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Hey everyone im hoping somebody could help me here.

Me and hubby got married in october and then filed for CR1..On our marriage certificate it still has my last name as at the time we didnt have the money to chance my name in both my passports and i didnt want to add extra stress with filing for the CR1.

I have my interview on July 12th and i will be flying out to US on July 27th. I was hoping that when i get there i could get my name changed and i was wondering how it worked to get my name changed on my GC. How much would it cost? Is it maybe worth mentioning it at the interview and maybe trying to get my husbands last name on the GC straight away?? TIA

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USCIS Journey

29.01.2010 I-130 sent!! Let the journey begin

05.02.2010 NOA1 recieved

08.02.2010 Recieved NOA1 Hardcopy

05.03.2010 Visiting my husband for 2 weeks <3

20.03.2010 Arrived back in Germany :(

24.03.2010 NOA2 Approved (recieved email)

I-130 was approved within 47days

NVC Journey

30.03.2010 NVC recieved - Case number assigned

01.04.2010 Gave NVC email addys

05.04.2010 Recieved NOA2 Hard copy

08.04.2010 Recieved AOS Bill

12.04.2010 Sent NVC E-mail

14.04.2010 Email from NVC, DS-3032 Accepted

14.04.2010 AOS Fee paid

15.04.2010 AOS Fee Shows PAID

02.05.2010 IV Fee paid

06.05.2010 Iv Fee shows PAID

10.05.2010 Sent AOS & IV packages 3:49pm

11.05.2010 NVC signed for packages 2:27pm

19.05.2010 AVR updated, NVC recieved documents

26.05.2010 SIGN IN FAIL!

27.05.2010 Case Complete YAY!!!

11.06.2010 Interview date assigned 12th July 7.30am

05.07.2010 Medical in Dortmund

12.07.2010 INTERVIEW!..APPROVED!!!

27.07.2010 POE ATL

http://britgirlinamerica.blogspot.com/ Take a look, its all about my visa journey and my life in America

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Brazil
Timeline

Hello there!

I´ll try to help you ´cause I had the same doubt. All my docs with my single name, so when I arrive in USA, I´ll apply SSN CARD with my married name, using my Marriage Licence, only after I get my SSN with my new name I´ll be able to apply to change the Green Card´s name. Hope this can help you.

I found the form I-90 on USCIS and I also asked one lawyer about.

http://www.uscis.gov/files/form/i-90instr.pdf

http://www.uscis.gov/i-90

The fee for this application is $290.

The fee for the biometrics is $80.

My Best for you!

Adriana & Henry

Marriage:12-18-2007

event.png

girlpowersmiley.gif

I love being married.It's so great to find that one special person you want to annoy, for the rest of your life. =)upherebl.gif

kyt3m3.png

USCIS Journey

I-130 NOA1: 09-11-2009

I-130 NOA2: 03-24-2010 - 194 days from NOA1 to NOA2 :o

NVC Journey

04-01-2010 : NVC Received and assigned case / I-864(AOS)and IV fee Bill paid

05-05-2010 : Return Completed I-864(AOS)& DS-230

06-04-2010 : Medical Exams - Done

06-21-2010 : Case Completed at NVC (SIF) Tks Dear Lord! Finally =)

08-04-2010: Interview Date - RJ 7:15am - APPROVED!!!!

08-12-2010: POE - LAX Woohoo...Our dream come true!!! =)

08-23-2010: Welcome Letter received by mail!! Nice =)

08-26-2010: Exactly 14 days after my POE, I got my GC by mail, I'm so Happy !!!

as1cHr40g410300ODgzMTI3fDkzMDk4bHxQYXJ0eSBpbiBVU0EhISEgV2VcJ3JlIEFQUFJPVkVE.gif

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Hey everyone im hoping somebody could help me here.

Me and hubby got married in october and then filed for CR1..On our marriage certificate it still has my last name as at the time we didnt have the money to chance my name in both my passports and i didnt want to add extra stress with filing for the CR1.

I have my interview on July 12th and i will be flying out to US on July 27th. I was hoping that when i get there i could get my name changed and i was wondering how it worked to get my name changed on my GC. How much would it cost? Is it maybe worth mentioning it at the interview and maybe trying to get my husbands last name on the GC straight away?? TIA

Why not get the German passport with the married name? That will get you the CR-1 visa with the married name as well as the GC. Could be cheaper than paying I-90 fees and waiting 3-6 months to get the new GC.

ROC 2009
Naturalization 2010

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Why not get the German passport with the married name? That will get you the CR-1 visa with the married name as well as the GC. Could be cheaper than paying I-90 fees and waiting 3-6 months to get the new GC.

Thanks, will i not have any problems if i change my name in my passport now seen as i have finished all the paparwork for the CR1 and they have a photo copy of my passport now with my maiden name in it? Im also not sure if my marriage will be reconised here in germany or if im going to have to do a butt load of paperwork with an appostile and stuff as we got married in america.

English_flag.gifflag_german.gif

USCIS Journey

29.01.2010 I-130 sent!! Let the journey begin

05.02.2010 NOA1 recieved

08.02.2010 Recieved NOA1 Hardcopy

05.03.2010 Visiting my husband for 2 weeks <3

20.03.2010 Arrived back in Germany :(

24.03.2010 NOA2 Approved (recieved email)

I-130 was approved within 47days

NVC Journey

30.03.2010 NVC recieved - Case number assigned

01.04.2010 Gave NVC email addys

05.04.2010 Recieved NOA2 Hard copy

08.04.2010 Recieved AOS Bill

12.04.2010 Sent NVC E-mail

14.04.2010 Email from NVC, DS-3032 Accepted

14.04.2010 AOS Fee paid

15.04.2010 AOS Fee Shows PAID

02.05.2010 IV Fee paid

06.05.2010 Iv Fee shows PAID

10.05.2010 Sent AOS & IV packages 3:49pm

11.05.2010 NVC signed for packages 2:27pm

19.05.2010 AVR updated, NVC recieved documents

26.05.2010 SIGN IN FAIL!

27.05.2010 Case Complete YAY!!!

11.06.2010 Interview date assigned 12th July 7.30am

05.07.2010 Medical in Dortmund

12.07.2010 INTERVIEW!..APPROVED!!!

27.07.2010 POE ATL

http://britgirlinamerica.blogspot.com/ Take a look, its all about my visa journey and my life in America

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Canada
Timeline

No, it will not be an issue. I received my passport back with my married name about 4 days before our interview. Previously all my ID that was sent to USCIS and NVC had my maiden name in it.

The visa will be issued in the name in the passport. The green card will be issued with the name on the visa. If you want that name to be your husband's, then change your passport.

Good luck

USCIS
August 12, 2008 - petition sent
August 16, 2008 - NOA-1
February 10, 2009 - NOA-2
178 DAYS FROM NOA-1


NVC
February 13, 2009 - NVC case number assigned
March 12, 2009 - Case Complete
25 DAY TRIP THROUGH NVC


Medical
May 4, 2009


Interview
May, 26, 2009


POE - June 20, 2009 Toronto - Atlanta, GA

Removal of Conditions
Filed - April 14, 2011
Biometrics - June 2, 2011 (early)
Approval - November 9, 2011
209 DAY TRIP TO REMOVE CONDITIONS

Citizenship

April 29, 2013 - NOA1 for petition received

September 10, 2013 Interview - decision could not be made.

April 15, 2014 APPROVED. Wait for oath ceremony

Waited...

September 29, 2015 - sent letter to senator.

October 16, 2015 - US Citizen

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Brazil
Timeline

Thanks, will i not have any problems if i change my name in my passport now seen as i have finished all the paparwork for the CR1 and they have a photo copy of my passport now with my maiden name in it? Im also not sure if my marriage will be reconised here in germany or if im going to have to do a butt load of paperwork with an appostile and stuff as we got married in america.

____________________________________________________________________________

I thought about to change my passport to my married name too, but DO NOT FORGET that ALL forms you/we sent to USCIS and NVC were filed out in your single name, what can happend during the interview if you showd up with diffent passport info?? They can hold your passport and ask you re-filed out all forms with the correction under your married name and delay everything anyway...that is why I´ll do the changes in USA, I really don´t mind to wait another time since I´ll be there, it´s bad to pay another 300 bucks in fees but that will be the price for my mistake.

My Best for you all friends....

Edited by Me and You Us

Marriage:12-18-2007

event.png

girlpowersmiley.gif

I love being married.It's so great to find that one special person you want to annoy, for the rest of your life. =)upherebl.gif

kyt3m3.png

USCIS Journey

I-130 NOA1: 09-11-2009

I-130 NOA2: 03-24-2010 - 194 days from NOA1 to NOA2 :o

NVC Journey

04-01-2010 : NVC Received and assigned case / I-864(AOS)and IV fee Bill paid

05-05-2010 : Return Completed I-864(AOS)& DS-230

06-04-2010 : Medical Exams - Done

06-21-2010 : Case Completed at NVC (SIF) Tks Dear Lord! Finally =)

08-04-2010: Interview Date - RJ 7:15am - APPROVED!!!!

08-12-2010: POE - LAX Woohoo...Our dream come true!!! =)

08-23-2010: Welcome Letter received by mail!! Nice =)

08-26-2010: Exactly 14 days after my POE, I got my GC by mail, I'm so Happy !!!

as1cHr40g410300ODgzMTI3fDkzMDk4bHxQYXJ0eSBpbiBVU0EhISEgV2VcJ3JlIEFQUFJPVkVE.gif

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____________________________________________________________________________

I thought about to change my passport to my married name too, but DO NOT FORGET that ALL forms you/we sent to USCIS and NVC were filed out in your single name, what can happend during the interview if you showd up with diffent passport info?? They can hold your passport and ask you re-filed out all forms with the correction under your married name and delay everything anyway...that is why I´ll do the changes in USA, I really don´t mind to wait another time since I´ll be there, it´s bad to pay another 300 bucks in fees but that will be the price for my mistake.

My Best for you all friends....

NOTHING will happen - she may need to get the new set of DS-230 (easy) but everything shows relation between maiden name and the new, married name. Passport in married name = GC in married name.

ROC 2009
Naturalization 2010

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Filed: Lift. Cond. (pnd) Country: Japan
Timeline

lucky for me my hubby is the beneficiary. so i can just change my name wherever i feel like it. :thumbs:

USCIS JOURNEY

12-08-09 - I-130 Delivered to Chicago Lockbox

12-11-09 - Notice of Action (NOA1)

02-25-10 - Notice of Action 2 (NOA2) ~CA service center~

03-23-10 - PCC Applied - GET 04/01

Your I-130 was approved in 76 days from your NOA1 date

NVC JOURNEY

03-03-10 - NVC Case Number Assigned

03-05-10 - Email give

03-09-10 - AOS bill; Agent Email Get

03-10-10 - Paid AOS Bill; Email/Mail DS-3032

03-12-10 - AOS Bill Status: PAID

03-15-10 - IV Bill Email Get; Pay IV Bill

03-16-10 - IV Bill Status: PAID; AOS @ NVC

04-07-10 - IV Pack @ NVC

04-12-10 - IV Pack Enters AVR

04-20-10 - Log-in Fail

04-21-10 - Case Complete

04-30-10 - Interview Date Assigned

05-07-10 - NVC Forwards Case to Embassy, Tokyo

Your case was complete in 50 days at NVC

EMBASSY JOURNEY

04-16-10 - Medical Exam ($400) - PASSED

05-10-10 - Embassy Receives Case from NVC

06-28-10 - INTERVIEW - Moved

06-21-10 - INTERVIEW - APPROVED!

06-22-10 - Visa Received

Your interview took 192 days from your I-130 NOA1 date

USA JOURNEY

07-05-10 - US Entry

07-26-10 - Request SSC @ SS office

07-28-10 - Welcome Letter (2nd on 8/9)

08-02-10 - SSC GET

08-12-10 - Green Card GET -38 days

04-05-2012 - File I-751: APPROVED 10/17

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My husband had a valid point too though. I have already booked my flights and they are under my maiden name. I will have to call the tarvel agency and even see if it mayb be possible to change it. Im not even sure its going to work as i dont think they reconise the marriage here in germany because we got married in FL. I think we have to do get an apostile and his BC translated and stuff and to be honest my interview is in 16days and no way am i gonna get all that done in time. If they do reconise it, it will take 5 days to get my passport back and i will call the consulate and just make sure its ok to change my name before the interview.

English_flag.gifflag_german.gif

USCIS Journey

29.01.2010 I-130 sent!! Let the journey begin

05.02.2010 NOA1 recieved

08.02.2010 Recieved NOA1 Hardcopy

05.03.2010 Visiting my husband for 2 weeks <3

20.03.2010 Arrived back in Germany :(

24.03.2010 NOA2 Approved (recieved email)

I-130 was approved within 47days

NVC Journey

30.03.2010 NVC recieved - Case number assigned

01.04.2010 Gave NVC email addys

05.04.2010 Recieved NOA2 Hard copy

08.04.2010 Recieved AOS Bill

12.04.2010 Sent NVC E-mail

14.04.2010 Email from NVC, DS-3032 Accepted

14.04.2010 AOS Fee paid

15.04.2010 AOS Fee Shows PAID

02.05.2010 IV Fee paid

06.05.2010 Iv Fee shows PAID

10.05.2010 Sent AOS & IV packages 3:49pm

11.05.2010 NVC signed for packages 2:27pm

19.05.2010 AVR updated, NVC recieved documents

26.05.2010 SIGN IN FAIL!

27.05.2010 Case Complete YAY!!!

11.06.2010 Interview date assigned 12th July 7.30am

05.07.2010 Medical in Dortmund

12.07.2010 INTERVIEW!..APPROVED!!!

27.07.2010 POE ATL

http://britgirlinamerica.blogspot.com/ Take a look, its all about my visa journey and my life in America

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Filed: Lift. Cond. (apr) Country: India
Timeline

Green card will be issued in the name that is listed on the passport. If you want to take your husband's name, you need to get your passport changed first.

03/27/2009: Engaged in Ithaca, New York.
08/17/2009: Wedding in Calcutta, India.
09/29/2009: I-130 NOA1
01/25/2010: I-130 NOA2
03/23/2010: Case completed.
05/12/2010: CR-1 interview at Mumbai, India.
05/20/2010: US Entry, Chicago.
03/01/2012: ROC NOA1.
03/26/2012: Biometrics completed.
12/07/2012: 10 year card production ordered.

09/25/2013: N-400 NOA1

10/16/2013: Biometrics completed

12/03/2013: Interview

12/20/2013: Oath ceremony

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Filed: Citizen (pnd) Country: Australia
Timeline

The Consulate will issue the visa in the name that is on the passport as long as your PCC shows all names used including your married name. You may want to check that with your Consulate.

You will not have any problems with your paperwork being submitted in your maiden name. Best of luck ... :star:

OUR JOURNEY SO FAR: (dd/mm/yyyy)

18/09/09 - CR1 NOA1

16/07/10 - POE LAX (256 days NOA1 to interview)

27/09/10 - Aussie/American bun in the oven due May 10, 2011

06/01/11 - Submitted change of address online to USCIS. Mailed I-865 for sponsor. Neverending!

05/05/11 - Bouncing baby boy arrives

10/07/12 - Sent I-751

13/07/12 - I-751 NOA1

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The Consulate will issue the visa in the name that is on the passport as long as your PCC shows all names used including your married name. You may want to check that with your Consulate.

You will not have any problems with your paperwork being submitted in your maiden name. Best of luck ... :star:

(from Wikipedia)

United States

State laws can regulate name changes in the United States. Several specific federal court rulings have set precedents regarding both court decreed name changes and common law name changes (changing your name "at will").

  • One may be employed, do business, and enter into other contracts, and sue and be sued under any name they choose at will (Lindon v. First National Bank 10 F. 894, Coppage v. Kansas 236 U.S. 1, In re McUlta 189 F. 250).

  • Such a change carries the exact same legal weight as a court decreed name change as long as it is not done with fraudulent intent (In re McUlta 189 F. 250, Christianson v. King County 196 F. 791, United States v. McKay 2 F.2d 257).

Usually a person can adopt any name desired for any reason. Most states allow one to legally change his name by usage with no paperwork, but a court order may be required for many institutions (such as banks or government institutions) to officially accept the change.[1] Although the States (except part of Louisiana) follow the common law there are differences in acceptable requirements; usually a court order is the most efficient way to change names (which would be applied for in a state court) (except at marriage, which has become a universally accepted reason for a name change). It is necessary to plead that the name change is not for a fraudulent or other illegal purpose (such as evading a lien or debt, or for defaming someone).

The applicant may be required to give a somewhat reasonable explanation for wanting to change his name. A fee is generally payable, and the applicant may be required to post legal notices in newspapers to announce the name change. Generally the judge has limited judicial discretion to grant or deny a change of name, usually only if the name change is for "frivolous" or "immoral" purposes, such as changing one's name to "God," "Superman," "Copyright," or "Delicious."

In 2004, a Missouri man did succeed in changing his name to "They." [2] The Minnesota Supreme Court ruled that a name change to "1069" could be denied, but that "Ten Sixty-Nine" was acceptable (Application of Dengler, 1979), and the North Dakota Supreme Court denied the same request several years before (Petition of Dengler, 1976).[3][4]

In nearly all states, one cannot choose a name that is intended to mislead (such as adopting a celebrity's name), that is intentionally confusing, or that incites violence; nor can one adopt, as a name, a racial slur, a threat, or an obscenity.

Under the federal immigration-and-nationality law, when aliens apply for naturalization, they have the option of asking for their names to be changed upon the grants of citizenship with no additional fees. This allows them the opportunities to adopt more Americanized names. In the 2005 version of Form N-400, Application for Naturalization, Part 1 (D) asks whether the person applying for naturalization would like to legally change his name. During the naturalization interview, a petition for a name change is prepared to be forwarded to a federal court. The applicant certifies that he or she is not seeking a change of name for any unlawful purpose such as the avoidance of debt or evasion of law enforcement. Such a name change becomes final once a federal court naturalizes an applicant.

In some states, individuals are often allowed to return to the use of any prior surnames (e.g., maiden names upon divorce). Some states, such as New York, also allow married couples to adopt any new surname upon marriage, which may be a hyphenated form of the bride's and groom's names, a combination of parts of their family names, or any new family name they can agree upon adopting as the married name.

To maintain one's identity, it is desirable to obtain a formal order so there is continuity of personal records.

Remember, to change your name in your passport you will have to comply with the rules & regulations in your home country.

They may require a marriage certificate with the name change (which you can't produce) - so you have to check on the

laws & regulations in your home state as well as your country of nationality.

Others who have responded apparently may have done so on the basis of their having an existing marriage certificate with the name change.

Edited by thongd4me

02/2003 - Met

08/24/09 I-129F; 09/02 NOA1; 10/14 NOA2; 11/24 interview; 11/30 K-1 VISA (92 d); 12/29 POE 12/31/09 Marriage

03/29/-04/06/10 - AOS sent/rcd; 04/13 NOA1; AOS 2 NBC

04/14 $1010 cashed; 04/19 NOA1

04/28 Biom.

06/16 EAD/AP

06/24 Infops; AP mail

06/28 EAD mail; travel 2 BKK; return 07/17

07/20/10 interview, 4d. b4 I-129F anniv. APPROVAL!*

08/02/10 GC

08/09/10 SSN

2012-05-16 Lifting Cond. - I-751 sent

2012-06-27 Biom,

2013-01-10 7 Mo, 2 Wks. & 5 days - 10 Yr. PR Card (no interview)

*2013-04-22 Apply for citizenship (if she desires at that time) 90 days prior to 3yr anniversary of P. Residence

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My husband had a valid point too though. I have already booked my flights and they are under my maiden name. I will have to call the tarvel agency and even see if it mayb be possible to change it. Im not even sure its going to work as i dont think they reconise the marriage here in germany because we got married in FL. I think we have to do get an apostile and his BC translated and stuff and to be honest my interview is in 16days and no way am i gonna get all that done in time. If they do reconise it, it will take 5 days to get my passport back and i will call the consulate and just make sure its ok to change my name before the interview.

I did that - booked a flight in my maiden name, then realised passport was in my married name. I called the airline, and they told me to bring both passports, and a copy of the marriage license to show them. It took a about 5 minutes more to check in, but I didn't run into any problems.

I have my husband's name, I just want my husband!! :devil::lol:

(from Wikipedia)

United States

State laws can regulate name changes in the United States. Several specific federal court rulings have set precedents regarding both court decreed name changes and common law name changes (changing your name "at will").

  • One may be employed, do business, and enter into other contracts, and sue and be sued under any name they choose at will (Lindon v. First National Bank 10 F. 894, Coppage v. Kansas 236 U.S. 1, In re McUlta 189 F. 250).

  • Such a change carries the exact same legal weight as a court decreed name change as long as it is not done with fraudulent intent (In re McUlta 189 F. 250, Christianson v. King County 196 F. 791, United States v. McKay 2 F.2d 257).

Usually a person can adopt any name desired for any reason. Most states allow one to legally change his name by usage with no paperwork, but a court order may be required for many institutions (such as banks or government institutions) to officially accept the change.[1] Although the States (except part of Louisiana) follow the common law there are differences in acceptable requirements; usually a court order is the most efficient way to change names (which would be applied for in a state court) (except at marriage, which has become a universally accepted reason for a name change). It is necessary to plead that the name change is not for a fraudulent or other illegal purpose (such as evading a lien or debt, or for defaming someone).

The applicant may be required to give a somewhat reasonable explanation for wanting to change his name. A fee is generally payable, and the applicant may be required to post legal notices in newspapers to announce the name change. Generally the judge has limited judicial discretion to grant or deny a change of name, usually only if the name change is for "frivolous" or "immoral" purposes, such as changing one's name to "God," "Superman," "Copyright," or "Delicious."

In 2004, a Missouri man did succeed in changing his name to "They." [2] The Minnesota Supreme Court ruled that a name change to "1069" could be denied, but that "Ten Sixty-Nine" was acceptable (Application of Dengler, 1979), and the North Dakota Supreme Court denied the same request several years before (Petition of Dengler, 1976).[3][4]

In nearly all states, one cannot choose a name that is intended to mislead (such as adopting a celebrity's name), that is intentionally confusing, or that incites violence; nor can one adopt, as a name, a racial slur, a threat, or an obscenity.

Under the federal immigration-and-nationality law, when aliens apply for naturalization, they have the option of asking for their names to be changed upon the grants of citizenship with no additional fees. This allows them the opportunities to adopt more Americanized names. In the 2005 version of Form N-400, Application for Naturalization, Part 1 (D) asks whether the person applying for naturalization would like to legally change his name. During the naturalization interview, a petition for a name change is prepared to be forwarded to a federal court. The applicant certifies that he or she is not seeking a change of name for any unlawful purpose such as the avoidance of debt or evasion of law enforcement. Such a name change becomes final once a federal court naturalizes an applicant.

In some states, individuals are often allowed to return to the use of any prior surnames (e.g., maiden names upon divorce). Some states, such as New York, also allow married couples to adopt any new surname upon marriage, which may be a hyphenated form of the bride's and groom's names, a combination of parts of their family names, or any new family name they can agree upon adopting as the married name.

To maintain one's identity, it is desirable to obtain a formal order so there is continuity of personal records.

Remember, to change your name in your passport you will have to comply with the rules & regulations in your home country.

They may require a marriage certificate with the name change (which you can't produce) - so you have to check on the

laws & regulations in your home state as well as your country of nationality.

Others who have responded apparently may have done so on the basis of their having an existing marriage certificate with the name change.

She is CR1/IR1, should have marriage license, especially if she got married in the States. :yes:

Edited by Married2009

Married: 01/02/09

I-130 filed: 11/06/09

NOA1: 11/13/09

NOA2: 02/11/10

NVC received: 02/18/10

Case complete @ NVC: 04/14/10

Interview @ Montreal: 07/13/10 - Approved

POE: Sweetgrass, MT, 08/07/10

Filed for ROC: 07/20/12

Biometrics appt: 08/24/12

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Brazil
Timeline

I changed my passport a few weeks before my interview and had no issues at all. Just bring another DS230 with the name updated just in case.

You wont have any problems with the airline and the papers previously sent in maiden name. I think its crazy to spend $300 to change it here after everything we have been through. Also, it will be so much trouble to go to biometrics, sending forms etc. I don't think it's worth it.

ADRIANA -> just go to the federal police in Brazil and get your passport changed. If you have registered your marriage in Brazil you should have no problems on doing it so -I think you got married in the US right?

Don't spend time and money with this when you get here. It may mess up your papers.... when you POE they send your info to DHS and they send you the green card. Having to file another paper and send to them may hold back all your docts. If you are not able to change your passport before the interview, then I'd just wait to have it changed (GC, SSN etc) when you are applying for ROC in 2 yrs.

Just my 2 cents....

Edited by mrs. wife!

CR-1 Journey - California Service Center

I-130 timeline:
I-130 NOA1 - 05th Nov, 2009
I-130 NOA2 - 10th February, 2010 Yay!!!!
"Your I-130 was approved in 97 days from your NOA1 date."


NVC Journey:
02-16-2010: NVC Case # Assigned
03-31-2010: Case Complete!!
04-12-2010: Interview date assigned by NVC.
05-11-2010: Medical appointment in Rio

05-13-2010: Interview in Rio - APPROVED!!!

06-02-2010: POE in Washington DC - Finally home!

July 30, 2010 - Received the Green Card after receiving 4 welcome letters! USCIS see ya later!

2 YEARS LATER......

03-02-2012: Elegible to lift conditions
06-02-2012: Temporary GC expires

12-20-2012: Permanent GC received

6 MONTHS LATER......

06/03/2013: n400 Filled

10/22/2013: Citizenship test and oath ceremony

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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.
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