In some visa applications such as tourist visas (B-2 Visa) the visa applicantâ??s intent must be such that they intend on returning home and do not intend on staying in the US. When an applicant tries to adjust status from a B2 visa (tourist visa) to a F1 Visa (Student visa), the USCIS will look very closely at the applicantâ??s intent at the time of filing for a tourist visa application. If the USCIS concludes that the B visa holder intended to gain admission to the US as a student, the change of status to F-1 student status will be rejected and a visa fraud will be presumed. More specifically, if a request to change from B-2 to F-1 occurs within 60 days of entry into the US, USCIS will likely interpret the change of status as preconceived intent.
Another common preconceived intent is adjusting status from F-1 Student Visa status to permanent residence or green card status immediately upon entry into the US on a student visa. In contrast, a work visa such as a h1b visa has â??dual intentâ?? allowing a h1b holder to adjust status to lawful permanent resident status. Common ways to obtain a green card from an h1b are through an employment based green card or marrying a US citizen and adjusting status as an immediate relative. Once you are a lawful permanent resident after waiting the requisite amount of time and complying with other necessary requirements you will eventually be able to naturalize to a US citizen.
The main point is that there is much interplay between non immigrant (temporary visas) and immigrant visas (permanent residence â?? green cards). Through proper planning and application, your immigration goals can be achieved, sometimes all at once, and sometimes one step at a time. But how you execute the plan is as important as the plan.
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