(c) is also available to otherwise eligible lawful permanent residents even if they were convicted following a trial before April 1, 1997.
Note: The form was previously titled, "Application for Advance Permission to Return to Unrelinquished Domicile".
Go to the I-191 | Application for Relief Under Former Section 212(c) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) page to find detailed information.
Use this form to classify an alien as:
- An Amerasian (Born after 12/31/1950 and before 10/23/1982);
- The widow(er) of a U.S. citizen;
- The abused spouse or child of a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident;
- The abused parent of a U.S. citizen; or
-
A special immigrant. A special immigrant is defined as one of the following:
- Religious Worker
- Panama Canal Company Employee, Canal Zone Government Employee, U.S. Government in the Canal Zone Employee;
- Physician;
- International Organization or NATO-6 Employee or Family Member;
- Juvenile Declared Dependent on a juvenile court;
- U.S. armed forces member;
- Afghan or Iraqi national who worked for or on behalf of the U.S. government as a translator;
- Iraqi national who worked for or on behalf of the U.S. government in Iraq or
- An Afghan national who worked for or on behalf of the U.S. government or the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan.
Go to the I-360 | Petition for Amerasian, Widow(er), or Special Immigrant page to find detailed information.
Use this form to apply for lawful permanent resident status if you are in the United States.
Go to the I-485 | Application to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status page to find detailed information.
Use this form to provide USCIS with additional information if you are seeking to adjust status under section 245(i) of the Immigration and Nationality Act.
Go to the I-485 Supplement A | Supplement A to Form I-485, Adjustment of Status Under Section 245(i) page to find detailed information.
Use Supplement J to:
- Confirm that the job offered to you in Form I-140, Petition for Alien Worker, remains a bona fide job offer that you intend to accept once your Form I 485, Application to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status, is approved. Beginning Jan. 17, 2017, if you are filing or have previously filed Form I-485 based on being the principal beneficiary of a valid Form I-140 in an employment-based immigrant visa category that requires a job offer, you will need to file Supplement J instead of submitting a job offer letter;
OR
- Request job portability under INA section 204(j) to a new, full-time, permanent job offer that you intend to accept once your Form I-485 is approved. This new job offer must be in the same or a similar occupational classification as the job offered to you in the Form I-140 that is the basis of your Form I-485. (For more information about how USCIS determines which jobs are same or similar please see PM-602-0122: Determining Whether a New Job is in “the Same or a Similar Occupational Classification” for Purposes of Section 204(j) Job Portability (PDF, 205 KB) (March 18, 2016) (PDF, 205 KB)
Go to the I-485 Supplement J | Confirmation of Bona Fide Job Offer or Request for Job Portability Under INA Section 204(j) page to find detailed information.
Non-U.S citizens working for a foreign government mission or international organization who are either:
- Lawful permanent residents; or
- Nonimmigrants in A, G or E status who are seeking adjustment of status as permanent residents
Use Form I-508 to waive certain diplomatic rights privileges, exemptions and immunities associated with their occupational status, including any exemption from paying U.S. income taxes on the salaries paid to them by their foreign governments or organizations. This form complies with Section 247(b) of the Immigration and Nationality Act.
Permanent residents in such occupations who do not waive the exemption and who fail to pay their U.S. income taxes may be adjusted to A, G or E status.
Nonimmigrants in A, G or E status who do not waive the exemption and who fail to pay their U.S. income taxes may be unable to adjust status to permanent resident.
Please note: French nationals are covered by a special convention between France and the United States and must submit both Form I-508 and Form I-508F to USCIS.
Go to the I-508 | Request for Waiver of Certain Rights, Privileges, Exemptions and Immunities page to find detailed information.
French nationals receiving a salary from the Republic of France use Form I-508F to comply with Section 247(b) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) and the convention between the United States of America and the French Republic with respect to taxes on income and property. A French national intending to file this form must also complete Form I-508 and submit both forms together.
Go to the I-508F | Request for Waiver of Rights, Privileges, Exemptions, and Immunities for French Nationals page to find detailed information.
Use this form if you are an entrepreneur who wishes to immigrate to the United States.
Go to the I-526 | Immigrant Petition by Alien Entrepreneur page to find detailed information.
This form accompanies the application for dependent employment authorization as an eligible A-1, A-2, G-1, G-3, G-4, or NATO 1-6 dependent, as well as any application for a change or adjustment of status to, or from, A, G or NATO status.
Go to the I-566 | Interagency Record of Request -- A, G or NATO Dependent Employment Authorization or Change/Adjustment to/from A, G or NATO Status page to find detailed information.
To apply for asylum in the United States and for withholding of removal (formerly called "withholding of deportation"). You may file for asylum if you are physically in the United States and you are not a United States citizen.
Go to the I-589 | Application for Asylum and for Withholding of Removal page to find detailed information.
If you are inadmissible to the United States and are seeking an immigrant visa, adjustment of status, certain nonimmigrant statuses or certain other immigration benefits, you must file this form to seek a waiver of certain grounds of inadmissibility. Please refer to the instructions to determine whether you should use this form.
You must submit all 12 pages.
Go to the I-601 | Application for Waiver of Grounds of Inadmissibility page to find detailed information.
For a refugee who has been found inadmissible to the United States for reasons such as felony conviction or health conditions to apply for a waiver of such inadmissibility on grounds of humanitarian reasons, family unity or national interest.
Go to the I-602 | Application By Refugee For Waiver of Grounds of Excludability page to find detailed information.
J-1 and J-2 visas holders and their families may use this form to apply for a waiver of the two-year foreign residence requirement.
Go to the I-612 | Application for Waiver of the Foreign Residence Requirement (under Section 212(e) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, as Amended) page to find detailed information.
Generally, all applicants filing for adjustment of status to that of a lawful permanent resident must submit Form I-693 completed by a designated civil surgeon. Form I-693 is used to report results of a medical examination to USCIS. The examination is required to establish that an applicant is not inadmissible to the United States on public health grounds.
A list of those health grounds can be found in section 212(a)(1) of the Immigration and Nationality Act.
Go to the I-693 | Report of Medical Examination and Vaccination Record page to find detailed information.
If you have been admitted to the United States as a principal refugee or if you were granted status in the United States as a principal asylee within the previous two years, you may file a Form I-730 to request follow-to-join benefits for your spouse and/or unmarried children under 21 years of age only. In some cases, USCIS may grant a waiver of the 2-year filing deadline for humanitarian reasons. See Form I-730 instructions (linked above) for further information.
Go to the I-730 | Refugee/Asylee Relative Petition page to find detailed information.
Use this form if you are a conditional permanent resident who obtained status through marriage and want to apply to remove the conditions on your permanent resident status.
Go to the I-751 | Petition to Remove Conditions on Residence page to find detailed information.
Certain foreign nationals who are in the United States may file Form I-765, Application for Employment Authorization, to request employment authorization and an Employment Authorization Document (EAD). Other foreign nationals whose immigration status authorizes them to work in the United States without restrictions may also use Form I-765 to apply to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) for an EAD that shows such authorization.
Go to the I-765 | Application for Employment Authorization page to find detailed information.
Certain abused nonimmigrant spouses may use Form I-765V to request an employment authorization document (EAD). You may file for employment authorization if you are, or were, the abused spouse of a nonimmigrant who was admitted under INA section 101(a)(15)(A), (E)(iii), (G), or (H) [admitted in A, E-3, G, or H nonimmigrant status], and you either accompanied or followed to join your abusive nonimmigrant spouse.
Go to the I-765V | Application for Employment Authorization for Abused Nonimmigrant Spouse page to find detailed information.
Use this form to request further action on a previously approved application or petition.
Go to the I-824 | Application for Action on an Approved Application or Petition page to find detailed information.
Use this form if you are a conditional permanent resident who obtained status through entrepreneurship and want to remove the conditions on your residence.
Go to the I-829 | Petition by Entrepreneur to Remove Conditions on Permanent Resident Status page to find detailed information.
Law enforcement agencies (LEAs) use Form I-854A to request a foreign national witness and/or informant receive classification as an S nonimmigrant.
LEAs use Form I-854B to request a foreign national in S nonimmigrant status be permitted to apply for adjustment of status to adjust to lawful permanent resident (LPR) status under section 245(j) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA).
Go to the I-854 | Inter-Agency Alien Witness and Informant Record page to find detailed information.
Most family-based immigrants and some employment-based immigrants use this form to show they have adequate means of financial support and are not likely to rely on the U.S. government for financial support.
Go to the I-864 | Affidavit of Support Under Section 213A of the INA page to find detailed information.
Use this form if you are a household member and want to promise to make your income and/or assets available to help support sponsored immigrants.
Go to the I-864A | Contract Between Sponsor and Household Member page to find detailed information.
To show that the applying immigrant has enough financial support to live without concern of becoming reliant on U.S. government welfare.
Go to the I-864EZ | Affidavit of Support Under Section 213A of the Act page to find detailed information.
Use this form to establish that applicant is exempt from the Form I-864 requirements.
Go to the I-864W | Request for Exemption for Intending Immigrant's Affidavit of Support page to find detailed information.
Use this form to request temporary immigration benefits if you are a victim of a severe form of trafficking in persons, also known as human trafficking.
Go to the I-914 | Application for T Nonimmigrant Status page to find detailed information.
To provide temporary immigration benefits to foreign nationals who are victims of qualifying criminal activity, and to their qualifying family members, as appropriate.
Go to the I-918 | Petition for U Nonimmigrant Status page to find detailed information.
To request immigration benefits on behalf of a family member who never held U nonimmigrant status.
Go to the I-929 | Petition for Qualifying Family Member of a U-1 Nonimmigrant page to find detailed information.