U.S. citizens who intend to marry a foreign national face a choice between two main pathways: the K 1 fiance visa (filing first, marrying in the U.S.) or the CR 1 immigrant spousal visa (marrying abroad first, then filing for the green card). Each has distinct timelines, costs, and practical considerations.
K 1 pathway: File I 129F, wait 6 to 12 months for USCIS approval, wait additional months for NVC processing and consular interview, fiance enters on K 1 and marries within 90 days, then files I 485 for
adjustment of status. Total time from I 129F filing to adjustment approval: 18 to 36 months in most cases. The K 1 beneficiary may receive an EAD and advance parole while the I 485 is pending, allowing work and limited travel during the adjustment period.
CR 1 pathway: Marry abroad, file I 130, wait for NVC processing and consular interview, spouse enters the U.S. directly as a permanent resident. Total time from I 130 filing to entry as a permanent resident: 12 to 24 months in most cases. The CR 1 visa holder enters as an immediate permanent resident (or conditional permanent resident if married less than two years at time of entry) and does not need to file I 485.
Historically, the K 1 pathway was faster because I 129F processing was faster than I 130 processing. In recent years,
USCIS processing times have converged, and the CR 1 pathway is now often faster for immediate relatives of U.S. citizens. The main practical advantage of K 1 is that the couple marries in the U.S., which some couples prefer. The CR 1 advantage is that the spouse enters already with permanent resident status and does not need to go through the additional I 485 step.
Costs also differ. K 1 requires both the I 129F filing fee ($675 as of April 2024) and later the I 485 filing fee ($1,440 for most applicants), totaling over $2,100 in government fees before attorney costs. CR 1 requires only the I 130 filing fee ($675) and the immigrant visa processing fee ($325). However, medical examinations, translation costs, and attorney fees for both pathways are roughly comparable.