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what happen when k1 visa & 1-94 expires?

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As long as you are married within the 90 days of entering you are fine. You can apply for AOS after your I-94 would have expired, it really doesn't matter except you are kind of statusless until you apply for AOS. You won't be in trouble or anything, but you might want to apply sooner rather than later to be able to get on with your life and be able to work.

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Filed: Timeline

hi everyone...

what will happen if k1 visa and i-94 expires...i have not apply for AOS yet?

am i still legal to stay in US?

thanks in advance for your replies...

God bless us all :)

No, you will not be legal because you have no authorization to be in the US. A spouse of a US citizen does not have an automatic right to be in the US. That is why people have to petition for their spouses.

Once your K1 visa expires, you will be an illegal overstay. You cannot legally stay in the US. You cannot legally work in the US.

If you got marry, then your spouse can file an I-130 and I-485 for you to adjust your status. The illegal overstay will be forgiven. While the applications are pending, you can continue to be in the US.

Edited by Jojo92122
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Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Philippines
Timeline

what will happen if k1 visa and i-94 expires...i have not apply for AOS yet?

am i still legal to stay in US?

Once your I-94 expires and you have not applied for AOS, you will start accumulating overstay. Your overstay stops accumulating once you apply for AOS. If your overstay is over 6 months you will banned from returning to the USA for 3 years. If your overstay is over 1 year then you will be banned from returning to US for 10 years. So, if you have accumulated over 6 moths or more, do not leave the USA until you get the GC.

So, you must file for AOS before your I-94 expires so that you will not accumulate any overstay (no gap between AOS and expiration of the I-94).

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Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Canada
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She is legal as long as they get married within 90 days; this is the only requirement under K-1 and they have fullfilled it. She will be "Out of Status" or "statuless" as AmyKathleen2005 said if they do not AOS.

Our AOS Journey started:

Nov 06, 2010: CS & CQ got married in Las Vegas

Nov 26, 2010: AOS-EAD-AP package sent out

Nov 29, 2010: Package delivered at 1:12pm

Dec 10, 2010: Received text messages from USCIS regarding receipt numbers for AOS, EAD, and AP

Dec 14, 2010: Received three I-797C from mail

Dec 18, 2010: Touched

Jan 05, 2011: Received RFE for I-485 (email)

Jan 10, 2011: Received RFE for I-485 (hardcopy)

Jan 11, 2011: Sent response to RFE for I-485 (Fedex/UPS do not deliver to PO Box. Only USPS does and it takes 2 days even for Express Post)

Jan 13, 2011: Response to RFE delivered

Jan 14, 2011: Touched

Jan 15, 2011: Touched

Jan 18, 2011: Received Biometric Appointment letter in mail

Jan 21, 2011: Biometric Appointment (Walk-in Successful)

Feb 10, 2011: Biometric Appointment (Originally Scheduled)

Feb 12, 2011: Received 1st text/email for EAD card in production and AP was APPROVED

Feb 17, 2011: Received 2nd text/email for EAD card in production

Feb 18, 2011: Received 3rd text/email for EAD card has been mailed out

Feb 18, 2011: Received AP!!!! YAY!!!!

Feb 22, 2011: Received EAD!!!!

Feb 22, 2011: Received letter for 2nd fingerprints :(

Mar 17, 2011: 2nd fingerprints

May 02, 2011: AOS Interview Approved!!!!!!

May 07, 2011: Received "Welcome to America" letter

May 09, 2011: Received Green Card. Yay!!!!!

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Vietnam
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She is legal as long as they get married within 90 days; this is the only requirement under K-1 and they have fullfilled it. She will be "Out of Status" or "statuless" as AmyKathleen2005 said if they do not AOS.

Not precisely. Getting married within 90 days is the only requirement in order to be eligible to adjust status based on a K1 visa. It doesn't mean you are "legal" if the I-94 expires. "Out of status" means you have no lawful status as defined in the INA - you're not a non-immigrant, you're not a permanent resident, you're not a citizen or a national of the US. You're an alien whose permission to be in the United States has expired. What separates you from someone who overstayed their visitor's visa is that you would be eligible to adjust status, even though your I-94 had expired.

As Haarp425 stated, you begin accumulating unlawful presence when the I-94 expires. You stop accumulating unlawful presence when the AOS petition is accepted, but that doesn't restore you to lawful status. What it does do is grant you permission to remain in the US until a decision is made on the AOS petition. In other words, you're "out of status" but not "unlawfully present".

12/15/2009 - K1 Visa Interview - APPROVED!

12/29/2009 - Married in Oakland, CA!

08/18/2010 - AOS Interview - APPROVED!

05/01/2013 - Removal of Conditions - APPROVED!

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Filed: Citizen (pnd) Country: Colombia
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Not precisely. Getting married within 90 days is the only requirement in order to be eligible to adjust status based on a K1 visa. It doesn't mean you are "legal" if the I-94 expires. "Out of status" means you have no lawful status as defined in the INA - you're not a non-immigrant, you're not a permanent resident, you're not a citizen or a national of the US. You're an alien whose permission to be in the United States has expired. What separates you from someone who overstayed their visitor's visa is that you would be eligible to adjust status, even though your I-94 had expired.

As Haarp425 stated, you begin accumulating unlawful presence when the I-94 expires. You stop accumulating unlawful presence when the AOS petition is accepted, but that doesn't restore you to lawful status. What it does do is grant you permission to remain in the US until a decision is made on the AOS petition. In other words, you're "out of status" but not "unlawfully present".

My wife's I-94 expired on 4/1. We also received the text notification that her AOS had been forwarded to National Benefits Center on 4/1 as well. We haven't seen the hard-copy NOA1 yet but I assume (this is the unknown) that the NOA1 date will be 4/1 (or maybe earlier.) If it is indeed 4/1, does this count as zero days of overstay or as 1 day (4/1)? If it is later for some reason and she has 3-4 days of overstay, would this matter in the case of traveling on an approved AP when she receives it?

I know there's a ban triggered at 180 days or more but would 1 day (or possibly 3-4 days) of overstay cause any problem upon returning if we take a trip outside of the U.S. before she receives her GC?

N-400

Feb. 12, 2016 - Sent N-400 to USCIS (3-year rule)

Feb. 19, 2016 - NOA1

Mar. 14, 2016 - Biometrics

June 2, 2016 - Interview - Recommended for Approval

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I know there's a ban triggered at 180 days or more but would 1 day (or possibly 3-4 days) of overstay cause any problem upon returning if we take a trip outside of the U.S. before she receives her GC?

3 or 4 days of overstay won't be an issue for using AP. Relax :)

Edited by Harpa Timsah

AOS for my husband
8/17/10: INTERVIEW DAY (day 123) APPROVED!!

ROC:
5/23/12: Sent out package
2/06/13: APPROVED!

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Filed: Citizen (pnd) Country: Colombia
Timeline

3 or 4 days of overstay won't be an issue for using AP. Relax :)

Thanks, that's what I thought. I knew there wasn't a ban (3/10 year) but didn't know if it would cause a "Sorry, file for a new (CR-1) visa" situation.

N-400

Feb. 12, 2016 - Sent N-400 to USCIS (3-year rule)

Feb. 19, 2016 - NOA1

Mar. 14, 2016 - Biometrics

June 2, 2016 - Interview - Recommended for Approval

.

.

.

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Vietnam
Timeline

My wife's I-94 expired on 4/1. We also received the text notification that her AOS had been forwarded to National Benefits Center on 4/1 as well. We haven't seen the hard-copy NOA1 yet but I assume (this is the unknown) that the NOA1 date will be 4/1 (or maybe earlier.) If it is indeed 4/1, does this count as zero days of overstay or as 1 day (4/1)? If it is later for some reason and she has 3-4 days of overstay, would this matter in the case of traveling on an approved AP when she receives it?

I know there's a ban triggered at 180 days or more but would 1 day (or possibly 3-4 days) of overstay cause any problem upon returning if we take a trip outside of the U.S. before she receives her GC?

Status expires at the END of the day stamped on the I-94. The period of authorized stay begins the moment the AOS petition is accepted. It sounds like your petition was accepted before the I-94 expired, so there would be no overstay.

Please don't misunderstand my previous statement. At the one extreme, there are aliens in the US who are completely in lawful status, having entered with a visa and not overstayed. At the other extreme, there are aliens standing in front of an immigration judge facing deportation. In between there are a lot of shades of gray. My statement was in response to a post that implied that a K1 who married within 90 days was "legal" by virtue of the fact that they had married within the required window of time, which is not true. When their I-94 expires then they are just as "illegal" as someone who overstays any other sort of non-immigrant visa. The distinct difference, as I pointed out, is that the K1 is eligible to adjust status. It is the stated policy of DHS not to initiate removal proceedings against someone who is clearly eligible for relief, and a K1 who married within the 90 day window would fall into this category. If you happened to encounter a CBP or ICE officer then they might jack you around for a while, but once it's established that you're eligible to adjust status then they'll usually turn you loose, with an admonishment to get the AOS filed as soon as possible. Someone who overstayed any other sort of non-immigrant visa, and wasn't eligible to adjust status, would probably have a date with an immigration judge. Someone who overstayed a Visa Waiver Program entry would probably find themselves on the next plane home.

I don't know what the actual statistics are, but I would guess that a substantial portion of K1's do not submit the AOS before their I-94 expires. The overwhelming majority of those people have no problems whatsoever as a result of their overstay. The overstay is irrelevant in adjudicating their adjustment of status.

The rules for using AP are pretty straightforward. If the CBP officer doesn't find any inadmissibility when you present yourself for reentry then they'll admit you back into the US. If you didn't accumulate 180 days or more of unlawful presence then you wouldn't be inadmissible on that basis. There would be no practical difference between 1 day and 179 days of overstay. The rules change dramatically after 180 days.

12/15/2009 - K1 Visa Interview - APPROVED!

12/29/2009 - Married in Oakland, CA!

08/18/2010 - AOS Interview - APPROVED!

05/01/2013 - Removal of Conditions - APPROVED!

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There would be no practical difference between 1 day and 179 days of overstay. The rules change dramatically after 180 days.

Jim, a lot of posters here claim that CBP might use their discretion to deny someone who has a lot of overstay, but not yet an official ban (say 5.5 months of overstay). I think for the most part it's general scare tactics and paranoia, but I too would be afraid to travel with 5.5 months of overstay, but perhaps I have succumbed to the paranoia. Do you have any insight on the "discretionary denial" claim with valid AP and no official ban?

AOS for my husband
8/17/10: INTERVIEW DAY (day 123) APPROVED!!

ROC:
5/23/12: Sent out package
2/06/13: APPROVED!

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Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Australia
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No, you will not be legal because you have no authorization to be in the US. A spouse of a US citizen does not have an automatic right to be in the US. That is why people have to petition for their spouses.

Once your K1 visa expires, you will be an illegal overstay. You cannot legally stay in the US. You cannot legally work in the US.

If you got marry, then your spouse can file an I-130 and I-485 for you to adjust your status. The illegal overstay will be forgiven. While the applications are pending, you can continue to be in the US.

Yeah as Amykathleen said you are wrong on so many points here.

Divorced !st November 2012.

Married only 2 years 1 month

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Jim, a lot of posters here claim that CBP might use their discretion to deny someone who has a lot of overstay, but not yet an official ban (say 5.5 months of overstay). I think for the most part it's general scare tactics and paranoia, but I too would be afraid to travel with 5.5 months of overstay, but perhaps I have succumbed to the paranoia. Do you have any insight on the "discretionary denial" claim with valid AP and no official ban?

CBP can stop anyone, regardless of how much overstay they have, at their discretion, and deny them entry. (this isn't a ban, just a denied entry - next trip - you may breeze through)

Even if you have a valid AP, that alone does not guarantee your passage through CBP. (There are cases where people had enough overstay to trigger a ban, they received the AP, but were denied upon re-entry - due to the fact the ban does not kick in till you attempt to re-enter).

5.5 months of overstay, I would stick to playing it safe and wait till I have the greencard, imo.

My Advice is usually based on "Worst Case Scenario" and what is written in the rules/laws/instructions. That is the way I roll... -Protect your Status - file before your I-94 expires.

WARNING: Phrases in this post may sound meaner than they were intended to be. Read the Adjudicator's Field Manual from USCIS

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Philippines
Timeline

thank you so much guys for all your replies..

we're married within 90 as the K-1 requires..

my i-94 will expire on the 16th of this month

and my visa will expire next month.. we're not

ready yet to apply for AOS because of some

circumtances...

have a nice day to all & GOd bless

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