Punancy & Cosentino

K-3 and K-4 Visa

Nonimmigrant

K-3 and K-4 Nonimmigrant Visas

The K-3 visa and K-4 permits a spouse living outside the U.S. to enter the U.S. legally, with minor children, while awaiting for the I-130 application, a family petition, to be approved. It is a fair way of keeping the family together while USCIS processes the I-140 application. The spouse may also work during the wait in the United States.

Who can apply?

To be eligible for a K-3 nonimmigrant visa, an individual must:

  • Be married to a U.S. citizen
  • Have a pending Form I-130, Petition for Alien Relative, filed by the U.S. citizen spouse on his or her behalf

A child may be eligible for a K-4 visa if:

  • He or she is unmarried, under 21, and the child of a qualified K-3 nonimmigrant visa applicant

Note: In order for a K-4 who is a step-child of a USC to immigrate as a relative of the USC step-parent (whether through adjustment of status in the United States or an immigrant visa abroad) the marriage between his or her parent and the USC must have occurred before his or her 18th birthday.

How to apply for the K-4 and K-3

Before applying for a K-3 nonimmigrant visa, please read and understand the limitations of the K-3/K-4 nonimmigrant visa described below.

To obtain a K-3 nonimmigrant visa for your spouse, you (the U.S. citizen petitioner) must file two petitions with USCIS on his or her behalf.

How to File:

Form I-130: First, file a Form I-130 on behalf of your non-citizen spouse with the Chicago Lockbox. You will then receive a Form I-797, Notice of Action, indicating that USCIS has received the Form I-130. Note: Form I-130 does not need to be filed on behalf of the child of a K-3 beneficiary in order to obtain a K-4 visa. Form I-130 does, however, need to be filed on behalf of the child of a K-3 beneficiary in order for the child to be eligible for permanent resident status.

Form I-129F, Petition for Alien Fiancé(e): Next, file Form I-129F on behalf of your non-citizen spouse with the Dallas Lockbox after filing Form I-130. Include a copy of the I-797, Notice of Action, indicating that USCIS has received your Form I-130, on behalf of your non-citizen spouse. There is no fee when filing a Form I-129F for a non-citizen spouse (K-3). If your non-citizen spouse has any minor children seeking K-4 nonimmigrant visas, they should be listed on the I-129F filed on your spouse’s behalf.

If approved, USCIS will forward the I-129F to the U.S. Department of State for consular processing.

Then the non-citizen spouse and any minor children will then need to apply to the U.S. Department of State for the K-3 or K-4 nonimmigrant visa.

What the the benefits of the K-3/K-4 visa

Once admitted to the United States, K-3 nonimmigrants may apply to adjust status to a permanent resident at any time. Upon admission to the United States, K-4 nonimmigrants may file an application for adjustment of status concurrently with or at any time after a Form I-130 has been filed on his or her behalf by the U.S. citizen petitioner.

Upon admission, K-3 and K-4 nonimmigrant visa holders may obtain employment authorization. They can obtain evidence of eligibility to work legally in the United States by filing Form I-765, Application for Employment Authorization.

Upon filing an application for adjustment of status, K-3 and K-4 nonimmigrant visa holders may also apply for employment authorization based on that pending application even if the K-3 or K-4 nonimmigrant visa status expires.

K-3 Visa Requirements

When the K-3’s I-130 reaches the Department of State, an immigrant visa is immediately available to him or her such that the he or she and his or her children are no longer eligible for K-3/K-4 nonimmigrant status, but rather must immigrate as lawful permanent residents.

If the K-4 visa does not have an approved I-130 at the Department of State at that time, he or she will be ineligible to immigrate with the spouse of the USC.

Therefore, while there is no requirement that a separate Form I-130, Petition for Alien Relative be filed on the child’s behalf for the purposes of obtaining a K-4 visa, it is advisable that the USC petitioner file a separate I-130 on the child’s behalf concurrently with the I-130 that he files for the spouse.

The Department of Homeland Security only admits K-3 or K-4 nonimmigrant visas holders for a 2-year period. K-3 or K-4 nonimmigrant visa holders may apply to USCIS for an extension of status in 2-year increments as long as the marriage-based I-130 visa petition or a corresponding application for adjustment of status or visa application is still pending adjudication.

When does the K-3 expire?

A K-3 visa holder’s authorized stay automatically expires 30 days after any of the following events:

  • USCIS denies or revokes the Form I-130 visa petition
  • USCIS denies a Form I-485 filed by the K-3 nonimmigrant or Department of State denies the immigrant visa application filed by the K-3 nonimmigrant
  • Termination of the marriage through divorce or annulment

If Your Child Turns 21 Before Obtaining Immigrant Status

Holders of K-4 nonimmigrant visas will be admitted to the United States for 2 years or until the day before their 21st birthday, whichever is shorter.

The K-4 nonimmigrant ‘s status will expire when he or she turns 21. If the USC petitioner filed a Form I-130 on a K-4 nonimmigrant’s behalf before the K-4 turned 21, he or she may continue to be eligible for adjustment of status under the Child Status Protection Act.

Advance Parole for K-3 or K-4 Family Members

Applicants presently in the United States in a K-3 or K-4 nonimmigrant classification may travel outside the United States and return using their K-3 or K-4 nonimmigrant visa. The only time advance parole is necessary is if the K-3 or K-4 nonimmigrant visa has expired and the applicant has an adjustment of status application that remains pending.

Affidavit of Support

Form I-134, Affidavit of Support, can be used to show that you will not become a public charge. When the K-3 or K-4 nonimmigrant visa applies for adjustment of status, they will adjust status as an immediate relative, and at that time will need to file Form I-864.

K-3 or K-4 Status After Approval of an Application for Adjustment of Status

If adjustment of status is approved, the K3/K4 nonimmigrant will become a lawful permanent resident of the United States. If, at the time of approval, your marriage is less than 2 years old, the K-3 or K-4’s permanent resident status is issued on a conditional basis. You and your spouse will then be required to file a Form I-751, Petition to Remove Conditions of Residence within the 90 day period prior to the expiration date on the green card.