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CONSULAR NEWS

Questions or concerns about nonimmigrant and immigrant visa-related issues?

* Please call our regional U.S. Visa Information Center using a special Telefónica calling card – VISAS USA –available at any Telefónica branch/booth.

* From the U.S. or other country call 818-755-8425 using a major credit card (Visa or Mastercard).

* Visit our Consular Website to see if your question can be answered there. You may also reach us via e-mail. Due to the large number of inquiries we receive,it may take several days before you receive a reply.

If you need immediate assistance,you must call the U.S. Visa Information Center.

Frequentlty Asked Questions about Consular Services, click here for more information

Salvadorans and citizens of other foreign countries who wish to obtain permanent resident status in the U.S. generally must obtain immigrant visas at the U.S. Embassy. Most immigrant visa applications begin when a family-member who is a U.S. citizen or legal permanent resident submits a petition (Form I-130) on behalf of the intending immigrant to the office of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) in the United States that serves the petitioner's place of residence. Do not attempt to submit the completed I-130 form to the Consular Section, we cannot process this form. It is also possible in some circumstances for a U.S. employer to petition to obtain permanent resident status for a foreign national employee. Click here to learn more about immigrant visas for foreign workers.

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The Petition Process

A U.S. citizen may petition for her/his spouse, children, parents or siblings. A legal permanent resident may petition for her/his spouse and children. Click here to check on the status of your petition filed with the DHS. In certain cases, businesses in the United States may submit immigrant visa petitions to DHS in the U.S. on behalf of potential employees. Employment-based visas are numerically limited each year. See link below.

HTML document Who may qualify for an immigrant visa. HTML document DHS information on helping a relative immigrate.

After approving an immigrant petition, DHS sends the case to the U.S. Department of State’s National Visa Center (NVC) for processing. When the NVC has determined that a case is approaching the time of the interview, it notifies the applicant and forwards the case to the Consular Section.

Because U.S. law limits the number of immigrant visas that may be issued each year in certain categories, there is a waiting list for certain types of immigrant visas. Spouses and children of legal permanent residents, as well as siblings and adult children of U.S. citizens, are subject to waiting lists. Immigrant visas for the spouse and minor unmarried children of a U.S. citizen, and the parents of a U.S. citizen who is 21 years or older, are not numerically limited; therefore, applicants who fall into those categories are not subject to waiting lists.

HTML document See the current waiting list for numerically limited immigrant visas.

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Preparing for the Interview

All applicants for immigrant visas must appear in person at the Consular Section for an interview. Prior to the scheduling of an interview, the NVC or the Consular Section will send a packet of information instructing the applicant to gather and send to the Consular Section all of the documents that will be necessary for the interview.

Once the Consular Section has received all of the preliminary documentation, we will mail you the Appointment Package for Immigrant Visa Applicants and schedulean interview.
Please note during the interview, the Consular Officer may inform the applicant of any additional documentation needed to process the case.

Prior to the interview, all immigrant visa applicants must undergo a physical examination by one of the local doctors autorized by the Embassy to conduct such examinations. Only Embassy authorized doctors may complete this examination. A list of authorized doctors is included in the Appointment Package For Immigrant Visa Applicants.

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The Affidavit of Support

U.S. immigration law requires the U.S. citizen or permanent resident petitioner to prove that he or she will be able to financially support the visa applicant. In most family-based visa cases, the petitioner must submit a signed affidavit of support (Form I-864) and copies of the petitioner’s U.S. federal tax filings (1040 and W-2) for the latest three years. If a petitioner is unable to demonstrate that he or she can support the current household size plus the immigrant(s), a different U.S. citizen or resident may submit an additional affidavit of support as a joint sponsor.

HTML document Click here to download Affidavit of Support forms.

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Checking on your Appointment

Once we make an appointment we will notify you or your registered agent by mail, or by e-mail if you so choose. You can check on your appointment time, or request changes by calling our regional Visa Information Center.

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Immigrant Visa Fees

At the time of the interview, each immigrant visa applicant must pay a $335 visa processing fee. For applicants whose files have all of the required documents during the interview and who have a qualifying sponsor in the U.S., an immigrant visa will be issued. The visa will be delivered to the applicant via Aeroflash. The cost of this service is $13.

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Additional Documents Submitted by Aeroflash Service

All immigrant visa applicants who have been interviewed, and have been asked to submit additional documentation to complete their application, will be asked to arrange two-way courier service with Aeroflash: first, to send the additional documentation to the Embassy, and second, for the Embassy to either send the approved visa or inform the applicant that more information is needed.

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U.S. Citizen – Foreign National Marriages

Marriage in the United States: Fiance(e) Visa. U.S. citizens may file an I-129F petition with DHS for the issuance of a K-1 visa to an alien fiance(e). A citizen exercising this option must remain unmarried until the arrival of the fiance(e) in the U.S., and the wedding must take place within three months of the fiance(e)’s arrival. Also, the alien and U.S. citizen must have met personally at least once in the two years before the petition was filed.

HTML document General information on marrying foreign nationals from the State Department HTML document More information about fiance(e) visas.

Marriage Abroad: Alien-Spouse Visa. If a U.S. citizen marries as alien abroad, an I-130 petition must be filed with DHS after the marriage to begin the immigration process for the alien spouse. For marriages in El Salvador, such petitions may be filed with the DHS office in the Embassy if the U.S. citizen resides in El Salvador; otherwise, the petition must be filed with the DHS office near the citizen’s residence in the U.S.

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The New V and K3 Visas

The V visa is available to the spouse and/or children of a U.S. legal permanent resident who filed an immigrant visa petition for the spouse or children on or before December 21, 2000, and who have been waiting three years since the petition was filed without being scheduled for an immigrant visa interview.

The National Visa Center notifies prospective V visa applicants of their eligibility for V visa processing. However, if applicants consider they meet the requirements above indicated, they can contact us with the necessary information. In either case, we need applicants to provide the NVC notification, the notice of action (I-797) issued by the DHS when the petition was filed, beneficiary's complete name and date of birth, local address/telephone where the beneficiary wishes to receive information. This information should be sent to:

Fax: 503-278-5522

In El Salvador mail it to:

Embajada de los Estados Unidos
Sección Consular, Programa de Visa V
Final Blvd Santa Elena
Antiguo Cuscatlán, La Libertad

In the U.S. mail to:

U.S. Embassy-San Salvador
Consular Section, V Visa Program
Unit 3114
APO AA 34023

K3/K4 visas are for the spouse and children under 21 and single of U.S. citizens. If the petitioner or the beneficiary of a K3/K4 petition is informed by the NVC that the petition has already been forwarded to the U.S. Embassy in San Salvador, and wishes to obtain information about the processing of the visa, the petitioner/beneficiary should contact our regional U.S. Visa Information Center for information by providing the customer service representative the number that the NVC has provided for the case. This number begins with three letters "SNS" followed by ten digits.

If the K3/K4 visa is in processing and the petitioner/beneficiary wishes to obtain information about the status of the processing, he/she must contact our regional U.S. Visa Information Center.

HTML document More information about K and V visas HTML document Local V visa forms

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Child Citizenship Act of 2000

On February 27, 2001 the Child Citizenship Act of 2000 became effective. The aim of this law, which, among other things, amends Section 320 of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), is to facilitate the automatic acquisition of U.S. citizenship for both biological and adopted children of U.S. citizens who are born abroad and who do not acquire U.S. citizenship at birth.

HTML document Click here to learn more about the Child Citizenship Act of 2000

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Adoptions

It is a difficult and time consuming process to adopt a child in El Salvador. The process frequently takes two years or longer to complete. Check the links below for information on how to adopt a child in El Salvador

HTML document General adoption information HTML document Adopting a child in El Salvador
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