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Posted

iam a Conditional green card holder ,since i got it we moved out from my wife's family house and after 10 months now we are moving back with her family again and we have to change the address with USCIS again and i traveled overseas alone and so did she last year ,do you think this would be against me when its time to lift my condition on my green card ?? thanks a lot guys.

Posted
iam a Conditional green card holder ,since i got it we moved out from my wife's family house and after 10 months now we are moving back with her family again and we have to change the address with USCIS again and i traveled overseas alone and so did she last year ,do you think this would be against me when its time to lift my condition on my green card ?? thanks a lot guys.

I would think where you live is irrelevant to USCIS (as long as it's in the US, of course), it is only the fact that you are living there TOGETHER that is important. Travelling without your spouse is also not uncommon, for example travelling for work reasons, or travelling to see relatives when only one partner can get the time off work. Are you talking about a lot of time abroad or just small holidays?

Cheryl

06/2005 Met Josh online ~ 02/2006 My 1st visit to the US ~ 09/2006 2nd US visit (Josh proposed) ~ 02/2007 3rd US visit (married)

04/2007 K3 visa applied ~ 05/2007 Josh's 1st UK visit ~ 09/2007 4th US visit ~ 02/2008 K3 visa completed ~ 02/2008 US entry

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

04/2008 AOS/EAD filed ~ 05/2008 Biometrics ~ 06/2008 EAD recv'd ~ 08/2008 Conditional greencard

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

02/2010 3rd wedding anniversary ~ 06/04/2010 Apply for lifting conditions ~ 06/14 package delivered ~ 07/23 Biometrics

Filed: Other Country: China
Timeline
Posted
iam a Conditional green card holder ,since i got it we moved out from my wife's family house and after 10 months now we are moving back with her family again and we have to change the address with USCIS again and i traveled overseas alone and so did she last year ,do you think this would be against me when its time to lift my condition on my green card ?? thanks a lot guys.

I would think where you live is irrelevant to USCIS (as long as it's in the US, of course), it is only the fact that you are living there TOGETHER that is important. Travelling without your spouse is also not uncommon, for example travelling for work reasons, or travelling to see relatives when only one partner can get the time off work. Are you talking about a lot of time abroad or just small holidays?

As you've posed the question, I see no problem. However if the conditional green card holder's travels were extended, it could impact their continued eligibility for permanent residence whether your travel was apart or together. If your travel apart was for you to return home for an extended period of time away from your spouse, (more than a couple months) you may also face some additional scrutiny of bona fides. There are all kinds of legitimate reasons for such travel.

Facts are cheap...knowing how to use them is precious...
Understanding the big picture is priceless. Anonymous

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A Warning to Green Card Holders About Voting

http://www.visajourney.com/forums/topic/606646-a-warning-to-green-card-holders-about-voting/

Posted
iam a Conditional green card holder ,since i got it we moved out from my wife's family house and after 10 months now we are moving back with her family again and we have to change the address with USCIS again and i traveled overseas alone and so did she last year ,do you think this would be against me when its time to lift my condition on my green card ?? thanks a lot guys.

I would think where you live is irrelevant to USCIS (as long as it's in the US, of course), it is only the fact that you are living there TOGETHER that is important. Travelling without your spouse is also not uncommon, for example travelling for work reasons, or travelling to see relatives when only one partner can get the time off work. Are you talking about a lot of time abroad or just small holidays?

Yes, you are fine.

I-130 Timeline with USCIS:

It took 92 days for I-130 to get approved from the filing date

NVC Process of I-130:

It took 78 days to complete the NVC process

Interview Process at The U.S. Embassy

Interview took 223 days from the I-130 filing date. Immigrant Visa was issued right after the interview

 
Didn't find the answer you were looking for? Ask our VJ Immigration Lawyers.

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