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N-400 October 2018 Filers

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Edited by GoodbyeGirl

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

Current status: UK and USA citizen

12-Mar-19: I-751 (WAC18026) + N400 combi interview

Outcome

16 Mar-19: I-751 ~ Green Card in Hand (from submission to card delivery, 17 months)

19 Apr-19:  N400 ~ Naturalization Oath Ceremony, certificate in-hand! (from submission to oath, 6 months)

1 May 19: Voter registration card in-hand

3 May 19: USA passport in-hand

11 May 19: New SSN card in-hand

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36 minutes ago, GoodbyeGirl said:

 

I was really lucky today and had a good combi interview experience. Here’s my story, I hope it helps anyone looking for a detailed account. Warning… it’s long!

 

It was lousy weather, we (me and my husband) set off for our 8:30am appointment in a torrential downpour. I was a little worried about looking like a drowned rat on arrival. 😊

 

At the front desk, security asked for my appointment letters and we both had to show ID. We then had to empty our pockets and put our items in a container (like at the airport) and go through the body scanner. We were then told to sit in the waiting room. It wasn’t full, just a few people. There was one officer sitting behind a glass window who had the patience of a saint. I was struck by how many visitors needed an awful lot of help and didn’t arrive with receipt numbers or much in the way of documentation. She seemed to spend most of her time directing people to which form to fill out and explaining that this office didn’t provide visas or a form filling in service.

 

We got called by an Immigration Officer (about 10 minutes after our scheduled appointment time), and were led to a private office. On the way, he asked for my 2-year Green Card and my 18-month extension letter (both were given back to me at the end of the interview).

 

The IO seemed to have a lot on his plate, was a bit grouchy at first, but was friendly and clear in his instructions. I had to stand on the left, my husband on the right and we raised our right hands and promised to tell the truth.

 

The IO explained that we’d be interviewed together for my 10 year Green Card and then my husband could leave, and I’d take the citizenship test and interview alone. He had my application on his desk and went through some basic questions from the i-751 – like name, address, telephone number, job – which I confirmed. We’d moved last summer and though our new address was confirmed by Homeland Security, and letters from service centres have been arriving to the right place, he had our old address and updated it during the interview.

 

He asked if we had a joint bank account, but didn’t ask to see any of the mountain of evidence I’d brought along. Before I knew it, that was the Green Card part done, and my husband was dismissed. Another nice and friendly IO came and escorted him back to the waiting room.

 

The IO then explained we’d start the citizenship interview with the civics test. I was asked these 6 questions which I got right so didn’t have to answer the full 10:

  • When was the Declaration of Independence adopted?
  • How many US Senators are there?
  • Who is the Chief Justice of the United States now?
  • What is the capital of the United States?
  • Where is the Statue of Liberty?
  • Who lived in America before the Europeans arrived?

Then I had to read out a statement which flashed up on a screen in front of me,  ‘Who elects Congress?’ I used a stylus to write the answer that the IO kept repeating, ‘the people elect Congress.’ Luckily it was legible though it did look like I was kindergarten age. Those things are hard to write with!

 

After that there was a long list of mostly ‘no’ questions like ‘have you ever committed some horrible act?’ The last 3 or 4 were ‘yes’ questions like agreeing to accept and obey the laws of the States.

 

He then told me I could relax while he updated the system. He said he was approving me for both Green Card and citizenship and I may or may not get a physical Green Card in the post. He said as my extension letter was good till July-2019, I could hold onto them and not worry about getting a stamp in my passport.

 

My name and basic details flashed up on screen which I had to check and sign, as this is how they’ll appear on my naturalisation certificate.

 

He said there was some spaces left on the 19 April oath ceremony so if the system updates in time, I should get an invite in the mail. He then handed me an N-652 confirming that I’d passed the N400 tests and that my application has been recommended for approval. The entire thing took around 30 minutes.

 

Within an hour of leaving, my case status online had changed to:

  • N400: Oath Ceremony Notice Was Mailed
  • i-751: New Card Is Being Produced

Hopefully I’ll get confirmation in my online documents of the oath ceremony date in a few days.

 

Some stray observations:

  • The IO seemed time-crunched, and said he gets a set amount of time for each interview. You can get a deferred result if you go over time, bring too much evidence (like all the societies/clubs/organisations) you belong to, as the IO has to type it all in during the allocated interview time slot
  • Similarly, the IO types up all you say in response to answers, so keep it brief
  • I was surprised we didn’t get interrogated a bit more, but apparently we are quite boring. The IO said i-751 interviews are typically held if there’s something they want to review in more detail, but in straight forward combi cases, it’s more of an adjudication of the application done with the applicant in attendance. That kind of explains the lack of interrogation.

Anyway, thank God that’s over! Sorry for the long post, I hope it helps someone.

 

I’m really looking forward to getting my oath ceremony date.


Good luck everyone!  

 

So awesome! :D Congratulations! Very good N400 \ I-751 Interview experience. Did they ask you for your tax transcripts? Not that it matters now :D just curious. Congratz again! 

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No, the IO didn't ask to see any evidence other than my 2 year Green Card and extension letter. That was it. I brought everything and the kitchen sink, but was happy I didn't have to delve into my paperwork. Even though I had it organised, I felt like I was all fingers and thumbs. LOL.

 

Thank you!

 

1 minute ago, NeedMoreCoffee said:

So awesome! :D Congratulations! Very good N400 \ I-751 Interview experience. Did they ask you for your tax transcripts? Not that it matters now :D just curious. Congratz again! 

 

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

Current status: UK and USA citizen

12-Mar-19: I-751 (WAC18026) + N400 combi interview

Outcome

16 Mar-19: I-751 ~ Green Card in Hand (from submission to card delivery, 17 months)

19 Apr-19:  N400 ~ Naturalization Oath Ceremony, certificate in-hand! (from submission to oath, 6 months)

1 May 19: Voter registration card in-hand

3 May 19: USA passport in-hand

11 May 19: New SSN card in-hand

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: India
Timeline
5 hours ago, GoodbyeGirl said:

 

I was really lucky today and had a good combi interview experience. Here’s my story, I hope it helps anyone looking for a detailed account. Warning… it’s long!

 

It was lousy weather, we (me and my husband) set off for our 8:30am appointment in a torrential downpour. I was a little worried about looking like a drowned rat on arrival. 😊

 

At the front desk, security asked for my appointment letters and we both had to show ID. We then had to empty our pockets and put our items in a container (like at the airport) and go through the body scanner. We were then told to sit in the waiting room. It wasn’t full, just a few people. There was one officer sitting behind a glass window who had the patience of a saint. I was struck by how many visitors needed an awful lot of help and didn’t arrive with receipt numbers or much in the way of documentation. She seemed to spend most of her time directing people to which form to fill out and explaining that this office didn’t provide visas or a form filling in service.

 

We got called by an Immigration Officer (about 10 minutes after our scheduled appointment time), and were led to a private office. On the way, he asked for my 2-year Green Card and my 18-month extension letter (both were given back to me at the end of the interview).

 

The IO seemed to have a lot on his plate, was a bit grouchy at first, but was friendly and clear in his instructions. I had to stand on the left, my husband on the right and we raised our right hands and promised to tell the truth.

 

The IO explained that we’d be interviewed together for my 10 year Green Card and then my husband could leave, and I’d take the citizenship test and interview alone. He had my application on his desk and went through some basic questions from the i-751 – like name, address, telephone number, job – which I confirmed. We’d moved last summer and though our new address was confirmed by Homeland Security, and letters from service centres have been arriving to the right place, he had our old address and updated it during the interview.

 

He asked if we had a joint bank account, but didn’t ask to see any of the mountain of evidence I’d brought along. Before I knew it, that was the Green Card part done, and my husband was dismissed. Another nice and friendly IO came and escorted him back to the waiting room.

 

The IO then explained we’d start the citizenship interview with the civics test. I was asked these 6 questions which I got right so didn’t have to answer the full 10:

  • When was the Declaration of Independence adopted?
  • How many US Senators are there?
  • Who is the Chief Justice of the United States now?
  • What is the capital of the United States?
  • Where is the Statue of Liberty?
  • Who lived in America before the Europeans arrived?

Then I had to read out a statement which flashed up on a screen in front of me,  ‘Who elects Congress?’ I used a stylus to write the answer that the IO kept repeating, ‘the people elect Congress.’ Luckily it was legible though it did look like I was kindergarten age. Those things are hard to write with!

 

After that there was a long list of mostly ‘no’ questions like ‘have you ever committed some horrible act?’ The last 3 or 4 were ‘yes’ questions like agreeing to accept and obey the laws of the States.

 

He then told me I could relax while he updated the system. He said he was approving me for both Green Card and citizenship and I may or may not get a physical Green Card in the post. He said as my extension letter was good till July-2019, I could hold onto them and not worry about getting a stamp in my passport.

 

My name and basic details flashed up on screen which I had to check and sign, as this is how they’ll appear on my naturalisation certificate.

 

He said there was some spaces left on the 19 April oath ceremony so if the system updates in time, I should get an invite in the mail. He then handed me an N-652 confirming that I’d passed the N400 tests and that my application has been recommended for approval. The entire thing took around 30 minutes.

 

Within an hour of leaving, my case status online had changed to:

  • N400: Oath Ceremony Notice Was Mailed
  • i-751: New Card Is Being Produced

Hopefully I’ll get confirmation in my online documents of the oath ceremony date in a few days.

 

Some stray observations:

  • The IO seemed time-crunched, and said he gets a set amount of time for each interview. You can get a deferred result if you go over time, bring too much evidence (like all the societies/clubs/organisations) you belong to, as the IO has to type it all in during the allocated interview time slot
  • Similarly, the IO types up all you say in response to answers, so keep it brief
  • I was surprised we didn’t get interrogated a bit more, but apparently we are quite boring. The IO said i-751 interviews are typically held if there’s something they want to review in more detail, but in straight forward combi cases, it’s more of an adjudication of the application done with the applicant in attendance. That kind of explains the lack of interrogation.

Anyway, thank God that’s over! Sorry for the long post, I hope it helps someone.

 

I’m really looking forward to getting my oath ceremony date.


Good luck everyone!  

 

grate news , Congratulations 🍾can't wait for my combi.

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My oath ceremony is confirmed for 19 April. Got the confirmation this morning less than 24hrs after my interview yesterday. 

 

Finally have an end date on my immigration journey. Wooo-hoooo! 

 

:) :) :)

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

Current status: UK and USA citizen

12-Mar-19: I-751 (WAC18026) + N400 combi interview

Outcome

16 Mar-19: I-751 ~ Green Card in Hand (from submission to card delivery, 17 months)

19 Apr-19:  N400 ~ Naturalization Oath Ceremony, certificate in-hand! (from submission to oath, 6 months)

1 May 19: Voter registration card in-hand

3 May 19: USA passport in-hand

11 May 19: New SSN card in-hand

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1 hour ago, GoodbyeGirl said:

My oath ceremony is confirmed for 19 April. Got the confirmation this morning less than 24hrs after my interview yesterday. 

 

Finally have an end date on my immigration journey. Wooo-hoooo! 

 

:) :) :)

The end is officially in sight :D :D next up is that passport :D

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I have my interview date!  April 19th.

 

179 days between them receiving the application to the date of the interview.

 

N400 paperwork mailed and received in Texas on the 22nd October. Check cashed on the 26th and on the 2nd November I received by mail my Biometrics appointment which is the 14th November.

 

Edited by Geordie

CR1 VISA

Jul 23 2010 - MARRIED

Aug 26 2010 - I-130 received by USCIS

Jan 21 2011 - Approved by USCIS

Mar 04 2011 - NVC received

Mar 15 2011 - Medical

Mar 30 2011 - NVC COMPLETED

Apr 14 2011 - Packet 4 received

May 12 2011 - EMBASSY INTERVIEW

May 23 2011 - VISA received

May 26 2011 - Dulles POE

Jun 20 2011 - GREENCARD arrives

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16 minutes ago, Geordie said:

I have my interview date!  April 19th.

 

179 days between them receiving the application to the date of the interview.

 

N400 paperwork mailed and received in Texas on the 22nd October. Check cashed on the 26th and on the 2nd November I received by mail my Biometrics appointment which is the 14th November.

 

Congrats! :D

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On 3/12/2019 at 10:18 AM, dannyphan91 said:

My cousin appiled on Oct 3 and today they schedule her appt. You should keep checking your mailbox from now 😋 Her local office is Miwaukee WI

hehehe this sounds promising! i had marked this month as a possibility of getting an interview notice because i hit 5 months on Monday. will keep my fingers crossed. Thanks for letting me know. 

Edited by nompish

K-1 Journey



2015 01 14 : I-129F Mailed


2015 01 22: NOA-2


2015 03 09 : Packet 3 Received


2015 05 19 : Interview - PASSED (K-1 Visa Approved)


2015 08 19 : Arrived U.S.


2015 10 30 : Married :dance:



AOS Journey



11/05/2015: AOS Package Mailed


11/07/2015: AOS Delivered


11/15/2015: NOAx3 text and email received


11/18/2015: NOAx3 received via mail date 11/10/2015


11/26/2015: Received biometrics letter scheduled for 12/10/2015


12/10/2015: Biometrics completed


01/08/2016: Case status update I-485 "New card being produced"


01/10/2016: Case status update I-485 "Case approved"


01/12/2016: Case status update I-485 "My Card was mailed to me"


01/13/2016: Case status update I-485 "My Card picked up by USPS


01/15/2016: GREENCARD IN HAND!! DONE FOR NOW!!!



:dance: :dance: :dance: :dance:

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1 hour ago, NeedMoreCoffee said:

The end is officially in sight :D :D next up is that passport :D

congrats to you both @GoodbyeGirl and @NeedMoreCoffee

K-1 Journey



2015 01 14 : I-129F Mailed


2015 01 22: NOA-2


2015 03 09 : Packet 3 Received


2015 05 19 : Interview - PASSED (K-1 Visa Approved)


2015 08 19 : Arrived U.S.


2015 10 30 : Married :dance:



AOS Journey



11/05/2015: AOS Package Mailed


11/07/2015: AOS Delivered


11/15/2015: NOAx3 text and email received


11/18/2015: NOAx3 received via mail date 11/10/2015


11/26/2015: Received biometrics letter scheduled for 12/10/2015


12/10/2015: Biometrics completed


01/08/2016: Case status update I-485 "New card being produced"


01/10/2016: Case status update I-485 "Case approved"


01/12/2016: Case status update I-485 "My Card was mailed to me"


01/13/2016: Case status update I-485 "My Card picked up by USPS


01/15/2016: GREENCARD IN HAND!! DONE FOR NOW!!!



:dance: :dance: :dance: :dance:

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18 hours ago, GoodbyeGirl said:

 

I was really lucky today and had a good combi interview experience. Here’s my story, I hope it helps anyone looking for a detailed account. Warning… it’s long!

 

It was lousy weather, we (me and my husband) set off for our 8:30am appointment in a torrential downpour. I was a little worried about looking like a drowned rat on arrival. 😊

 

At the front desk, security asked for my appointment letters and we both had to show ID. We then had to empty our pockets and put our items in a container (like at the airport) and go through the body scanner. We were then told to sit in the waiting room. It wasn’t full, just a few people. There was one officer sitting behind a glass window who had the patience of a saint. I was struck by how many visitors needed an awful lot of help and didn’t arrive with receipt numbers or much in the way of documentation. She seemed to spend most of her time directing people to which form to fill out and explaining that this office didn’t provide visas or a form filling in service.

 

We got called by an Immigration Officer (about 10 minutes after our scheduled appointment time), and were led to a private office. On the way, he asked for my 2-year Green Card and my 18-month extension letter (both were given back to me at the end of the interview).

 

The IO seemed to have a lot on his plate, was a bit grouchy at first, but was friendly and clear in his instructions. I had to stand on the left, my husband on the right and we raised our right hands and promised to tell the truth.

 

The IO explained that we’d be interviewed together for my 10 year Green Card and then my husband could leave, and I’d take the citizenship test and interview alone. He had my application on his desk and went through some basic questions from the i-751 – like name, address, telephone number, job – which I confirmed. We’d moved last summer and though our new address was confirmed by Homeland Security, and letters from service centres have been arriving to the right place, he had our old address and updated it during the interview.

 

He asked if we had a joint bank account, but didn’t ask to see any of the mountain of evidence I’d brought along. Before I knew it, that was the Green Card part done, and my husband was dismissed. Another nice and friendly IO came and escorted him back to the waiting room.

 

The IO then explained we’d start the citizenship interview with the civics test. I was asked these 6 questions which I got right so didn’t have to answer the full 10:

  • When was the Declaration of Independence adopted?
  • How many US Senators are there?
  • Who is the Chief Justice of the United States now?
  • What is the capital of the United States?
  • Where is the Statue of Liberty?
  • Who lived in America before the Europeans arrived?

Then I had to read out a statement which flashed up on a screen in front of me,  ‘Who elects Congress?’ I used a stylus to write the answer that the IO kept repeating, ‘the people elect Congress.’ Luckily it was legible though it did look like I was kindergarten age. Those things are hard to write with!

 

After that there was a long list of mostly ‘no’ questions like ‘have you ever committed some horrible act?’ The last 3 or 4 were ‘yes’ questions like agreeing to accept and obey the laws of the States.

 

He then told me I could relax while he updated the system. He said he was approving me for both Green Card and citizenship and I may or may not get a physical Green Card in the post. He said as my extension letter was good till July-2019, I could hold onto them and not worry about getting a stamp in my passport.

 

My name and basic details flashed up on screen which I had to check and sign, as this is how they’ll appear on my naturalisation certificate.

 

He said there was some spaces left on the 19 April oath ceremony so if the system updates in time, I should get an invite in the mail. He then handed me an N-652 confirming that I’d passed the N400 tests and that my application has been recommended for approval. The entire thing took around 30 minutes.

 

Within an hour of leaving, my case status online had changed to:

  • N400: Oath Ceremony Notice Was Mailed
  • i-751: New Card Is Being Produced

Hopefully I’ll get confirmation in my online documents of the oath ceremony date in a few days.

 

Some stray observations:

  • The IO seemed time-crunched, and said he gets a set amount of time for each interview. You can get a deferred result if you go over time, bring too much evidence (like all the societies/clubs/organisations) you belong to, as the IO has to type it all in during the allocated interview time slot
  • Similarly, the IO types up all you say in response to answers, so keep it brief
  • I was surprised we didn’t get interrogated a bit more, but apparently we are quite boring. The IO said i-751 interviews are typically held if there’s something they want to review in more detail, but in straight forward combi cases, it’s more of an adjudication of the application done with the applicant in attendance. That kind of explains the lack of interrogation.

Anyway, thank God that’s over! Sorry for the long post, I hope it helps someone.

 

I’m really looking forward to getting my oath ceremony date.


Good luck everyone!  

 

CONGRATS!!!
And wow...I've got to study...You are the first one so far who shared questions where I didn't know the answers to all 6 off the top of my head (actually, I didn't know 2). 😮  

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On 3/12/2019 at 10:18 AM, dannyphan91 said:

My cousin appiled on Oct 3 and today they schedule her appt. You should keep checking your mailbox from now 😋 Her local office is Miwaukee WI

That's awesome. I only applied early nov., but oh, I hope it's close... (I'm in MKE too.)

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Mexico
Timeline
19 hours ago, GoodbyeGirl said:

 

I was really lucky today and had a good combi interview experience. Here’s my story, I hope it helps anyone looking for a detailed account. Warning… it’s long!

 

It was lousy weather, we (me and my husband) set off for our 8:30am appointment in a torrential downpour. I was a little worried about looking like a drowned rat on arrival. 😊

 

At the front desk, security asked for my appointment letters and we both had to show ID. We then had to empty our pockets and put our items in a container (like at the airport) and go through the body scanner. We were then told to sit in the waiting room. It wasn’t full, just a few people. There was one officer sitting behind a glass window who had the patience of a saint. I was struck by how many visitors needed an awful lot of help and didn’t arrive with receipt numbers or much in the way of documentation. She seemed to spend most of her time directing people to which form to fill out and explaining that this office didn’t provide visas or a form filling in service.

 

We got called by an Immigration Officer (about 10 minutes after our scheduled appointment time), and were led to a private office. On the way, he asked for my 2-year Green Card and my 18-month extension letter (both were given back to me at the end of the interview).

 

The IO seemed to have a lot on his plate, was a bit grouchy at first, but was friendly and clear in his instructions. I had to stand on the left, my husband on the right and we raised our right hands and promised to tell the truth.

 

The IO explained that we’d be interviewed together for my 10 year Green Card and then my husband could leave, and I’d take the citizenship test and interview alone. He had my application on his desk and went through some basic questions from the i-751 – like name, address, telephone number, job – which I confirmed. We’d moved last summer and though our new address was confirmed by Homeland Security, and letters from service centres have been arriving to the right place, he had our old address and updated it during the interview.

 

He asked if we had a joint bank account, but didn’t ask to see any of the mountain of evidence I’d brought along. Before I knew it, that was the Green Card part done, and my husband was dismissed. Another nice and friendly IO came and escorted him back to the waiting room.

 

The IO then explained we’d start the citizenship interview with the civics test. I was asked these 6 questions which I got right so didn’t have to answer the full 10:

  • When was the Declaration of Independence adopted?
  • How many US Senators are there?
  • Who is the Chief Justice of the United States now?
  • What is the capital of the United States?
  • Where is the Statue of Liberty?
  • Who lived in America before the Europeans arrived?

Then I had to read out a statement which flashed up on a screen in front of me,  ‘Who elects Congress?’ I used a stylus to write the answer that the IO kept repeating, ‘the people elect Congress.’ Luckily it was legible though it did look like I was kindergarten age. Those things are hard to write with!

 

After that there was a long list of mostly ‘no’ questions like ‘have you ever committed some horrible act?’ The last 3 or 4 were ‘yes’ questions like agreeing to accept and obey the laws of the States.

 

He then told me I could relax while he updated the system. He said he was approving me for both Green Card and citizenship and I may or may not get a physical Green Card in the post. He said as my extension letter was good till July-2019, I could hold onto them and not worry about getting a stamp in my passport.

 

My name and basic details flashed up on screen which I had to check and sign, as this is how they’ll appear on my naturalisation certificate.

 

He said there was some spaces left on the 19 April oath ceremony so if the system updates in time, I should get an invite in the mail. He then handed me an N-652 confirming that I’d passed the N400 tests and that my application has been recommended for approval. The entire thing took around 30 minutes.

 

Within an hour of leaving, my case status online had changed to:

  • N400: Oath Ceremony Notice Was Mailed
  • i-751: New Card Is Being Produced

Hopefully I’ll get confirmation in my online documents of the oath ceremony date in a few days.

 

Some stray observations:

  • The IO seemed time-crunched, and said he gets a set amount of time for each interview. You can get a deferred result if you go over time, bring too much evidence (like all the societies/clubs/organisations) you belong to, as the IO has to type it all in during the allocated interview time slot
  • Similarly, the IO types up all you say in response to answers, so keep it brief
  • I was surprised we didn’t get interrogated a bit more, but apparently we are quite boring. The IO said i-751 interviews are typically held if there’s something they want to review in more detail, but in straight forward combi cases, it’s more of an adjudication of the application done with the applicant in attendance. That kind of explains the lack of interrogation.

Anyway, thank God that’s over! Sorry for the long post, I hope it helps someone.

 

I’m really looking forward to getting my oath ceremony date.


Good luck everyone!  

 

Thanks for sharing in such great detail!!

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Yes! LOL. Got my passport form filled out, photos ready to go and a date in the diary to visit the local passport office. For a first timer you need to go in person. Just my luck that it's in a huge college with a ton of exits and entrances. I'll need to leave early to allow for 'wandering around looking lost time'.

 

Then it's off to social security to get that all updated and squared away. I'm hoping by to be all done by June.

 

I am so relieved the light at the end of the tunnel finally switched on. :) 

 

2 hours ago, NeedMoreCoffee said:

The end is officially in sight :D :D next up is that passport :D

 

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

Current status: UK and USA citizen

12-Mar-19: I-751 (WAC18026) + N400 combi interview

Outcome

16 Mar-19: I-751 ~ Green Card in Hand (from submission to card delivery, 17 months)

19 Apr-19:  N400 ~ Naturalization Oath Ceremony, certificate in-hand! (from submission to oath, 6 months)

1 May 19: Voter registration card in-hand

3 May 19: USA passport in-hand

11 May 19: New SSN card in-hand

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