Two Paths to Your Green Card—We'll Help You Choose the Right One

Whether you’re in the United States or abroad, we guide you through the complete green card process with clarity, compassion, and expertise.

Rated 4.9/5 Stars

by hundreds of families

100%

All-female, immigrant-founded team

Your Green Card Journey Starts Here

Getting your green card is one of the most important steps in your immigration journey. At the Law Office of Carrie Nguyen, we’ve helped hundreds of families navigate both paths to permanent residence: staying in the United States (Adjustment of Status) or processing through a U.S. consulate abroad (Consular Processing).

As immigrants ourselves, we understand this journey. We’ll evaluate your unique situation and recommend the strategy that keeps your family together, protects your rights, and gives you the best chance of success.

You are not alone. We guide, protect, and empower you through every step.

Two Paths, One Goal:
Permanent Residence in the United States

The right path depends on where you are now, how you entered the U.S., and your immigration history.

Which Path Is Right for You?

Path 1: Green Card Without Leaving the Country

Adjustment of Status (AOS)

Apply for your green card from within the United States. Complete your entire process—including your interview—without leaving home.

Key Benefits: Stay with your family throughout the process. No international travel required. Work authorization available while you wait. Travel permit available. No consulate interview abroad.

Best For:

Timeline: 12-24 months from filing to approval

Path 2: Green Card Through U.S. Consulate Abroad

Consular Processing (CP)

Complete your green card process through a U.S. consulate or embassy in your home country. Your interview takes place abroad, and you receive your immigrant visa before entering the U.S.

Key Benefits: Required if you’re living outside the U.S.. May be faster in some cases. Avoids certain inadmissibility issues. Better option for some immigration violations. Clean entry with immigrant visa.

Best For:

Timeline:  6-18 months (varies by country and consulate)

Not Sure Which Path Is Right for You?

Your eligibility depends on multiple factors: how you entered the U.S., your current status, immigration history, and family situation. Making the wrong choice can result in years of delays, separation from family, or permanent bars from the United States.

We’ll help you choose the right path. Schedule a consultation, and we’ll evaluate your complete case.

Path 1: Green Card Without Leaving the United States

Adjustment of Status (AOS) — Stay Home, Stay Together

Who Qualifies for Adjustment of Status?

Adjustment of Status allows you to apply for permanent residence from within the United States. To qualify, you must meet several requirements:

Entry Requirements

Lawful Entry Required

Petition Requirements

Approved Petition Needed

Status Requirements

Admissibility Matters

Two people stand indoors in front of a light-colored wall and abstract painting; one holds a document while both face the camera, smiling.

Immediate Relatives — The Best Option

Immediate relatives have the most flexibility and strongest protections:

Who Qualifies: 

Special Advantages:

This is usually the best path if you qualify as an immediate relative.

Family Preference — Priority Date Must Be Current

Family preference categories have annual limits, so you may wait for a visa number to become available.

Categories:

Requirements:

We monitor the Visa Bulletin and notify you when your priority date is current.

Special Categories

Asylees & Refugees:

VAWA Self-Petitioners:

Special Immigrant Juveniles:

Diversity Visa Lottery Winners:

Cuban Adjustment Act:

U & T Visa Holders:

When You CANNOT Adjust Status in the United States

You likely need consular processing instead if you:

Exception: Immediate relatives of U.S. citizens may still adjust their status despite certain immigration violations.


Let our experienced immigration attorneys review your case to determine if a waiver or alternative path may apply. 

The Adjustment of Status Process — Step by Step

Phase 1: Consultation & Preparation (Weeks 1-4)

Phase 2: Filing (Week 4-6)

Phase 3: Biometrics & Initial Processing (Months 2-8)

Phase 4: Interview Preparation (Months 8-18)

Phase 5: Interview (Months 12-24)

Common Interview Questions:

Phase 6: Approval & Green Card Receipt (2-4 weeks after interview)

Common Interview Questions:

Processing Time Summary Box: Total Timeline: 12-24 months from filing to green card in hand. Varies by USCIS field office and case complexity

Our Accountability Promise: We ensure your case shows progress every 30/60/90 days or we’ll reevaluate our engagement.

Three people stand indoors, smiling. The man in the center holds a paper and cash; the two women beside him hold folders. They are dressed in business-casual attire.

What's Included in Our Adjustment of Status Service?

Legal Services:

Communication & Support:

Preparation & Guidance:

Peace of Mind:

Path 2: Green Card Through U.S. Consulate Abroad

Consular Processing (CP) — Immigrant Visa Interview Abroad

What Is Consular Processing?

Consular Processing is the path to a green card for immigrants who are outside the United States OR for those inside the U.S. who cannot adjust status. Your immigrant visa interview takes place at a U.S. consulate or embassy in your home country, and you receive your immigrant visa abroad before entering the United States as a permanent resident.

When Consular Processing Is Your Best (or Only) Option:

Currently Outside the U.S.

Entered Without Inspection

Status Violations or Bars

Three women stand indoors, smiling at the camera; the woman in the center holds an envelope while the other two stand on either side of her.

Understand the Risks Before Leaving the U.S.

If you’re currently in the United States and considering consular processing, you MUST understand these risks:

3-Year Bar: If you’ve been unlawfully present in the U.S. for 180-364 days and then leave, you’re barred from returning for 3 years.

10-Year Bar: If you’ve been unlawfully present for 365+ days and then leave, you’re barred from returning for 10 years.

These bars are triggered when you LEAVE the U.S. — not while you’re here.

You may need a waiver (Form I-601A or I-601) to overcome these bars. We help you determine if you qualify for a waiver BEFORE you leave.

Never leave the U.S. for consular processing without consulting an attorney first.

Two people stand indoors; the person on the left is holding a bouquet of flowers and smiling, while the person on the right stands beside them, both facing the camera.

Who Qualifies for Consular Processing?

Consular Processing is available to most immigrant categories, but requires:

General Requirements:  Approved immigrant petition (I-130, I-140, or Fiancé). Immigrant visa number available (priority date current). Admissible to the U.S. (or qualify for waiver). Not barred from receiving a visa.

Eligible Categories (Same as AOS):

The Consular Processing Journey — Step by Step

Phase 1: Petition Approval (Before You Begin)

Before consular processing begins, your U.S. citizen/permanent resident relative or employer must file and receive approval for:

Phase 2: National Visa Center (NVC) Processing (2-4 months)

Once USCIS approves your petition and a visa number is available:

We handle all NVC submissions and follow-ups on your behalf.

Phase 3: Interview Scheduling (1-3 months)

We provide comprehensive interview preparation and document checklists.

Phase 4: Consular Interview (The Big Day)

Interview typically lasts 10-30 minutes.

Note: We cannot attend consular interviews abroad, but we prepare you thoroughly and can provide consular representation strategies.

Phase 5: Visa Issuance & Travel (1-2 weeks after approval)

Phase 6: Welcome to the United States

Total Timeline: 6-18 months (varies significantly by country and consulate)

Common Consular Processing Challenges

Administrative Processing Some cases are placed into “administrative processing” for additional security checks. This can add weeks or months to your timeline. Certain countries and certain fields (STEM, military, government) face more scrutiny.

Visa Denials Consulates can deny visas for:

If denied, you may be stuck abroad without a way to return to the U.S.

Document Challenges Some countries have difficulty obtaining required civil documents (birth certificates, police clearances, etc.). We help you navigate these challenges.

Waivers If you’re inadmissible, you’ll need to apply for a waiver:

Three people stand indoors, smiling. The man in the center holds a paper and cash; the two women beside him hold folders. They are dressed in business-casual attire.

What's Included in Our Consular Processing Service?

Petition & NVC Phase:

Interview Preparation:

Waiver Assistance:

Support & Communication:

What Our Clients Say

Join hundreds of families who’ve achieved their American dream with our guidance

⭐ 4.9/5 Stars Based on 290+ Google Reviews

Your Green Card Journey Starts with One Conversation

We’ll evaluate your case, explain your options, and guide you toward permanent residence.

Three-Step Process:

Step 1:

Book your consultation—available by phone, video, or in-person

Step 2:

We review your case and recommend Adjustment of Status OR Consular Processing

Step 3:

Start your green card application with confidence and expert guidance

Frequently Asked Questions

Which process is faster—Adjustment of Status or Consular Processing?

It depends. Consular Processing CAN be faster (6-18 months) in some countries with efficient consulates. However, Adjustment of Status (12-24 months) allows you to work and stay with family during processing. Speed isn’t everything—staying together and avoiding risks matters more.

Generally no. Once you file Form I-485 for Adjustment of Status, you’ve committed to that path. Switching to Consular Processing requires withdrawing your I-485. Similarly, starting Consular Processing means you’ll interview abroad. Choose carefully from the start—we’ll help you make the right choice.

You MUST have Advance Parole (Form I-131) approved before leaving the U.S. We file for this along with your I-485. Traveling without Advance Parole will abandon your application. We include this application in our service and guide you on safe travel timing.

If you accumulate unlawful presence in the U.S. (overstaying your visa) and then LEAVE the United States:

  • 180-364 days = 3-year bar from returning
  • 365+ days = 10-year bar from returning


These bars are triggered when you depart. That’s why leaving for consular processing can be extremely risky. We help you assess this risk.

The I-601A provisional waiver allows certain immediate relatives to apply for a waiver of the unlawful presence bars BEFORE leaving the U.S. for consular processing. If approved, you can attend your consular interview knowing you’ve already been provisionally cleared to return. We handle I-601A waivers.

Government fees:

  • Adjustment of Status: $1,500-$2,500 (includes I-485, EAD, Advance Parole)
  • Consular Processing: $325-$1,200+ (visa fees vary by category)


Our legal fees vary based on case complexity. We provide transparent pricing during consultation.

Attorneys generally cannot accompany you into consular interviews abroad. However, we provide extremely thorough preparation, practice sessions, document review, and can be on standby during your interview for consultation if issues arise.

If denied, you may be placed in removal proceedings. However, you can often reapply, appeal, or pursue other options. We fight to prevent denials with thorough preparation and strong applications.

You’ll remain in your home country without a visa. Depending on the reason for denial, you may be able to overcome the issue with additional evidence or a waiver. Consular denials are why we emphasize thorough preparation.

Yes, both require medical exams:

  • Adjustment of Status: U.S. civil surgeon
  • Consular Processing: Panel physician in your country


We provide lists and guidance for both.

  • Adjustment of Status: Card arrives by mail 2-4 weeks after approval
  • Consular Processing: You receive an immigrant visa stamp at the consulate. Upon entry to the U.S., you’re a permanent resident. Physical card arrives within 90 days.

Yes! With Adjustment of Status, you can work as soon as your EAD is approved (before green card). With Consular Processing, you can work upon entry to the U.S. with your immigrant visa.

Select Your Language