Jump to content
Jules15

Sending in I-751! Organization tips?!

 Share

30 posts in this topic

Recommended Posts

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: England
Timeline

Hi everyone, my husband (green card holder) and I are preparing/gathering documents to send in his ROC paperwork. As you all know, it’s a STACK of documents we end up sending into USCIS.

 

It made me curious, how are you all organizing your application? Binder with dividers? Clear inserts with tabs? Paper clips? Staples? In the past, we have used paper clips but I wonder if that annoys officials. Anyone have any insight as to how the officials like the documents prepared?

 

I’m still in the process of printing all important evidence and preparing to ship out the application on January 27th.

Thanks and good luck to everyone in the process!

😀

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I didn’t use anything, they just received a stack of papers from me 😅

 

Don’t use staples, but you can use paperclips 

“It’s been 84 years…” 

- Me talking about the progress of my I-751

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Jules15 said:

Hi everyone, my husband (green card holder) and I are preparing/gathering documents to send in his ROC paperwork. As you all know, it’s a STACK of documents we end up sending into USCIS.

 

It made me curious, how are you all organizing your application? Binder with dividers? Clear inserts with tabs? Paper clips? Staples? In the past, we have used paper clips but I wonder if that annoys officials. Anyone have any insight as to how the officials like the documents prepared?

 

I’m still in the process of printing all important evidence and preparing to ship out the application on January 27th.

Thanks and good luck to everyone in the process!

😀

We just used paper clips to help separate everything and had no issues

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Australia
Timeline

We used ACCO clips (two-hole punch in the tops of the pages).  This is what they prefer, and we thought it would be good to hand it to them like they like it.  We had five different sections, and I had one big rubber band around the five of them.  Table of contents is helpful.

 

Just remember - print on one side only, and for your safety, if you have a piece of paper that is not 8 1/2 x 11 or A4, tape it to a blank sheet of paper of the same size as your stack.  The first thing they are going to do (besides cash your check) is scan all your documents - and if you have one that is off-size, it can easily get lost!

 

Best of luck!

 

Sukie in NY

Spoiler

 

Spoiler

Our Prior Journey

N-400 Naturalization

18-Feb-2018 - submitted N-400 online, credit card charged

18-Feb-2018 - NOA1

12-Mar-2018 - Biometrics 

18-June-2018 - Notice of interview received

26-July-2018 - Interview  - APPROVED!!!

26-July-2018 - Oath Ceremony Scheduled

17-Aug-2018 - Oath Ceremony

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 hours ago, Sukie said:

We used ACCO clips (two-hole punch in the tops of the pages).  This is what they prefer, and we thought it would be good to hand it to them like they like it.  We had five different sections, and I had one big rubber band around the five of them.  Table of contents is helpful.

 

Just remember - print on one side only, and for your safety, if you have a piece of paper that is not 8 1/2 x 11 or A4, tape it to a blank sheet of paper of the same size as your stack.  The first thing they are going to do (besides cash your check) is scan all your documents - and if you have one that is off-size, it can easily get lost!

 

Best of luck!

 

Sukie in NY

This. Also purchased printer paper that thad the ACCO holes punched at the top to save a step.

A magical mystery tour of many US visas prior to AOS... (J-1, F-1, H-1B)

I-485/AOS:

Spoiler

EAD/AP - NOA received May 18, 2020

AOS - NOA received May 18, 2020

Biometrics (Code 2) - August 5, 2020

Biometrics take 2 (Code 3) - August 27, 2020

Ready to be Scheduled for Interview - September 8, 2020

EAD/AP Approval Notice - October  1, 2020

EAD Card Received - October 13, 2020

Interview Scheduled Notification - March 1, 2021

Interview Scheduled - April 6, 2021

GC Approved - May 7, 2021

GC Mailed - May 11, 2021

GC Delivered - May 11, 2021

 

N400 Citizenship:

File Date - January 8, 2024

Biometrics Waiver - January 8, 2024

Interview Scheduled - March 7, 2024

Interview Date - April 12, 2024

Conditionally Approved Pending I-751 Transfer - April 12, 2024

I-751 Case Was Transferred to Another Office - April 12, 2024

Case Approved - May 5, 2024

Oath Ceremony to be Scheduled - May 5, 2024

Oath Scheduled - May 18, 2024

Oath Ceremony - June 18, 2024

Oath Ceremony Cancelled - June 12, 2024

Oath Ceremony Rescheduled Date - July 30, 2024

DONE

 

Removal of Conditions:

File Date - January 7, 2023

Package Delivered - January 9, 2023

NOA Date - January 10, 2023

NOA Received - January 17, 2023 (dated "received" January 9, 2023)

48 Month Extension Received - March 20, 2023

Case Approved - May 3, 2024
 

event.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

USCIS doesn't like hole punches and paper clips anymore -- https://www.uscis.gov/newsroom/alerts/recommendations-for-paper-filings-to-avoid-scanning-delays

 

To avoid delays and improve scanning efficiency, we recommend that you do not:

  • Hole punch, staple, paper clip, binder clip, or otherwise attach documents to one another.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Argentina
Timeline

 This is how we organized it:

  • Cover on top.
  • Check
  • Cover letter
  • Form G-1145
  • Form 751
  • Evidence organized from newest to oldest. For example, most recent bank statement on top, followed by the older ones. 
  • We hole punched on top (because the article that @Chancy posted was released after we filed) and held everything together with a 3" inch ACCO binder and a piece of cardboard at the back, for more stability.
  • Used sticky dividers on the side
  • We wrote the name of the documents with labels that we created using a DYMO label maker.
  • Sent the package in a sturdy FedEx box.

FROM F1 TO AOS

October 17, 2019 AOS receipt date 

December 09, 2019: Biometric appointment

January 15, 2020 RFE received

January 30, 2020  RFE response sent

Feb 7: EAD approved and interview scheduled

March 18, 2020 Interview cancelled

April 14th 2020: RFE received

April 29, 2020 Approved without interview

May 1, 2020 Card in hand

 

REMOVAL OF CONDITIONS

February 1, 2022 package sent

March 28, 2022 Fingerprints reused

July 18, 2023 approval

July 20, 2023 Card in hand

 

N400 

January 30,2023: Online filing

February 4th, 2023: Biometric appointment

June 15th, 2023: Case actively being reviewed

July 11th, 2023: Interview scheduled.

August 30th, 2023: Interview!

August 31st, 2023: Oath ceremony scheduled.

Sept 19th, 2023: Officially a US citizen!

 


 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Australia
Timeline
1 hour ago, Chancy said:

USCIS doesn't like hole punches and paper clips anymore -- https://www.uscis.gov/newsroom/alerts/recommendations-for-paper-filings-to-avoid-scanning-delays

 

To avoid delays and improve scanning efficiency, we recommend that you do not:

  • Hole punch, staple, paper clip, binder clip, or otherwise attach documents to one another.

I saw this the other day but I find this odd for petitions that tend to be large like I-751. Do they expect people to chuck a stack of lose paper into a mailer and send it that way? 

K1 to AOS                                                                                   AOS/EAD/AP                                                                      N-400

03/01/2018 - I-129F Mailed                                              06/19/2019 - NOA1 Date                                              01/27/2023 - N-400 Filed Online

03/08/2018 - NOA1 Date                                                    07/11/2019 - Biometrics Appt                                   02/23/2023 - Biometrics Appt
09/14/2018 - NOA2 Date                                                    12/13/2019 - EAD/AP Approved                               04/03/2023 - Interview Scheduled

10/16/2018 - NVC Received                                              12/17/2019 - Interview Scheduled                          05/10/2023 - Interview - APPROVED!

10/21/2018 - Packet 3 Received                                      01/29/2020 - Interview - APPROVED!                  OFFICIALLY A U.S. CITIZEN! 

12/30/2018 - Packet 3 Sent                                               02/04/2020 - Green Card Received! 

01/06/2019 - Packet 4 Received                                     ROC - I-751

01/29/2019 - Interview - APPROVED!                           11/02/2021 - Mailed ROC Packet

02/05/2019 - Visa Received                                             11/04/2021 - NOA1 Date

05/17/2019 - U.S. Arrival                                                     01/19/2022 - Biometrics Waived

05/24/2019 - Married ❤️                                                    02/04/2023 - Transferred to New Office

06/14/2019 - Mailed AOS Packet                                    05/10/2023 - APPROVED!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Australia
Timeline
12 hours ago, Chancy said:

USCIS doesn't like hole punches and paper clips anymore -- https://www.uscis.gov/newsroom/alerts/recommendations-for-paper-filings-to-avoid-scanning-delays

 

To avoid delays and improve scanning efficiency, we recommend that you do not:

  • Hole punch, staple, paper clip, binder clip, or otherwise attach documents to one another.

Well!  I am glad to know this!  Our journey is over, but I often help people organize their packets.  Now I know the "new" suggestions!  Thank you for pointing this out!

 

Sukie in NY

Spoiler

 

Spoiler

Our Prior Journey

N-400 Naturalization

18-Feb-2018 - submitted N-400 online, credit card charged

18-Feb-2018 - NOA1

12-Mar-2018 - Biometrics 

18-June-2018 - Notice of interview received

26-July-2018 - Interview  - APPROVED!!!

26-July-2018 - Oath Ceremony Scheduled

17-Aug-2018 - Oath Ceremony

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

21 hours ago, Chancy said:

USCIS doesn't like hole punches and paper clips anymore -- https://www.uscis.gov/newsroom/alerts/recommendations-for-paper-filings-to-avoid-scanning-delays

 

To avoid delays and improve scanning efficiency, we recommend that you do not:

  • Hole punch, staple, paper clip, binder clip, or otherwise attach documents to one another.

Welp, I'm not going to reprint ~500 pages now :) They'll have to deal with the hole punches.

A magical mystery tour of many US visas prior to AOS... (J-1, F-1, H-1B)

I-485/AOS:

Spoiler

EAD/AP - NOA received May 18, 2020

AOS - NOA received May 18, 2020

Biometrics (Code 2) - August 5, 2020

Biometrics take 2 (Code 3) - August 27, 2020

Ready to be Scheduled for Interview - September 8, 2020

EAD/AP Approval Notice - October  1, 2020

EAD Card Received - October 13, 2020

Interview Scheduled Notification - March 1, 2021

Interview Scheduled - April 6, 2021

GC Approved - May 7, 2021

GC Mailed - May 11, 2021

GC Delivered - May 11, 2021

 

N400 Citizenship:

File Date - January 8, 2024

Biometrics Waiver - January 8, 2024

Interview Scheduled - March 7, 2024

Interview Date - April 12, 2024

Conditionally Approved Pending I-751 Transfer - April 12, 2024

I-751 Case Was Transferred to Another Office - April 12, 2024

Case Approved - May 5, 2024

Oath Ceremony to be Scheduled - May 5, 2024

Oath Scheduled - May 18, 2024

Oath Ceremony - June 18, 2024

Oath Ceremony Cancelled - June 12, 2024

Oath Ceremony Rescheduled Date - July 30, 2024

DONE

 

Removal of Conditions:

File Date - January 7, 2023

Package Delivered - January 9, 2023

NOA Date - January 10, 2023

NOA Received - January 17, 2023 (dated "received" January 9, 2023)

48 Month Extension Received - March 20, 2023

Case Approved - May 3, 2024
 

event.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Canada
Timeline
On 1/5/2023 at 9:30 AM, Wuozopo said:


@Jules15

Mine was just an orderly stack (75 total pages) with no cover letter, holes, contents, tabs, or clips. I put the stack in an old folder to squash it down to more easily slide it into the cardboard USPS Priority mailer. Very minimalistic and approved with no RFE, no interview, no issues. I think the presentation is not as important as most think. Contractors open the mail and USCIS officers do not see your efforts.

@Wuozopo

Great advice! 75 pages is minimalistic and contrary to some advice I received around here. Can you please let me know:

1.Did you just give USCIS 1 statement per quarter for your joint bank or credit card statements? 1 monthly statement for one bank alone for me is 8 pages.

2. Can you also list the evidence you provided? Any pictures?

3. Did you provide 2 year evidence from the date you became an LPR or 2 year evidence from the date you got married? My greencard was approved almost 2 years after marriage due to long USCIS processing so I have a choice of providing 4 year evidence since we got married or just 2 year evidence since I got my green card.

 

Thanks!

Edited by chancecody

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, chancecody said:

@Wuozopo

Great advice! 75 pages is minimalistic and contrary to some advice I received around here. Can you please let me know:

1.Did you just give USCIS 1 statement per quarter for your joint bank or credit card statements? 1 monthly statement for one bank alone for me is 8 pages.

2. Can you also list the evidence you provided? Any pictures?

3. Did you provide 2 year evidence from the date you became an LPR or 2 year evidence from the date you got married? My greencard was approved almost 2 years after marriage due to long USCIS processing so I have a choice of providing 4 year evidence since we got married or just 2 year evidence since I got my green card.

 

Thanks!

I'm sending:

 

Form I-751 – Petition to Remove Conditions on Residence, duly executed, and a check in the amount of $680 for filing costs, and biometrics fee, as well as:

 

- A copy of the Permanent Resident Card of the petitioner (front and back)


Additional supporting documents:
o    Copy of marriage certificate
o    Copy of drivers licenses
o    Tax return transcripts, married filing jointly (2020 and 2021)
o    Joint leases
o    Bank statements of joint checking, and savings accounts
o    Bank statements of joint credit card
o    Beneficiary statements of life insurance, retirement and investment accounts
o    Utility bills showing joint address (internet, electricity)
o    Car and rental insurance policy documents
o    Photographs and trip itineraries
 

A magical mystery tour of many US visas prior to AOS... (J-1, F-1, H-1B)

I-485/AOS:

Spoiler

EAD/AP - NOA received May 18, 2020

AOS - NOA received May 18, 2020

Biometrics (Code 2) - August 5, 2020

Biometrics take 2 (Code 3) - August 27, 2020

Ready to be Scheduled for Interview - September 8, 2020

EAD/AP Approval Notice - October  1, 2020

EAD Card Received - October 13, 2020

Interview Scheduled Notification - March 1, 2021

Interview Scheduled - April 6, 2021

GC Approved - May 7, 2021

GC Mailed - May 11, 2021

GC Delivered - May 11, 2021

 

N400 Citizenship:

File Date - January 8, 2024

Biometrics Waiver - January 8, 2024

Interview Scheduled - March 7, 2024

Interview Date - April 12, 2024

Conditionally Approved Pending I-751 Transfer - April 12, 2024

I-751 Case Was Transferred to Another Office - April 12, 2024

Case Approved - May 5, 2024

Oath Ceremony to be Scheduled - May 5, 2024

Oath Scheduled - May 18, 2024

Oath Ceremony - June 18, 2024

Oath Ceremony Cancelled - June 12, 2024

Oath Ceremony Rescheduled Date - July 30, 2024

DONE

 

Removal of Conditions:

File Date - January 7, 2023

Package Delivered - January 9, 2023

NOA Date - January 10, 2023

NOA Received - January 17, 2023 (dated "received" January 9, 2023)

48 Month Extension Received - March 20, 2023

Case Approved - May 3, 2024
 

event.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: England
Timeline
4 hours ago, chancecody said:

@Wuozopo

Great advice! 75 pages is minimalistic and contrary to some advice I received around here. Can you please let me know:

1.Did you just give USCIS 1 statement per quarter for your joint bank or credit card statements? 1 monthly statement for one bank alone for me is 8 pages.

2. Can you also list the evidence you provided? Any pictures?

3. Did you provide 2 year evidence from the date you became an LPR or 2 year evidence from the date you got married? My greencard was approved almost 2 years after marriage due to long USCIS processing so I have a choice of providing 4 year evidence since we got married or just 2 year evidence since I got my green card.

 

Thanks!


I am unconventional and go with my own logic rather than sending masses of redundant paper because eager forum members suggest it. You’ll have to decide what makes sense to you. To me 500 pages is not going to be viewed and there is a greater chance they will 1) leave it sitting on the desk/shelf forever because it is going to be a drudgery to go through, 2) miss something important because it’s HUGE,
 

Bank statements. My thought were if you have the same bank, same names, same address and account number, it is a certainty that you had that account for the full duration. So I sent 4 statements total.(for two different banks)  —earliest, two middle,, most recent. I did try to pick middle ones that showed the account was used based on big differences in beginning balance and ending balance. A joint account with the same $500 in it every month for 2 years proves nothing. I also sent only the first page of the 4 bank statements because it showed we shared an account, address, and the balances might have $5000 swings in the selected month. Removing conditions is not about proving income so I decided to not show them every single place we spent money. It’s about jointness and commingling. On that same thought, our three joint tax transcripts were first page only to show we filed jointly.

 

Credit card statements. None. I laid out five joint credit cards his/hers on the copier. Our account numbers were the same on the matching cards so it showed we shared five accounts on one piece of paper. It did blank out a few middle numbers with tape for a bit more security. I think you can see in the examples how I reduced lots of paper. 

 

 Other evidence (trying to remember). One page had three State Farm auto insurance proofs all copied on one paper. They are small. Again, early middle, recent dates. Other cards lined up on one page…matching library cards, and ID cards for fun community classes we took. One page of driver licenses from two cities. Cat adoption papers in both names. Three dental receipts that showed we went same day and had both names. A cute“”We’re Moving” postcard we sent to friends with new contact info. Two photo Christmas cards we sent. Some paperwork from sale of house. A couple of trips showing we sat by each other (boarding passes).

 

As you can see we had odd random stuff because we did not have a lot of the traditional things. Only one joint utility bill, houses were only in wife’s name. Did not share a phone plan, health insurance, or kids. 

 

Pictures. Yes lots, but they were created like a collage on regular printer paper so 8-10 on two pages with captions. And they weren’t all fixed up beautiful occasions. More realistic life like house painting in messy clothes, hanging Christmas lights, selfie with the cat. Cooking out with family, hanging out at the coffee shop with friends.  And some from trips abroad. 
 

Evidence covered basically from our K1 visa marriage which was followed within 5 months by greencard so time frame was close together. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 
Didn't find the answer you were looking for? Ask our VJ Immigration Lawyers.
Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
- Back to Top -

Important Disclaimer: Please read carefully the Visajourney.com Terms of Service. If you do not agree to the Terms of Service you should not access or view any page (including this page) on VisaJourney.com. Answers and comments provided on Visajourney.com Forums are general information, and are not intended to substitute for informed professional medical, psychiatric, psychological, tax, legal, investment, accounting, or other professional advice. Visajourney.com does not endorse, and expressly disclaims liability for any product, manufacturer, distributor, service or service provider mentioned or any opinion expressed in answers or comments. VisaJourney.com does not condone immigration fraud in any way, shape or manner. VisaJourney.com recommends that if any member or user knows directly of someone involved in fraudulent or illegal activity, that they report such activity directly to the Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement. You can contact ICE via email at Immigration.Reply@dhs.gov or you can telephone ICE at 1-866-347-2423. All reported threads/posts containing reference to immigration fraud or illegal activities will be removed from this board. If you feel that you have found inappropriate content, please let us know by contacting us here with a url link to that content. Thank you.
×
×
  • Create New...