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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Kenya
Timeline

You just started the journey. Patience is required in this slow bus.

Check the link below for your answer.

 

https://egov.uscis.gov/processing-times/

Immigration journey is not: fast, for the faint at heart, easy, cheap, for the impatient nor right away. If more than 50% of this applies to you, best get off the bus.

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13 minutes ago, StrawberryKiss said:

You should refer to the USCIS website: 

 

https://egov.uscis.gov/processing-times/

 

for ROC at NSC it’s currently taking between 17 to 36.5 months. 

Thanks. I can see Potomac is the slowest. 

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Taiwan
Timeline

For an I-751, your local office times are more important than the USCIS service center.

Edited by Lucky Cat

"The US immigration process requires a great deal of knowledge, planning, time, patience, and a significant amount of money.  It is quite a journey!"

- Some old child of the 50's & 60's on his laptop 

 

Senior Master Sergeant, US Air Force- Retired (after 20+ years)- Missile Systems Maintenance & Titan 2 ICBM Launch Crew Duty (200+ Alert tours)

Registered Nurse- Retired- I practiced in the areas of Labor & Delivery, Home Health, Adolescent Psych, & Adult Psych.

IT Professional- Retired- Web Site Design, Hardware Maintenance, Compound Pharmacy Software Trainer, On-site go live support, Database Manager, App Designer.

______________________________________

In summary, it took 13 months for approval of the CR-1.  It took 44 months for approval of the I-751.  It took 4 months for approval of the N-400.   It took 172 days from N-400 application to Oath Ceremony.   It took 6 weeks for Passport, then 7 additional weeks for return of wife's Naturalization Certificate.. 
 

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Sweden
Timeline
13 hours ago, Lucky Cat said:

For an I-751, your local office times are more important than the USCIS service center.

Not in this case. OP looks to have had an interview for AOS, which means she likely won't have one for ROC (if she can provide enough evidence for them to make a decision without an interview). So her field office likely won't have anything to do with it, her case will be adjudicated at a service center (Nebraska or if it gets transferred to another service center). 

Edited by Scandi

K-1: 12-22-2015 - 09-07-2016

AP: 12-20-2016 - 04-07-2017

EAD: 01-18-2017 - 05-30-2017

AOS: 12-20-2016 - 07-26-2017

ROC: 04-22-2019 - 04-22-2020
Naturalization: 05-01-2020 - 03-16-2021

U.S. passport: 03-30-2021 - 05-08-2021

En livstid i krig. Göteborg killed it. Epic:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBs3G1PvyfM&ab_channel=Sabaton

 

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2 hours ago, Scandi said:

Not in this case. OP looks to have had an interview for AOS, which means she likely won't have one for ROC (if she can provide enough evidence for them to make a decision without an interview). So her field office likely won't have anything to do with it, her case will be adjudicated at a service center (Nebraska or if it gets transferred to another service center). 

Yea that makes sense. 

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Taiwan
Timeline
3 hours ago, Scandi said:

Not in this case. OP looks to have had an interview for AOS, which means she likely won't have one for ROC (if she can provide enough evidence for them to make a decision without an interview). So her field office likely won't have anything to do with it, her case will be adjudicated at a service center (Nebraska or if it gets transferred to another service center). 

Maybe.....USCIS has the discretion to waive the interview.......I wish they could waive ALL I-751 interviews.

"The US immigration process requires a great deal of knowledge, planning, time, patience, and a significant amount of money.  It is quite a journey!"

- Some old child of the 50's & 60's on his laptop 

 

Senior Master Sergeant, US Air Force- Retired (after 20+ years)- Missile Systems Maintenance & Titan 2 ICBM Launch Crew Duty (200+ Alert tours)

Registered Nurse- Retired- I practiced in the areas of Labor & Delivery, Home Health, Adolescent Psych, & Adult Psych.

IT Professional- Retired- Web Site Design, Hardware Maintenance, Compound Pharmacy Software Trainer, On-site go live support, Database Manager, App Designer.

______________________________________

In summary, it took 13 months for approval of the CR-1.  It took 44 months for approval of the I-751.  It took 4 months for approval of the N-400.   It took 172 days from N-400 application to Oath Ceremony.   It took 6 weeks for Passport, then 7 additional weeks for return of wife's Naturalization Certificate.. 
 

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Taiwan
Timeline
1 hour ago, Ani2 said:

Yea that makes sense. 

That may or may not be true.  There are several factors USCIS considers prior to waiving an interview.   They do not automatically waive I-751 interviews just because you had an AOS interview, although that is one of the requirements to consider waiving it.  Good luck.  

"The US immigration process requires a great deal of knowledge, planning, time, patience, and a significant amount of money.  It is quite a journey!"

- Some old child of the 50's & 60's on his laptop 

 

Senior Master Sergeant, US Air Force- Retired (after 20+ years)- Missile Systems Maintenance & Titan 2 ICBM Launch Crew Duty (200+ Alert tours)

Registered Nurse- Retired- I practiced in the areas of Labor & Delivery, Home Health, Adolescent Psych, & Adult Psych.

IT Professional- Retired- Web Site Design, Hardware Maintenance, Compound Pharmacy Software Trainer, On-site go live support, Database Manager, App Designer.

______________________________________

In summary, it took 13 months for approval of the CR-1.  It took 44 months for approval of the I-751.  It took 4 months for approval of the N-400.   It took 172 days from N-400 application to Oath Ceremony.   It took 6 weeks for Passport, then 7 additional weeks for return of wife's Naturalization Certificate.. 
 

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Sweden
Timeline
4 hours ago, Ani2 said:

Yea that makes sense. 

Absolutely, pretty much "everyone" who had an AOS interview are getting their ROC interview waived these days. There are certain times they don't, like in some cases where the applicant filed with a divorce waiver, if there are certain red flags or if the evidence wasn't good enough to make a decision (in these cases they first send out an RFE for more evidence, and if the RFE response isn't enough then the applicant gets called in for an interview). They try everything to waive the interview so it's not common that those who had one for AOS gets another for ROC.

Edited by Scandi

K-1: 12-22-2015 - 09-07-2016

AP: 12-20-2016 - 04-07-2017

EAD: 01-18-2017 - 05-30-2017

AOS: 12-20-2016 - 07-26-2017

ROC: 04-22-2019 - 04-22-2020
Naturalization: 05-01-2020 - 03-16-2021

U.S. passport: 03-30-2021 - 05-08-2021

En livstid i krig. Göteborg killed it. Epic:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBs3G1PvyfM&ab_channel=Sabaton

 

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