The Department of Homeland Security may soon finalize adjustments to USCIS filing fees that impact intercountry adoptees. The biggest impact will be for intercountry adoptees who 1) are US citizens but need a Certificate of Citizenship as proof of citizenship or 2) are not legal permanent residents (i.e., do not have a green card) and must adjust status through a spouse or immediate relative.
For intercountry adoptees without a green card (meaning they entered the country on a nonimmigrant visa, such as a tourist visa or on humanitarian parole), fees to obtain a green card through a US citizen spouse will nearly double, from $1,760.00 to $3,500.
Filing fees for naturalization applications will stay roughly the same, going from the current fee of $725 to $760 (which includes biometrics).
Proposed Fee Adjustments
Fee adjustments that DHS appears likely to publish as a final rule within the next months. Typically, the fees go into effect within sixty days after publication.
Form | Current | New | +/- $ | +/- % |
---|---|---|---|---|
N-400: Application for Naturalization (with biometrics)* | $725.00 | $760.00 | +$35.00 | +5% |
N-600: Application for Certificate of Citizenship* | $1,170.00 | $1,385.00 | +$215.00 | +18% |
N-565: Application for Replacement Naturalization/Citizenship Document* | $555.00 | $555.00 | $0.00 | 0% |
I-90: Application to Replace Permanent Resident Card (with biometrics)* | $540.00 | $455.00 | -$85.00 | -16% |
Full Adjustment of Status Package ("One Step" AOS)* | $1,760.00 | $3,500.00 | $1,740.00 | +99% |
*the proposed fee schedule eliminates the current practice of requiring separate fees for biometrics, instead folding them into the total filing fee. Adjustment of status applications are for the “one-step” process, which includes the filing of a number of forms at roughly the same time.
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