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Posted (edited)
Are your parents on the same visa application? Or do they have two seperate ones?

I am not sure what you mean by 'same visa aplication'.

I have applied 1-130 for both of them. But I have applied using two forms. They are together and still married.

I would appreciate your help on this question.

Thanks.

Ok, looking at the instructions, If the other immigrant is not coming within 6 months of the first one, then they would need a seperate 864.

Since your Mother and your Father are (spouses), only one 864 is needed.

So go with your answers above.

Accompanying Family Members You are Sponsoring.The immigrant you are sponsoring may be bringing a spouse and/or children to the United States. If the spouse and/orchildren will be traveling with the immigrant, or within six months of the immigrant's entry to the United States and youare sponsoring them, you should list the names and other requested information on the lines provided.

The above information is wrong..

You MUST complete one AOS for each parent. They are not on the same visa and they can not get a visa along with their spouse. They each have to have a I-130 and they each have to have a DS-230 that is why you pay for 2 visas not one.

You do not list the other parent in Q9 part 3. As per the instructions.

"I am sponsoring the following family members immigrating at the same time or within six months of the principal immigrant named in Part 2 above. Do not include any relative listed on a separate visa petition."

No - it isn't wrong, it just doesn't apply to this situation. But your correct, if they are on seperate visa's, then they would need seperate 864's, which is why I asked the question above.

Thanks for the correction :) I should read more carefully :)

Edited by Bobby_Umit

My Advice is usually based on "Worst Case Scenario" and what is written in the rules/laws/instructions. That is the way I roll... -Protect your Status - file before your I-94 expires.

WARNING: Phrases in this post may sound meaner than they were intended to be. Read the Adjudicator's Field Manual from USCIS

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

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