Reunite Your Family in the United States

Family separation is one of the most painful experiences any person can endure.

At L.I.H. Law, we understand that bringing your loved ones to the United States isn't just a legal process—it's about reuniting families, keeping children with their parents, allowing spouses to build their lives together, and honoring the bonds that connect us across borders.

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Family-based immigration allows U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents (green card holders) to sponsor certain family members for permanent residence in the United States.

This process begins with filing Form I-130 (Petition for Alien Relative) with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), establishing your qualifying relationship with your relative. Once approved, your family member can apply for an immigrant visa and eventually receive a green card, allowing them to live and work permanently in the United States.

Attorney Lesley Irizarry-Hougan has devoted over 20 years exclusively to immigration law in Seattle, helping hundreds of families navigate the complex petition process to reunite with their loved ones. Her entirely bilingual, Spanish-speaking staff ensures language is never a barrier—whether you're sponsoring your spouse, children, parents, or siblings, we communicate in the language you're most comfortable with throughout the entire process.

L.I.H. Law specializes in complex family immigration cases that other Seattle attorneys may turn away. We help families separated by years of waiting, couples navigating marriage-based petitions with complicated immigration histories, parents sponsoring adult children with previous visa denials, siblings facing decades-long backlogs, and mixed-status families trying to keep everyone together. We don't just complete forms—we develop comprehensive strategies to overcome obstacles, prepare you thoroughly for interviews, and advocate passionately for your family's right to be together.

Family Immigration Services We Provide

We guide Seattle-area families through every aspect of family-based immigration, including:

Immediate Relative Petitions (No Waiting List)

U.S. citizens sponsoring spouses, unmarried children under 21, or parents (petitioner must be 21+)

Marriage-Based Green Cards (I-130 & I-485)

Including same-sex couples, LGBTQ+ families, international marriages, and second marriages

Family Preference Petitions (Subject to Visa Backlogs)

F1, F2A, F2B, F3, and F4 categories for unmarried adult children, married children, and siblings of legal permanent residents

Consular Processing

For family members abroad who will obtain immigrant visas through U.S. embassies or consulates

National Visa Center (NVC) Processing

Navigating document submission, fee payments, and interview scheduling after I-130 approval

Affidavit of Support (Form I-864)

Proving financial ability to sponsor your relative at 125% of federal poverty guidelines

Joint Sponsors and Co-Sponsors

When the primary petitioner doesn't meet income requirements alone

Removal of Conditions (I-751)

For spouses who received conditional 2-year green cards through recent marriages

Priority Date Tracking and Visa Bulletin Monitoring

Keeping you informed when your family member's visa number becomes current

Complex Cases with Prior Immigration Violations

Addressing unlawful presence, visa overstays, previous deportations, or entry without inspection

Waivers of Inadmissibility (I-601/I-601A/I-212)

Overcoming bars to green cards due to unlawful presence, fraud, or criminal history

Family Unity and Keep Families Together Cases

Strategies to prevent family separation during immigration proceedings

Derivative Beneficiaries

Including children of principal beneficiaries in family petitions

Stepchild and Stepparent Petitions

Establishing qualifying stepfamily relationships formed before child turned 18

Adopted Children Petitions

Immigration for internationally or domestically adopted children

Follow-to-Join Refugee/Asylee Relatives

Bringing family members of refugees and asylees to the United States (Form I-730)

Our Family Immigration Process

Initial Consultation - Comprehensive Family Assessment

We conduct a detailed review of your entire family situation, including your immigration status (U.S. citizen or green card holder), the relationship you have with the family member you want to sponsor (spouse, child, parent, sibling), your relative's current location and immigration status, any previous immigration violations by either party, and your financial ability to sponsor.

We determine which category your petition falls into (immediate relative with no waiting list, or family preference with potentially years-long waits), calculate estimated processing times based on current visa bulletins, identify any potential issues that could delay or complicate the petition, and provide honest guidance about the timeline and requirements. If you're not quite ready to file, we create a strategy showing exactly what steps to take first.


Document Collection and Relationship Evidence

Family-based petitions require extensive documentation proving your relationship is genuine. We provide you with a customized checklist based on your specific family relationship.

For all petitions: Your proof of U.S. citizenship or permanent residence, birth certificates establishing family relationships, marriage certificates (for spouses), divorce decrees from prior marriages, name change documents if applicable.

For marriage-based petitions specifically: Marriage certificate from your wedding, proof of your relationship (even if you do not live together), proof you live together (joint lease or mortgage, joint bank accounts, joint utility bills, joint insurance policies), photos together throughout the relationship spanning different time periods, affidavits from friends and family who know you as a couple, travel records showing trips taken together, correspondence between you (emails, texts, letters).

Our bilingual team guides you through obtaining missing documents from government agencies abroad, translate foreign-language documents with certified translations, and organize everything systematically for filing.


Form I-130 Petition Preparation and Filing

We meticulously prepare your Form I-130 (Petition for Alien Relative), ensuring every answer is accurate and consistent with supporting documents. This form requires detailed biographical information about both you (the petitioner) and your relative (the beneficiary), complete immigration histories, current addresses and employment, information about children and previous marriages, and careful attention to dates and spellings.

For complex cases, we prepare detailed cover letters explaining circumstances to USCIS officers proactively. We file your I-130 with USCIS, provide you with complete copies of everything submitted, and ensure you have your receipt number for tracking.

Concurrent filing option (one-step adjustment): If your relative is an immediate relative of a U.S. citizen AND they're already in the United States in valid status, we can file Form I-485 (Adjustment of Status) at the same time as the I-130, significantly speeding up the process.


USCIS Processing and Priority Date Assignment

Timing: 6-50 months for I-130 approval, depending on category

After filing, you'll receive a receipt notice from USCIS confirming they've accepted your petition. USCIS assigns a "priority date" (the date they received your petition), which becomes crucial for family preference categories with visa backlogs.

During processing, USCIS may issue Requests for Evidence (RFE) asking for additional documentation or clarification. We respond to RFEs strategically and thoroughly. For marriage-based petitions, USCIS may schedule an interview to verify the authenticity of your relationship.

For immediate relatives: Once your I-130 is approved, your relative can immediately proceed with the next steps because no visa waiting period applies.

For family preference categories: After I-130 approval, your relative's name goes on a waiting list. Processing times vary dramatically (these are all approximate):

  • F1 (unmarried adult children of U.S. citizens): 7-8 years currently

  • F2A (spouses and children of green card holders): 2-3 years

  • F2B (unmarried adult children of green card holders): 7-10 years

  • F3 (married children of U.S. citizens): 10-15 years

  • F4 (siblings of U.S. citizens): 15-20+ years

Times are longer for countries with high demand (Mexico, Philippines, China, India). We monitor the monthly Visa Bulletin and inform you on how to check when your relative can move on to the next step.


National Visa Center (NVC) Processing (For Relatives Abroad)

Timing: 2-4 months after I-130 approval

If your relative will obtain their immigrant visa through a U.S. embassy or consulate abroad (consular processing), USCIS forwards your approved I-130 to the National Visa Center.

At NVC, your relative must:

  • Pay immigrant visa processing fees ($325) and Affidavit of Support fee ($120)

  • Submit Form DS-260 (Immigrant Visa Application) online

  • Upload civil documents (birth certificates, police certificates, marriage certificates, etc.)

  • Submit financial documents for Form I-864 review

We guide you through NVC's document portal system, ensure all uploads meet technical requirements, prepare Form I-864 (Affidavit of Support) proving your financial ability to sponsor, and respond to any NVC requests for additional evidence.

Once NVC determines your case is "documentarily qualified," they schedule your relative's immigrant visa interview at the U.S. embassy or consulate in their home country.


Adjustment of Status (Form I-485) (For Relatives in the U.S.)

Timing: 8-36 months after filing, depending on field office workload

If your relative is already in the United States AND an immigrant visa is immediately available (immediate relatives of U.S. citizens, or family preference categories whose priority dates are current), they can apply to adjust status to permanent resident without leaving the country.

The I-485 application packet includes:

  • Form I-485 (Application to Register Permanent Residence)

  • Form I-864 (Affidavit of Support)

  • Medical examination (Form I-693) from USCIS-approved civil surgeon

  • Work authorization and travel document applications (optional but recommended)

  • Supporting documents (biographical documents, photos, birth certificates, passport copies)

Your relative will attend a biometrics appointment (fingerprinting) after filing. USCIS will schedule an adjustment of status interview at your local field office (Seattle Field Office for King County residents). We thoroughly prepare your relative for this interview, reviewing all application materials and practicing likely questions.

Important: Adjustment of status is only possible if your relative entered the U.S. legally (with inspection). Relatives who entered without inspection generally cannot adjust status in the U.S., even as immediate relatives, unless they qualify for specific exceptions like 245(i) or certain waivers.


Immigrant Visa Interview (For Relatives Abroad)

Timing: Scheduled by NVC after case is documentarily qualified

Your relative will attend an interview at the U.S. embassy or consulate in their home country. The consular officer will verify all information in the application, review relationship evidence (especially important for marriage-based cases), confirm financial support through Form I-864, check for any grounds of inadmissibility, and make a final decision on the immigrant visa.

We provide comprehensive interview preparation, including practice questions, explanations of what documents to bring, guidance on how to answer questions about your relationship, and strategies for addressing any potential issues. For particularly complex cases or cases involving waivers, Attorney Lesley can provide detailed written briefs to support your relative's visa application.

If approved, your relative receives their immigrant visa in their passport. They must enter the United States within 6 months of visa issuance. Upon entry, they become lawful permanent residents and their physical green cards are mailed to the U.S. address within 2-3 weeks.


Green Card Approval and Conditional Residence (If Applicable)

Once your relative successfully adjusts status or enters the U.S. with an immigrant visa, they become a lawful permanent resident (green card holder).

For most family members: They receive a 10-year green card with no conditions.

For spouses married less than 2 years at the time of green card approval: They receive a conditional 2-year green card. Before the 2-year anniversary, you must file Form I-751 (Petition to Remove Conditions on Residence) jointly with your spouse to prove your marriage is still valid. We handle I-751 petitions, including waiver requests if you've divorced or experienced domestic violence.

Important next steps: Your relative can immediately work in the U.S. without restriction, travel freely in and out of the U.S. (with green card), apply for a Social Security number if they don't have one, and begin counting time toward citizenship eligibility (5 years for most green card holders, or 3 years for spouses of U.S. citizens).


After your family member receives their green card, we can help with additional family members you want to sponsor, citizenship applications once your relative is eligible to naturalize, traveling safely as a permanent resident (obtaining re-entry permits for extended trips), updating addresses and information with USCIS, and understanding green card renewal procedures.

New sponsorship opportunities: Once your family member naturalizes and becomes a U.S. citizen, they can sponsor additional relatives (their own spouse, children, parents, siblings). This creates new pathways for extended family reunification that weren't available when they were just green card holders.

Follow-Up Support and Future Family Petitions

Why Choose L.I.H. Law for Family Immigration

Our Specialty

Experience With Complex Immigration Journeys: Family-Based, Family Reunification, VAWA, Waivers

20+ Years Exclusively Practicing Immigration Law

Fully Bilingual Service—Se Habla Español

Daughter of a Veteran with Deep Community Roots

Active Community Involvement

Transparent, Reasonable Fees

Local Knowledge

Transparent Process

Client Service

Proven Results

Frequently Asked Questions

Have more questions? View our FAQs page →

What Our Clients Say

View all our testimonials

★★★★★
“Attorney Lesley and her team did a great job helping me and my son get my green card and then with my citizenship. I am very happy, and I give them a high recommendation."

— Freddy Barraza, Google Review

★★★★★
"Very good service, thank you very much, I got my green card."

— Jorge Irias, Google Review (translated from Spanish)

★★★★★
"Very happy because Lesly took care of everything and made the whole process feel no stress and very smooth! Thank you again, Lesley!!"

— Diana Navarrete, Google Review (Family Immigration)

★★★★★
"We had a difficult immigration problem that involved my son-in-law. We talked with several lawyers but got no satisfactory answers. This case involved a 10 year bar, and several trips to interviews. It took a long time but Lesley was with us all the way through. The firm's fees were very fair and did not change or escalate. If you are looking for a lawyer who will listen to you, tell you the truth, and be there for you with whatever comes, give L.I.H Law a call."

— Verified Avvo Client (Family Immigration Success)

★★★★★
"I am immensely grateful to Lesley Irizarry Hougan for her exceptional legal assistance in obtaining my green card. I had a very complex case that most lawyers would not even touch. I probably consulted with a dozen of them but I kept getting the same response, 'sorry I cannot help you with this'. However, with attorney Lesley, from our first consultation, she demonstrated thorough knowledge, professionalism, and a genuine dedication to my case. Thanks to Lesley's expertise and support, my application was approved without any issues."

— Ahmed Gaoh, Google Review (Complex Family Case)