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There's a question in the application that says " how many days have you been outside the United States in the past 5 years".... I am applying based on marriage, which means I've been in the U.S only 3 years of the past 5 years... how do I answer this question??, do I add the 2 years I haven't been in the country?? Help!!

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2005/07/10 I-129F filed for Pras

2005/11/07 I-129F approved, forwarded to NVC--to Chennai Consulate 2005/11/14

2005/12/02 Packet-3 received from Chennai

2005/12/21 Visa Interview Date

2006/04/04 Pras' entry into US at DTW

2006/04/15 Church Wedding at Novi (Detroit suburb), MI

2006/05/01 AOS Packet (I-485/I-131/I-765) filed at Chicago

2006/08/23 AP and EAD approved. Two down, 1.5 to go

2006/10/13 Pras' I-485 interview--APPROVED!

2006/10/27 Pras' conditional GC arrives -- .5 to go (2 yrs to Conditions Removal)

2008/07/21 I-751 (conditions removal) filed

2008/08/22 I-751 biometrics completed

2009/06/18 I-751 approved

2009/07/03 10-year GC received; last 0.5 done!

2009/07/23 Pras files N-400

2009/11/16 My 46TH birthday, Pras N-400 approved

2010/03/18 Pras' swear-in

---------------------------------------------------------------------

As long as the LORD's beside me, I don't care if this road ever ends.

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If you're applying based on three years married to a US Citizen, the only requirement written in the law concerns the past three years. But the form says five years.

You have two choices:

1. Take the question literally, and answer for the past five years. Include time spent out of the country before getting the green card. They seem to understand this; they'll ignore your answer and calculate their own answer based on the dates of travel which you provide.

2. Take the question for what it's REALLY getting at, which is the amount of time spent out of the country during the legally required period of continuous residence, which would be three years for someone filing based on three years married to a US Citizen. If you do this, cross out the five and write "three", and answer for three years. Several immigration attorneys have suggested doing it this way. That's the way we did it, and we were approved.

Whatever you do, don't lie or mislead. As long as you don't lie or mislead, and you do provide them with the list of trips and dates, they'll figure it out. If they have any trouble figuring it out, they'll ask you about it at your interview, and you'll be able to clarify it there.

They really ought to revise the form concerning this point.

04 Apr, 2004: Got married

05 Apr, 2004: I-130 Sent to CSC

13 Apr, 2004: I-130 NOA 1

19 Apr, 2004: I-129F Sent to MSC

29 Apr, 2004: I-129F NOA 1

13 Aug, 2004: I-130 Approved by CSC

28 Dec, 2004: I-130 Case Complete at NVC

18 Jan, 2005: Got the visa approved in Caracas

22 Jan, 2005: Flew home together! CCS->MIA->SFO

25 May, 2005: I-129F finally approved! We won't pursue it.

8 June, 2006: Our baby girl is born!

24 Oct, 2006: Window for filing I-751 opens

25 Oct, 2006: I-751 mailed to CSC

18 Nov, 2006: I-751 NOA1 received from CSC

30 Nov, 2006: I-751 Biometrics taken

05 Apr, 2007: I-751 approved, card production ordered

23 Jan, 2008: N-400 sent to CSC via certified mail

19 Feb, 2008: N-400 Biometrics taken

27 Mar, 2008: Naturalization interview notice received (NOA2 for N-400)

30 May, 2008: Naturalization interview, passed the test!

17 June, 2008: Naturalization oath notice mailed

15 July, 2008: Naturalization oath ceremony!

16 July, 2008: Registered to vote and applied for US passport

26 July, 2008: US Passport arrived.

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If you're applying based on three years married to a US Citizen, the only requirement written in the law concerns the past three years. But the form says five years.

You have two choices:

1. Take the question literally, and answer for the past five years. Include time spent out of the country before getting the green card. They seem to understand this; they'll ignore your answer and calculate their own answer based on the dates of travel which you provide.

What happens if the applicant's first entry (ever) into US was at the 3-year mark, and they simply mark the 2 years prior to that as being in home country--even if they have travelled to third-country destinations during that time?

2005/07/10 I-129F filed for Pras

2005/11/07 I-129F approved, forwarded to NVC--to Chennai Consulate 2005/11/14

2005/12/02 Packet-3 received from Chennai

2005/12/21 Visa Interview Date

2006/04/04 Pras' entry into US at DTW

2006/04/15 Church Wedding at Novi (Detroit suburb), MI

2006/05/01 AOS Packet (I-485/I-131/I-765) filed at Chicago

2006/08/23 AP and EAD approved. Two down, 1.5 to go

2006/10/13 Pras' I-485 interview--APPROVED!

2006/10/27 Pras' conditional GC arrives -- .5 to go (2 yrs to Conditions Removal)

2008/07/21 I-751 (conditions removal) filed

2008/08/22 I-751 biometrics completed

2009/06/18 I-751 approved

2009/07/03 10-year GC received; last 0.5 done!

2009/07/23 Pras files N-400

2009/11/16 My 46TH birthday, Pras N-400 approved

2010/03/18 Pras' swear-in

---------------------------------------------------------------------

As long as the LORD's beside me, I don't care if this road ever ends.

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Colombia
Timeline
If you're applying based on three years married to a US Citizen, the only requirement written in the law concerns the past three years. But the form says five years.

You have two choices:

1. Take the question literally, and answer for the past five years. Include time spent out of the country before getting the green card. They seem to understand this; they'll ignore your answer and calculate their own answer based on the dates of travel which you provide.

What happens if the applicant's first entry (ever) into US was at the 3-year mark, and they simply mark the 2 years prior to that as being in home country--even if they have travelled to third-country destinations during that time?

Here are the questions from the latest N-400:

A. How many total days did you spend outside of the United States during the past five years?

B. How many trips of 24 hours or more have you taken outside of the United States during the past five years?

C. List below all the trips of 24 hours or more that you have taken outside of the United States since becoming a Lawful

Permanent Resident. Begin with your most recent trip. If you need more space, use a separate sheet(s) of paper.

A. Can be answered literally, nothing about traveling from country to country, just the number of days you were not in the USA for the last five years.

B. Should be the same number of trips compiled in C, how can you take trips out of the USA if you are not even here? But you can read this as trips outside of the USA if you say took a trip from the UK to Turkey because that is a trip out of the USA in which case, if you did, the number of trips listed in C would be the wrong answer. That question whether intentional or not, does have a double meaning.

In the science field giving an incorrect answer is considered much worse than giving no answer at all, but this isn't the science field, it's the USCIS field where no answer would be considered as an incomplete form which is reason for rejection.

C states to list the trips in reverse chronological order that you took them which is exactly opposite if you made a diary of your trips, not quite normal to list events with the most recent first since when you start, that has not even happened yet unless you are a time traveler.

I just assumed with B you are inside of the USA and you take a trip out of the USA, but assume also means, ###-u-me and can be dead wrong as my wife did take several trips from one country to another, outside of the USA before she came here, but didn't take any trips from the time she arrived to the time she became a permanent resident. If she did, that would get awfully confusing as those trips do not have to be listed in C but shown in B.

Probably shouldn't use logic, even though I do not drink, after thinking about this, I think I need one. We will go in with her new and old passports, fall flat on our faces, and beg for mercy.

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