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[South Korea] My 6-month K1 Visa Journey in 2021! Visa approved with no job, but decent assets.

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Haiti
Timeline

Please put this in your visa journey timeline. This will help the data and others who are searching fir specific country information. Congratulations.

Our K1 Journey    I-129f

Service Center : Texas Service Center   Transferred? California Service Center on 8/11/14

Consulate : Port au Prince, Haiti             I-129F Sent : 4/14/2014

I-129F NOA1 : 4/24/14                            I-129F NOA2 : 9/10/14

NVC Received : 9/24/14                          NVC Left : 9/26/14

Consulate Received : 10/6/14 CEAC status changed to ready

Packet 3 Received : 10/27/14 packet received by petitioner in USA ( beneficiary never received packet 3)

Medical: 10/30/14 Dr. Buteau                  Medical picked up: 11/3/14

Packet 3 Sent : 11/10/13.. Had to schedule interview appointment and attach confirmation receipt to packet

Interview Date : 12/1/14                           Interview Result : Approved !

Visa Received : 12/10/14 picked up at Jacmel location

US Entry : 12/15/14 Fort Lauderdale, Florida

Apply for Social Security Card: 12/30/14 Connecticut

Marriage: 1/26/15

 

Adjustment of Status

CIS Office : Hartford                                  Filed : 3/18/15

NOA : 3/25/15                                            Biometrics : 4/15/15

Approved: 8/31/15                                     Received: 9/8/15

 

EAD

CIS Office : Hartford                                  Filed : 3/18/15

NOA : 3/25/15                                            Approved: 6/12/15

Received: 6/20/15

 

Removal of Conditions I-751

Filed: 8/14/17 at VSC                                 NOA: 8/15/17 Received 8/21 by mail

Biometrics: Dated: 8/25/17   Received 9/2/17   Appointment 9/11/17 

Approved: 10/23/18 -no interview

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: South Korea
Timeline
7 minutes ago, Luckycuds said:

Please put this in your visa journey timeline. This will help the data and others who are searching fir specific country information. Congratulations.

 

I did not know this was a thing! I filled out as much information as I could (some dates are not filled out as the wonky e-mail system made it hard to keep track of some events).

Edited by VisaPerson
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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Haiti
Timeline
36 minutes ago, VisaPerson said:

 

I did not know this was a thing! I filled out as much information as I could (some dates are not filled out as the wonky e-mail system made it hard to keep track of some events).

Awesome, thank you! If you had this created earlier on you would have gotten an “estimate” of when your visa would have been approved- and the more that update/create their timeline the more accurate it is. So others from South Korea can now benefit from your timeline 🙂 you can do it as well when you adjust status, remove conditions and apply for citizenship, if fiancé so chooses. Your post   Is also helpful for those going through the process and I’m sure gives hope to many!!
 

I think that’s great you were able to go in with your fiancé to the interview- some consulates don’t allow that and some that did not don’t. I was able to go with my (now) husband and I think that helped with the nerves but unfortunately PAP no longer allows the fiancé to attend.

 

Congratulations, Good luck and start packing !! 😁

Our K1 Journey    I-129f

Service Center : Texas Service Center   Transferred? California Service Center on 8/11/14

Consulate : Port au Prince, Haiti             I-129F Sent : 4/14/2014

I-129F NOA1 : 4/24/14                            I-129F NOA2 : 9/10/14

NVC Received : 9/24/14                          NVC Left : 9/26/14

Consulate Received : 10/6/14 CEAC status changed to ready

Packet 3 Received : 10/27/14 packet received by petitioner in USA ( beneficiary never received packet 3)

Medical: 10/30/14 Dr. Buteau                  Medical picked up: 11/3/14

Packet 3 Sent : 11/10/13.. Had to schedule interview appointment and attach confirmation receipt to packet

Interview Date : 12/1/14                           Interview Result : Approved !

Visa Received : 12/10/14 picked up at Jacmel location

US Entry : 12/15/14 Fort Lauderdale, Florida

Apply for Social Security Card: 12/30/14 Connecticut

Marriage: 1/26/15

 

Adjustment of Status

CIS Office : Hartford                                  Filed : 3/18/15

NOA : 3/25/15                                            Biometrics : 4/15/15

Approved: 8/31/15                                     Received: 9/8/15

 

EAD

CIS Office : Hartford                                  Filed : 3/18/15

NOA : 3/25/15                                            Approved: 6/12/15

Received: 6/20/15

 

Removal of Conditions I-751

Filed: 8/14/17 at VSC                                 NOA: 8/15/17 Received 8/21 by mail

Biometrics: Dated: 8/25/17   Received 9/2/17   Appointment 9/11/17 

Approved: 10/23/18 -no interview

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Canada
Timeline

~~Moved to K1 Progress Reports~~

Spoiler

Met Playing Everquest in 2005
Engaged 9-15-2006
K-1 & 4 K-2'S
Filed 05-09-07
Interview 03-12-08
Visa received 04-21-08
Entry 05-06-08
Married 06-21-08
AOS X5
Filed 07-08-08
Cards Received01-22-09
Roc X5
Filed 10-17-10
Cards Received02-22-11
Citizenship
Filed 10-17-11
Interview 01-12-12
Oath 06-29-12

Citizenship for older 2 boys

Filed 03/08/2014

NOA/fee waiver 03/19/2014

Biometrics 04/15/14

Interview 05/29/14

In line for Oath 06/20/14

Oath 09/19/2014 We are all done! All USC no more USCIS

 

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Liberia
Timeline
8 hours ago, VisaPerson said:

 

  • Feb 06 - Began preparing materials for our K-1 visa
  • Feb 23 - Mailed our I-129F petition to USCIS via FedEx Korea
  • Feb 25 - USCIS received our petition
  • Apr 28 - Notice of Action, Petition Approval, received via mail (NOA 1)
  • May 17 - Completed DS-160 Form
  • Jun 22 - Notice of Action, NVC sent K-1 Visa petition to the U.S. Embassy in Korea, received via e-mail (NOA 2)
  • Jul 01 - Visa Interview Instruction Packet, received via e-mail
  • Jul 28 - Medical Examination appointment
  • Aug 03 - Received medical exam results in a white taped A4 envelope
  • Aug 10 - Visa interview

 


 

 

 

Congratulations!!! So exciting. I know the embassy part varies by country but your petition was approved by USCIS in just 4 months. That's record timing these days!!  

Edited by J&D1008
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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Ireland
Timeline

Congrats! I saw your post on Reddit a few minutes ago. Really appreciate the detail you provided!

K-1

02/08/2021: I-129F packet shipped via FedEx

02/09/2021: I-129F delivered to Texas Lockbox (Lewisville) 

(02/09/2021: NOA1)

03/17/2021: Received NOA1 backdated to 02/09/2021 (36 days)

09/28/2021: NOA2 (231 days from NOA1)

10/02/2021: I-797 Received via USPS

10/19/2021: NVC Case Number Assigned

10/26/2021: In Transit

10/28/2021: Arrived at Embassy (DHL Receipt)

11/03/2021: Packet 3 Received (Email to Petitioner)

03/03/2022: Interview: Dublin Embassy

03/16/2022: Visa Received

04/04/2022: Entered USA

04/21/2022: Marriage

04/25/2022: Applied for SSN > Issued same day

04/30/2022: SS card arrived

05/04/2022: Filed I-485, I-131, I-765

05/05/2022: NOA1 for I-485 and I-765

05/17/2022: RFE for I-864 

06/15/2022: Biometrics

08/03/2022: AP Approved

12/19/2022: AOS Approved (no interview)

 

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Great detailed post on the S. Korea K1 process.  Timelines there seem to be what was considered "normal" pre-Covid.  The opposite extreme is the Philippines who many are now at the 2 year mark without an interview being scheduled.  

The United States is now a country obsessed with the worship of its own ignorance.  Americans are proud of not knowing things.  They have reached a point where ignorance, is an actual virtue.  To reject the advice of experts is to assert autonomy, a way for Americans to insulate their increasingly fragile egos from ever being told they're wrong about anything.  It is a new Declaration of Independence: no longer do we hold these truths to be self-evident, we hold all truths to be self-evident, even the ones that arent true.  All things are knowable and every opinion on any subject is as good as any other.  The fundamental knowledge of the average American is now so low that it has crashed through the floor of "uninformed", passed "misinformed", on the way down, and now plummeting to "aggressively wrong."

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Russia
Timeline

Thank you for sharing this wealth of info with us! And thanks for filling in your timeline. :)

🇷🇺 CR-1 via DCF (Dec 2016-Jun 2017) & I-751 ROC (Apr 2019-Oct 2019)🌹

Spoiler

Info about my DCF Moscow* experience here and here

26-Jul-2016: Married abroad in Russia 👩‍❤️‍👨 See guide here
21-Dec-2016: I-130 filed at Moscow USCIS field office*
29-Dec-2016: I-130 approved! Yay! 🎊 

17-Jan-2017: Case number received

21-Mar-2017: Medical Exam completed

24-Mar-2017: Interview at Embassy - approved! 🎉

29-Mar-2017: CR-1 Visa received (via mail)

02-Apr-2017: USCIS Immigrant (GC) Fee paid

28-Jun-2017: Port of Entry @ PDX 🛩️

21-Jul-2017: No SSN after three weeks; applied in person at the SSA

22-Jul-2017: GC arrived in the mail 📬

31-Jul-2017: SSN arrived via mail, hurrah!

 

*NOTE: The USCIS Field Office in Moscow is now CLOSED as of February 28th, 2019.

 

Removal of Conditions - MSC Service Center

 28-Jun-2019: Conditional GC expires

30-Mar-2019: Eligible to apply for ROC

01-Apr-2019: ROC in the mail to Phoenix AZ lockbox! 📫

03-Apr-2019: ROC packet delivered to lockbox

09-Apr-2019: USCIS cashed check

09-Apr-2019: Case number received via text - MSC 📲

12-Apr-2019: Extension letter arrives via mail

19-Apr-2019: Biometrics letter arrives via mail

30-Apr-2019: Biometrics appointment at local office

26-Jun-2019: Case ready to be scheduled for interview 

04-Sep-2019: Interview was scheduled - letter to arrive in mail

09-Sep-2019: Interview letter arrived in the mail! ✉️

17-Oct-2019: Interview scheduled @ local USCIS  

18-Oct-2019: Interview cancelled & notice ordered*

18-Oct-2019: Case was approved! 🎉

22-Oct-2019: Card was mailed to me 📨

23-Oct-2019: Card was picked by USPS 

25-Oct-2019: 10 year GC Card received in mail 📬

 

*I don't understand this status because we DID have an interview!

 

🇺🇸 N-400 Application for Naturalization (Apr 2020-Jun 2021) 🛂

Spoiler

Filed during Covid-19 & moved states 1 month after filing

30-Mar-2020: N-400 early filing window opens!

01-Apr-2020: Filed N-400 online 💻 

02-Apr-2020: NOA 1 - Receipt No. received online 📃

07-Apr-2020: NOA 1 - Receipt No. received via mail

05-May-2020: Moved to another state, filed AR-11 online

05-May-2020: Application transferred to another USCIS field office for review ➡️

15-May-2020: AR-11 request to change address completed

16-Jul-2020: Filed non-receipt inquiry due to never getting confirmation that case was transferred to new field office

15-Oct-2020: Received generic response to non-receipt inquiry, see full response here

10-Feb-2021: Contacted senator's office for help with USCIS

12-Feb-2021: Received canned response from senator's office that case is within processing time 😡

16-Feb-2021: Contacted other senator's office for help with USCIS - still no biometrics

19-Feb-2021: Biometrics reuse notice - canned response from other senator's office 🌐

23-Feb-2021: Interview scheduled - notice to come in the mail

25-Feb-2021: Biometrics reuse notice arrives via mail

01-Mar-2021: Interview notice letter arrives via mail  ✉️ 

29-Mar-2021: Passed interview at local office! Oath Ceremony to be scheduled

13-Apr-2021: Oath Ceremony notice was mailed

04-May-2021: Oath Ceremony scheduled 🎆 Unable to attend due to illness

04-May-2021: Mailed request to reschedule Oath to local office

05-May-2021: "You did not attend your Oath Ceremony" - notice to come in the mail

06-May-2021: Oath Ceremony will be scheduled, date TBA

12-May-2021: Oath Ceremony re-scheduled for June 3rd, then de-scheduled same day 😡 

25-May-2021: New Oath Ceremony notice was mailed

16-Jun-2021: Oath Ceremony scheduled 🎆 - DONE!!

17-Jun-2021: Certificate of Naturalization issued

 

🎆 Members new and old: don't forget to fill in your VJ timeline! 🎇 https://www.visajourney.com/timeline/

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18 hours ago, VisaPerson said:

 

I did not know this was a thing! I filled out as much information as I could (some dates are not filled out as the wonky e-mail system made it hard to keep track of some events).

Now, for the really long wait......AOS in Seattle!

 

Back in 2018, we had a 6 month timeline for petition approval as well.  Our wait time for an AOS interview in Tukwila was 14 months.   Not sure what it is at the moment. Best of luck!

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: South Korea
Timeline
On 8/10/2021 at 6:47 AM, VisaPerson said:

Hello everyone, my fiancé and I finished our visa interview earlier today and thought it would be helpful to document the entire process from start to finish for those curious about the K1 visa process in 2021. Please note: this visa timeline documents the process for a South Korean beneficiary, which is one of the countries that has seen faster processing times than most other countries. The process may be different in your country.
 

 

Our Situation

I am a U.S. citizen born in America, but I currently live in South Korea. I moved to Korea a few years ago and met my fiancé after a year of living here. My fiancé is a South Korean citizen. I am currently unemployed, but have been working at a Company X for two years before it shut down in March 2021. My fiancé is unemployed and his work history is lacking. We did not use a lawyer in any of the process. Just a bajillion hours of research. :)

 

K-1 Visa General Timeline

  • Feb 06 - Began preparing materials for our K-1 visa
  • Feb 23 - Mailed our I-129F petition to USCIS via FedEx Korea
  • Feb 25 - USCIS received our petition
  • Apr 28 - Notice of Action, Petition Approval, received via mail (NOA 1)
  • May 17 - Completed DS-160 Form
  • Jun 22 - Notice of Action, NVC sent K-1 Visa petition to the U.S. Embassy in Korea, received via e-mail (NOA 2)
  • Jul 01 - Visa Interview Instruction Packet, received via e-mail
  • Jul 28 - Medical Examination appointment
  • Aug 03 - Received medical exam results in a white taped A4 envelope
  • Aug 10 - Visa interview

 


 

I-129F Petition & NOA1

We began preparing for the I-129F petition on February 6. In the end, we submitted 78 pages with the following contents:

 

  1. G-1450 Authorization for Credit Card Transactions ($535 Dollar amount, 1 page)
  2. Cover Letter (1 page)
  3. G-1145 Notification of Application Acceptance (1 page)
  4. Form I-129F (13 pages)
  5. Statement of Circumstances of Meeting (Question 54) (1 page)
  6. Proof of Meeting (12 pages, cover page) (hotel receipts and pictures together)
  7. Proof of Relationship (39 pages, cover page) (phone logs, pictures of dates and living together, translated text messages)
  8. Evidence of intent to marry statement and proof (6 pages, signed by both)
  9. US citizen’s Proof of Citizenship (1 page)
  10. Copy of Beneficiary’s Passport (1 page)
  11. Two (2) Passport sized photos (petition, beneficiary)

 

I personally translated all text messages and receipts that included Korean, signed and dated each translation stating I was capable of translations. Nothing was notarized. You can see an example page from our petition showing an original text message, my translated copy, and my "Certification of Translation" attached to the translation here: https://i.imgur.com/CaOth4y.png

 

Our goal when gathering evidence was to show that we have consistently stayed in contact since being together and physically met with each other (i.e. hotel receipts, dates where we're together in the photograph, friend gatherings). Since we live together, I tried to include text messages/images that proved our living arrangement (i.e. messages stating "grab something from the grocery!" or "did you do laundry yet?", pictures of my fiancé cooking meals). Our phone logs show that we've called each other basically every day since we started dating. Of course, when we moved in together, we didn't call each other as much.

 

We did not use a binder (I think this is discouraged), nor did we have any stickies or staples. I just had a huge clip to make sure everything would stay together during transit. We plopped the petition into the FedEx express envelope on the morning of February 23rd and off it went!

 

I listed a family member for the US mailing address. They received NOA1 in the mail in early May and sent me the following photo: https://i.imgur.com/py3J9Qy.png. It stated that the petition was received on February 25, 2021. The notice date is April 28. The petition expiration date is August 27.

 

NOA2 & Visa Interview Prep

There were some e-mail issues (all emails from NVC and USCIS were sent to spam and I never check spam...), so although NOA2 was e-mailed to me on June 22, I didn't know until late-July. I made a series of calls over the span of a few weeks to USCIS, NVC, and the US embassy trying to figure out the status of our petition. It was a very frustrating time, mostly because I believed that the e-mails were not being received on our end. Anyways, it got all handled (used a different e-mail), and we proceeded with the instructions provided by the instruction packet.

 

Here is everything we had to obtain before the interview:

  • Two (2) US-sized Passport Photos (5cm * 5cm)
  • Six (6) Korean-sized Passport Photos
  • DS-160 confirmation page (you can download the confirmation page after you've filled out the DS-160 form and submitted online at https://ceac.state.gov/ceac/)
  • Citibank Visa Fee Receipt $265 (you must print out the instruction page for the MRV and show it to the Citibank representative before paying the visa fee. The payment takes about a day to process in the backend.)
  • Interview Appointment Confirmation (this is the page you can download after you make your appointment on https://ustraveldocs.com/kr/kr-niv-appointmentschedule.asp. You MUST have paid your visa fee at Citibank before you can make your appointment.)
  • Birth Certificate and Translation (for Koreans, this means your "Basic Certificate (Detailed)" and "Family Relations Certificate (Detailed)", which can be obtained in-person at your local Gu or Dong office. English Translation template for the certificate is available online.)
  • Marriage Certificate/Divorce Decree and Translation (can be obtained in-person at your local Gu or Dong office. English Translation template for the certificate is available online.)
  • Police Certificate (for Koreans, you can request it at your local police station; these already come translated)
  • Copy of Immunization Records (can be obtained online). Note: If your fiancé served in the military, there may be a chance that some of his vaccinations during his service was not recorded onto his immunization records. Call the military to confirm, and if they haven't done so, ask them to update the immunization records to show what vaccinations were given.
  • Medical Examination Results (mailed to you or can be picked up; takes about a week to receive via mail since appointment date)
  • Form I-134, Affidavit of Support (filled out by the US sponsor)
    • [Required] US Federal Income Tax Return 2020 (if applicable)
    • [Required] Relevant W-2 Forms (if applicable)
    • [Required] Letter from all US banks stating account balances and account opened date
    • [Required] Letter from current employer stating type of employment (contract, permanent, etc.), salary amount, and length of employment
    • Extra proof of income: *These are extra documents I included in my affidavit because I did not have a job and did not currently live in the US. You need to establish proof of income and proof of U.S. domicile.
      • 7 months' worth of paystubs until unemployment (to show reliable work history)
      • 2020 year-end credit card statements (proof of US domicile)
      • Stocks & Bonds Portfolio Statement (proof of US domicile)
      • Life insurance policies (proof of US domicile & income)

 

Medical Examination

We scheduled our medical examination for July 28, 2021. The process took about 1.5 hours. My fiancé had 3 shots I believe, and did a series of tests like X-rays, urine test, blood tests, height/weight measurements, etc. We received our results via mail a week later on August 3. There MUST be someone who can sign for the package; it cannot be dropped off in the mailbox.

 

To schedule the medical examination, you have to choose one of the approved hospitals that can conduct the K-1 Visa medical examination. There are a few locations in South Korea, but the Seoul National University Hospital is the cheapest (~$350), whereas the Gangnam hospital is the most expensive (~$480). The other hospitals have fees in-between (~$400). I called all the hospitals to retrieve these quotes.

 

In order to schedule an interview at any of these locations, you need the following information prepared:

  • DS-160 confirmation #
  • Beneficiary's Passport #
  • Interview date* (You cannot schedule a medical examination without a confirmed interview date and time.)
  • Current address
  • Intended US address

 

They require the following items in-person during the appointment:

  • Six (6) Korean-sized Passport Photos (with beneficiary's name written on the back)
  • Visa Interview Appointment Confirmation Letter
  • Copy of Immunization Records
  • Passport
  • Fees ($300 ~ $500)

 

Form I-134, Affidavit of Support

I believe this is a more lenient version of the I-864 form (filled out for a green card), which does not require evidence unless asked. I, however, wanted to include evidence because I do not have a job but have a substantial amount of liquid assets and bank account balances to subsidize my lack of employment.

 

Situation: I am currently unemployed. I have been unemployed since March 2021, but have a stable work history (2 years at Company X making decent income) and a lot of "assets," as defined by the US government. In all, I have about $200,000 worth of checkings/savings, portfolio stocks & bonds, personal property, life insurance cash surrender value (not all life insurance plans have cash surrender values). Also, I accepted a U.S. job offer in February 2021 and the future employer is willing to wait for my arrival in the states before I begin my job. I was offered a 6-figure salary.

 

IMPORTANT: The I-134 requests TWO COPIES of your bank letter(s) and your current employer letter, both of which are required in your affidavit. Call your bank and employer in advance to retrieve these letters!

 

Documents Included in Affidavit:

  • Form I-134 (8 pages)
  • Proof of Income (36 pages, cover page)
    • U.S. Federal Income Tax Return 2020 (21 pages)
    • Letter from [U.S. BANKS] (confirming account balances and account open date) (2 copies, 2 pages)
    • U.S. Employer Letter, signed (job offer letter stating length of employment, type of employment, and salary) (2 copies, 4 pages)
    • Paystubs from August 2020 to February 2021 (7 pages)
    • U.S. Currency Account Balance at [KOREAN BANK] (1 page)
    • Bitcoin Portfolio Balance, July 2021 (1 page)
  • Proof of Domicile in the U.S. (16 pages, cover page)
    • 2020 Year-End Credit Card Statements at [U.S. BANKS] (5 pages)
    • International Wire Transfers from [KOREAN BANK] to [U.S. BANKS] (5 pages)
    • June 2021 Portfolio Statement from American Brokerage Service (3 pages)
    • Life Insurance Policies and Cash Values (3 pages)
      • Not all life insurance policies have a "cash surrender value." This is the cash value if you want to "cash out" of your life insurance policy for some quick money. This is only available for "Whole Life Insurance" policies. If you have life insurance, ask your provider if this is the type of policy you are on.
    • Copy of Sponsor’s U.S. Passport (1 page)

 

*Note: Because I do not have a job, but had a signed offer letter from an employer, I used that letter in lieu of a "current employer" letter.

 

The Visa Interview

Finally!! The visa interview. My fiancé and I went together to the U.S. Embassy in Seoul.

 

Appointment: August 10, 2021 @ 7:45am (South Korea)

 

General process and rough timeline:

  • [5:45AM] Arrived at the premises and waited at a local café (my fiancé and I practiced some potential questions, mostly about both of our unemployed statuses, our biggest worry)
  • [7:10AM] Got in line at the U.S. Embassy in Seoul. We were one of the first people there, a few individuals before us.
  • [7:20AM] People were being checked into the U.S. Embassy. When it was our turn, I was asked if I was joining. I initially said no, but they were confirming identities. The receptionist was expecting both my fiancé (beneficiary) and me (U.S. petitioner/sponsor)! I went to the reception desk thinking that I'd just cheer on my fiancé as he went inside, but they suddenly asked "Who is [U.S. petitioner name]?" and I said it was me and they said "you should go inside too."
  • [7:25AM] We went to the 2nd floor to submit the preliminary documents (appointment confirmation letter and US passport photos) and was admitted to the next floor to wait for our appointment.
  • [7:35AM] During the waiting time, we were given a checklist of documents to prepare in a specific order (i.e. passport, medical exam, birth certificate, etc.)
  • [7:50AM] We were called to one of the counters at 7:50am, where the employee double-checked all documents we were submitting. We submitted the following items:
    • 53 pages - I-134 plus supporting documents
    • 80 pages - a copy of our I-129F petition
    • 10 pages - documents of our preliminary wedding plans
    • 25 pages - extra copies of all documents that I thought would be nice to have just in case (did not submit, I just had these in case something went wrong)
    • Everything except the extra copies and I-129F petition (they already had a copy) was submitted and approved. They also needed the ORIGINAL Citibank receipt that was used to pay for the visa application. Also, I was asked if I (U.S. petitioner) currently resided in South Korea and I said yes, and as she was skimming and confirming documents, she pointed out to my employer's offer letter and said "Is this an offer letter?" I said yes, and she nodded her head.
    • We were told to wait again until the interview officer was ready for us.
  • [8:15AM] We were called up to the counters again to meet with the interview officer. The process was simple:
    • My fiancé was told to raise his right hand and swear that everything stated in the documents was true and that going forth anything said during the interview is true. They then scanned his fingerprints.
    • Our interview officer was extremely kind, thoughtful, and super sweet. My fiancé gets very nervous at interviews and it was pretty obvious, he even blurted out "oh my gosh, I'm so nervous!" And the officer said "Hey, it's okay. Don't worry! It'll be alright." It was very touching!
    • Officer asked questions in a mix of English and Korean (reason stated below), and my fiancé responded in mostly Korean (his English isn't the best at the moment), with me occasionally helping translate a few words he might not have understood. He was asked very few questions:
      • How did we meet?
      • When did your relationship start?
      • Have you met any of your fiancée's family? Has your fiancé met any of your family?
      • [Question for U.S. Petitioner] How do you two communicate?
      • Before the interview officially started, it was obvious my fiancé's English wasn't the best, so the interview officer asked us how we communicated. I said "Konglish" (a mix of Korean and English), but actually for us, it's like 98% Korean and 2% English words sprinkled in our conversations. Our officer said "Okay, then I will use Konglish too!" oops, lol. Probably should have said Korean - my fiancé was struggling a little.
      • [Question for U.S. Petitioner] You're currently working in South Korea?
      • I explained that I stopped working in March 2021, but received a job offer back in America and am going to start my new employment as soon as I arrive in the U.S.
    • The interview took probably 5 minutes tops. It was in front of the entire waiting area (with all the counters), so I'm pretty sure most of the people waiting heard our interview lol. Also, I was really taken aback that it was out in public, and the interview was extremely short, and I (U.S. Petitioner) was asked questions directly!
    • After the interview concluded, our officer said our visa application was approved and to expect the visa to be mailed to us within a week. She then handed back our wedding plan packet (10 pages) and said "Have fun!"
  • [8:25AM] We left the premises, and when we retrieved our electronics from the security room, the guards were shocked and said "Wow, they must have started really early today."

 

The End

And now here I am writing this post. We'll be waiting for my fiancé's visa to arrive and in the meantime, we'll be packing, selling things, booking flights, etc.! We're extremely excited to move forward. I think we were lucky in that everything went generally smoothly (minus the e-mail hiccups) in less than 6 months. :)


 

I'm happy to answer any questions about our journey (South Korea K-1 Visa)! Please note that the K-1 visa application process varies by country and some of my steps may not apply to you!

 

Thanks~

 

Congratulations! I am so happy for you!! My fiance and I started our whole K1 visa last August and our case was finally sent to the U.S. Embassy in South Korea this week. I wanted to ask, when you were choosing the date for the interview appointment, how was the availability of the dates? My fiance and I are eager to see each other because we have been far apart for months now and we're worried we will have to wait a while(at least a month?) for an interview because of no availability of earlier dates. 

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I also submitted for a K1 Visa for my South Korean Fiancé.

They received our petition on February 24, 2021.

I received NOA1 on March 24, 2021.

I still haven't heard anything else and I and I haven't seen my Fiancé in 11 months because of Korea Covid restrictions.

I really just want to get her here already.

I have been tracking the other South Korea I-129f Petitions.

Does South Korea have a dedicated person for I-129F petitions?

 

I noticed you filled and submitted Form DS-160 before NOA2. I thought you were supposed to fill this form out after NOA2?

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  • 5 months later...
Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline

I'm very surprised how fast you guys got the K-1 visa! Congrats! It seems like beneficiary from Korea gets it quicker than from Canada which doesn't makes sense for some reason.

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