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Mona50brazilusa

GC married name, Passport maiden, travelling to Brazil?

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HI, please move if is in the wrong forum.

My 10 year Greencard is in my married name, brazilian passport is in maiden name.

Has anyone in the same situation traveled to Brazil recently? .

I haven't been to Brazil in over 10 years...

I hear you use the passport to enter Brazil, and Greencard to enter the US...

How that work when booking tickets, any experience with a particular airline?

 

Thank you,

Mona

Permanent resident.

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Russia
Timeline

Not Brazil, but in my wife's case Russia.  Until my wife naturalized, we always booked her tickets in her maiden name to match her Russian passport, then she always kept a copy of the marriage certificate with her.  She would get on flights with her Russian passport, then when returning to the US, show her GC to board the US bound flight and if anyone asked, show them the marriage certificate.  No one ever asked.  Now that she has a US passport, we book all her international flights using her US passport in her married name, and any Russia domestic flights using her Russian passport.

Visa Received : 2014-04-04 (K1 - see timeline for details)

US Entry : 2014-09-12

POE: Detroit

Marriage : 2014-09-27

I-765 Approved: 2015-01-09

I-485 Interview: 2015-03-11

I-485 Approved: 2015-03-13

Green Card Received: 2015-03-24 Yeah!!!

I-751 ROC Submitted: 2016-12-20

I-751 NOA Received:  2016-12-29

I-751 Biometrics Appt.:  2017-01-26

I-751 Interview:  2018-04-10

I-751 Approved:  2018-05-04

N400 Filed:  2018-01-13

N400 Biometrics:  2018-02-22

N400 Interview:  2018-04-10

N400 Approved:  2018-04-10

Oath Ceremony:  2018-06-11 - DONE!!!!!!!

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Taiwan
Timeline

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not country specific, it applies to all. 

many many GC holder in the same situation like yours and they are from all around the world ( passport = maiden, GC - married)

always book ur flight ticket with the name listed on the passport. all airline adopt the same rule.

 

US- Brazil

check in : show Brazil passport

 

from Brazil - US

check in : show passport and GC. if airline staff ask about name discrepancy : show marriage certificate. 

landing : show GC, if CBP ask for passport ( they rarely ask), show ur brazil passport

 

 

Edited by Verrou
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Filed: AOS (pnd) Country: Philippines
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I agree with everyone's sentiment.  There should be no problem.  However, to avoid any possible issue, my wife applied for and received a new passport in her married name through the Philippines embassy in Chicago.  Now her GC matches her PHP passport.  I imagine you could do the same through Brazilian embassy near you.

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I have a similar situation however I am a citizen of Ukraine and traveled to Ukraine and Poland. I always book my tickets for my maiden name and when at the airport I show an officer my green card and marriage certificate. I never had any troubles. CBR officers were very nice to me and I think they know that most marriage-based green card holders have this situation.

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19 hours ago, Verrou said:

not country specific, it applies to all. 

many many GC holder in the same situation like yours and they are from all around the world ( passport = maiden, GC - married)

always book ur flight ticket with the name listed on the passport. all airline adopt the same rule.

 

US- Brazil

check in : show Brazil passport

 

from Brazil - US

check in : show passport and GC. if airline staff ask about name discrepancy : show marriage certificate. 

landing : show GC, if CBP ask for passport ( they rarely ask), show ur brazil passport

 

 

I'm surprised to read they rarely ask. Granted, I've only flown twice with it, but both times I was asked for my British passport. The first time, the officer yelled at me because I should have known to hand it to him with the green card 😆

ROC from CR-1 visa (Green Card expiration date was Nov 24th 2016)

 

Link to the evidence I submitted. Be sure to send evidence spanning your entire marriage (especially for K-1) or as far back as you can. Just one or two bank statements will not cut it. I primarily focused on the two years of living here since I came in on a CR-1. If you don't have the fundamentals (i.e. joint accounts/policies), you can explain why in the covering letter. E.g. "While we do not have joint utilities, we both contribute to them from our joint bank account".

 

September 26th 2016: I-751 package sent to CSC

September 28th 2016: Package delivered
September 30th 2016: Check cashed
October 3rd 2016: NOA1 received with receipt date of 09/28/16
November 3rd 2016: Biometrics received with appointment date of 11/14/16.
November 14th 2016: Attended biometrics appointment
October 30th 2017: Infopass appointment to get I-551 stamp
February 26th 2018: I-751 case number (aka the NOA1 receipt number) becomes trackable
March 14th 2018: Submitted service request due to being outside of processing time.

March 15th 2018: ROC approved. 535 days (1 year, 5 months and 17 days)

March 29th 2018: Card being produced

April 4th 2018: Card mailed out

April 6th 2018: Card in hand. Has incorrect "resident since" date. Submitted service request on I-751 case (typographical error on permanent resident card) and an I-90 online.

April 2018 - August 7th 2018: Tons of service requests, emails and now senator involvement to get my corrected green card back because what the heck, USCIS. Also some time in May I sent a letter to Potomac telling them I want to withdraw my I-90 since CSC were handling it.

August 8th 2018: Card in production thanks to the direct involvement of Senator Sherrod Brown's team

August 13th 2018: Card mailed

August 15th 2018: Card in hand with correct date. :joy:

October 31st 2018: Potomac sends out a notice stating they have closed out my I-90 per my request. Yay for no duplicate card drama.

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1 minute ago, Ketsuban said:

I'm surprised to read they rarely ask. Granted, I've only flown twice with it, but both times I was asked for my British passport. The first time, the officer yelled at me because I should have known to hand it to him with the green card 😆

lol...i always used my "me no speak english" or " english is not my first language" BS when it happened. i always get away with it ha ha ha.

 

but yeah, i guess it really depend on the officer. one time i even gave my passport together with the GC, and the officer immediately return my passport and said " i dont need that, just this" while waving on my GC. 

 

im on the waiting list for nexus approval. once it got approved, i can use global service kiosk too. less human interaction the better :D

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36 minutes ago, Ketsuban said:

I'm surprised to read they rarely ask. Granted, I've only flown twice with it, but both times I was asked for my British passport. The first time, the officer yelled at me because I should have known to hand it to him with the green card 😆

 

Depends on the CBP officer, but if they followed their own regulations re: document requirements for air travel -- https://www.cbp.gov/travel/us-citizens/whti-program-background/docs-air-travel

 

"Lawful permanent residents must continue to present a valid Permanent Resident Card. A passport is not required."

 

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On 8/29/2023 at 1:35 PM, Chancy said:

 

Depends on the CBP officer, but if they followed their own regulations re: document requirements for air travel -- https://www.cbp.gov/travel/us-citizens/whti-program-background/docs-air-travel

 

"Lawful permanent residents must continue to present a valid Permanent Resident Card. A passport is not required."

 

Thanks. The guy I saw must have been having a pretty bad day! 

ROC from CR-1 visa (Green Card expiration date was Nov 24th 2016)

 

Link to the evidence I submitted. Be sure to send evidence spanning your entire marriage (especially for K-1) or as far back as you can. Just one or two bank statements will not cut it. I primarily focused on the two years of living here since I came in on a CR-1. If you don't have the fundamentals (i.e. joint accounts/policies), you can explain why in the covering letter. E.g. "While we do not have joint utilities, we both contribute to them from our joint bank account".

 

September 26th 2016: I-751 package sent to CSC

September 28th 2016: Package delivered
September 30th 2016: Check cashed
October 3rd 2016: NOA1 received with receipt date of 09/28/16
November 3rd 2016: Biometrics received with appointment date of 11/14/16.
November 14th 2016: Attended biometrics appointment
October 30th 2017: Infopass appointment to get I-551 stamp
February 26th 2018: I-751 case number (aka the NOA1 receipt number) becomes trackable
March 14th 2018: Submitted service request due to being outside of processing time.

March 15th 2018: ROC approved. 535 days (1 year, 5 months and 17 days)

March 29th 2018: Card being produced

April 4th 2018: Card mailed out

April 6th 2018: Card in hand. Has incorrect "resident since" date. Submitted service request on I-751 case (typographical error on permanent resident card) and an I-90 online.

April 2018 - August 7th 2018: Tons of service requests, emails and now senator involvement to get my corrected green card back because what the heck, USCIS. Also some time in May I sent a letter to Potomac telling them I want to withdraw my I-90 since CSC were handling it.

August 8th 2018: Card in production thanks to the direct involvement of Senator Sherrod Brown's team

August 13th 2018: Card mailed

August 15th 2018: Card in hand with correct date. :joy:

October 31st 2018: Potomac sends out a notice stating they have closed out my I-90 per my request. Yay for no duplicate card drama.

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