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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Spain
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Posted

Hello

 

I am Spanish and my wife is from USA and we are currently residing in Spain. My wife is going to file form I-130 online, we are providing the following:

  1. I-130 online petition.
  2. Spanish spouse data
  3. Photos 1 of each of me and my wife according to the requirements 
  4. Marriage certificate
  5. I-130A
  6. Collection of photos (wedding, honeymoon, vacations, family...)
  7. Wife's U.S. passport
  8. Registration of joint cohabitation in the country of residence (Spain)
  9. Explanatory letter of relationship explaining how we met until we got married, etc. 
  10. Flight purchases with our names on them.

 

Is it enough? 

 

At the moment we do not have a joint bank account, is it strictly necessary? 

The marriage certificate is in Spanish, does it have to be translated and notarized into English? Does a multilingual certificate (issued in several languages) work?

 

Thank you very much

Posted
5 hours ago, Oriol Reinoso said:

The marriage certificate is in Spanish, does it have to be translated and notarized into English?

No notarization is needed, but you need translation for any documents that are not in English. I'd pay online translation agencies to do translation, they can do it pretty cheaply and they do it well. The translator must speak both languages (English and Spanish or whatever other language document is in). Translator must also include statement (Google it, I don't remember exact wording).

 

5 hours ago, Oriol Reinoso said:

Does a multilingual certificate (issued in several languages) work?

 

I've seen USCIS issuing RFE for such documents if not accompanied by translation. I understand there is English there already, but since there is foreign language next to it, it needs to be translated even if it says exactly the same.

Posted

You don't need joint accounts now. You may need to open some when you move to the US. It would not only help with immigration, but also with family budgeting. For example, many choose to contribute money to joint account to pay rent / mortgage, bills and large purchases. Get the tax refund money there. You can still have personal accounts to cover for smaller things like credit card purchases.

 

Also, you need to understand, your wife should have filed taxes as a US citizen no matter where she lives. If she didn't, it's time to file those missing taxes.

 

At some point, she should also reestablish US domicile to have your visa issued. This means she has to get an address in the US (leas, parents). Register to vote at that address. Have bank accounts in the US, get library card, start job search, register with primary care doctor. Unless she can provide proof of domicile, no visa will be issued.

 

Also, she may need a joint sponsor, a US LPR or US citizen, not necessarily a family member, who needs to have enough good income to exceed 125% poverty guideline https://www.uscis.gov/i-864p. It's different depending how many dependants on taxes joint sponsor has. With no dependants, I'd recommend at least 30K income a year.

 

Good luck!

 
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