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MikaG

Does The Processing Time For An I-130 Differ Depending On Who Send It To The Service Center?

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Grenada
Timeline

I've been searching through the forums on this site and it seems like if I send an I-130 petiton to the US Service Center it could take up to 6 months to be approved. But if I do a DCF and the consulate / embassy abroad sends the

I-130 petition to the US Service Center, it only takes a couple of weeks to be approved. Am I understanding this correctly? If so, why does the I-130 get approved faster if the consular abroad sends it to the US Service Center rather than if I send it in myself?

Thanks in advance,

Mika :)

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I've been searching through the forums on this site and it seems like if I send an I-130 petiton to the US Service Center it could take up to 6 months to be approved. But if I do a DCF and the consulate / embassy abroad sends the

I-130 petition to the US Service Center, it only takes a couple of weeks to be approved. Am I understanding this correctly? If so, why does the I-130 get approved faster if the consular abroad sends it to the US Service Center rather than if I send it in myself?

Thanks in advance,

Mika :)

Hi Mika,

DCF (direct consular processing) is only available when the US spouse is residing legally in the foreign country. For example, to direct file in the UK, my USC husband would have had to have been a legal resident in the UK for 6 months (note: tourist does not count) before he could submit the petition to the London embassy.

If the USC is residing in the States, or only visiting the spouses country, the only option is to file through the service centres.

The reason it is quicker is that the embassy have a much smaller workload to work through than the service centres. They also have the benefit that both partners are living together in the same country.. not separated while waiting for this process to be completed.

Hoep this is helpful.

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

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Grenada
Timeline
DCF (direct consular processing) is only available when the US spouse is residing legally in the foreign country

This is not the case in Barbados. In Barbados, resident means the same thing as physically present. So as long as I'm present in the country of Barbados I can file the I-130, it doesn't matter that I really live in the US.

Anyway, thanks for the info about the workload.

Mika :)

Edited by MikaG
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