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K-1 Fiancé(e) Visa Guide 2026: Steps, Fees, Timeline & Green Card After Marriage

💑 Family VisaUpdated for 2026Last verified: March 2026

The K-1 Fiancé(e) Visa lets a U.S. citizen bring a foreign fiancé(e) to the United States to marry. After entry, the couple must marry within 90 days. Once married, the foreign spouse typically applies for Adjustment of Status (AOS) to become a lawful permanent resident.

Who Can Petition

Only a U.S. citizen can file a fiancé(e) petition — not a lawful permanent resident. The petitioner and beneficiary must have met in person at least once within the last 2 years.

K-1 Visa Process (Step-by-Step)

StepActionWho Files
1File Form I-129F with USCISU.S. citizen petitioner
2USCIS review (and possible RFE)USCIS adjudicates
3Case moves to National Visa Center (NVC)Automatic transfer
4Complete DS-160 + prepare documentsForeign fiancé(e)
5Medical exam + visa interview at U.S. consulateForeign fiancé(e)
6Enter the U.S. — must marry within 90 daysBoth partners
7File Adjustment of Status (I-485) after marriageForeign spouse

K-1 Visa Fees and Total Cost (2026)

FeeAmount (2026)
USCIS Filing Fee (I-129F)~$675
State Department K Visa Application Fee$265
Medical Exam~$200–$500 (varies by country)
Adjustment of Status (I-485) after marriage$1,440 (most adult applicants)

What Happens After Marriage: K-1 to Green Card

Common Mistakes That Cause Delays or Denials

Key Takeaway

K-1 is a two-stage process: entry + marriage within 90 days, then green card via AOS. The 90-day rule is strict — failure to marry requires the fiancé(e) to depart. Document the relationship thoroughly and plan the full cost including the AOS stage.

FAQs

Can a green card holder sponsor a fiancé(e) with K-1?

No. The petitioner must be a U.S. citizen.

What if we don't marry within 90 days?

The fiancé(e) generally must leave the U.S. and may face serious immigration consequences for staying beyond the 90-day period.

Can children come on a K-1 case?

Children may qualify for K-2 status (unmarried, under 21) in many situations.

⚠️ Not Legal Advice. General information only. For case-specific guidance, consult a licensed U.S. immigration attorney.

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