A Family Petition Attorney Can Help You Reunite With Your Family
Find Experienced Family Petition Attorneys In Austin, Texas

AUSTIN, TX · IMMIGRATION LAW

Family Petition Lawyer In Austin

You miss your family. That fear of getting it wrong, of one mistake keeping you separated even longer, is real, and you are not alone in it. We’ll walk the path with you.

Kate Lincoln-Goldfinch Austin, TX Green Card Attorney
Kate Lincoln-Goldfinch Austin, TX Green Card Attorney

In The Media

TL;DR Key Takeaways

  • A family petition lawyer in Austin helps U.S. citizens and permanent residents sponsor a spouse, child, parent, or sibling through Form I-130.
  • The I-130 filing fee in 2026 is $625 online or $675 by paper, and processing averages about 11 months.
  • Immediate relatives of citizens have no annual visa cap; other relatives wait for a visa number.
  • After approval, your relative finishes through adjustment of status inside the U.S. or consular processing abroad.
  • A lawyer is optional but reduces the document errors and Requests for Evidence that cause most delays.

You miss your family. Maybe a spouse is waiting in another country, or a parent is aging far from you, and every month apart feels heavier than the last. That fear of getting it wrong, of one mistake keeping you separated even longer, is real, and you are not alone in it.

Here is the reassuring part. Reuniting with family is one of the clearest, most established paths in U.S. immigration law, and thousands of families walk it successfully every year. The process has rules, and the rules can be learned. We’ll guide you through what to expect, what it costs, and how to move forward with confidence. Today, you can start by understanding which relatives you’re allowed to petition for, and that’s exactly where we’ll begin.

Elegibility

Can You File A Family Petition?

The first question is simple: are you allowed to sponsor your relative? Family-based immigration lets U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents bring certain family members to live here permanently. Whether you qualify, and how long you’ll wait, depends on two things: your status, and your relationship to the person you want to bring.

U.S. citizens can petition for the widest circle of relatives. Permanent residents (green card holders) can petition for a smaller group. Here’s who fits where.

You may be eligible if you are a U.S. citizen petitioning for your:

  • Spouse

  • Unmarried child under 21
  • Parent (if you are at least 21)
  • Son or daughter over 21, married or unmarried
  • Brother or sister (if you are at least 21)

You may be eligible if you are a permanent resident petitioning for your:

  • Spouse
  • Unmarried child of any age

One distinction shapes your entire timeline. Spouses, unmarried children under 21, and parents of U.S. citizens are called “immediate relatives,” and there’s no yearly limit on their visas. As soon as USCIS recognizes the relationship, a visa is available, so these cases tend to move the fastest.
Everyone else falls into the family preference categories, which have annual caps and per-country limits, and that’s where waits stretch into years.

The preference system runs in tiers. Unmarried adult children of citizens, spouses and children of permanent residents, married children of citizens, and brothers and sisters of citizens each sit in their own line, and each line moves at its own pace. Demand from countries with many applicants,
such as Mexico, the Philippines, and India, can lengthen those waits considerably. We’ll explain how to track your place in line later on, because planning around the wait is half the battle, and knowing the timeline up front lets your family make decisions about work, travel, and where to live while you wait.

How-To Steps

The Family Petition Process, Step By Step

Most families want the same thing first: a clear map. Here is the path from start to green card, in order.

  • Confirm eligibility and gather your documents. You’ll prove both your status and your relationship, which usually means birth certificates, a marriage certificate, and proof of U.S. citizenship or permanent residence.

  • File Form I-130, Petition for Alien Relative. This is the petition that asks USCIS to recognize your family relationship. You can file online or by mail.

  • Wait for USCIS to process the petition. You’ll receive a receipt notice (Form I-797) first, then a decision.
  • Wait for a visa number, if your category requires it. Immediate relatives skip this step. Preference categories watch the monthly Visa Bulletin for their priority date to become current.

  • Finish through adjustment of status or consular processing. If your relative is in the U.S. and eligible, they file Form I-485 to adjust status here. If they’re abroad, the case moves to the National Visa Center and then to a consular interview.

  • Attend the interview and receive the decision. Once approved, your relative becomes a lawful permanent resident and the green card arrives by mail.

A quick note on a fork in this road. If you’re engaged but not yet married, you may be weighing a fiancé visa instead of a spousal petition. The next section lays the two side by side.

Comparison Table

I-130 Spousal Petition vs. K-1 Fiancé Visa

Couples often ask which path is faster and which is smoother. Neither is universally better; they trade speed for stability. Here’s the honest comparison.

FEATURE I-130 SPOUSAL PETITION K-1 FIANCÉ VISA
Relationship required Already married Engaged, marry within 90 days of arrival
Where you marry Before filing In the U.S. after arrival
Arrives as Permanent resident (CR- 1/IR-1) Fiancé, adjusts status after marriage
Work and travel on arrival Immediately Several months of waiting
Overall speed Slower start, fuller rights Faster reunion, more steps after

If reuniting quickly matters most, the K-1 can feel faster. If you’d rather your spouse arrive able to work and travel from day one, the spousal petition often serves families better over time. A short consultation can match the choice to your priorities.

Checklist

Documents You’ll Need For Your I-130

A complete, well-organized packet is what keeps your case moving and helps you avoid a Request for Evidence. Use this as your starting checklist, then tailor it to your relationship type.

Proof of your status (the petitioner)

  • Copy of your U.S. passport, U.S. birth certificate, or naturalization certificate
  • If you’re a permanent resident, a copy of your green card, front and back

Proof of your family relationship

  • Marriage certificate (for a spouse)
  • Birth certificates linking you and your relative (for a child, parent, or sibling)
  • Proof that any prior marriages legally ended, such as divorce or death certificates

For spousal cases, evidence the marriage is genuine

  • Joint lease or mortgage, shared bank accounts, or bills in both names
  • Photos together over time and affidavits from people who know you

The filing essentials

  • Completed and signed Form I-130 (and Form I-130A for a spouse)
  • The correct filing fee
  • Certified English translations for any document in another language

For marriage-based cases, the quality of your relationship evidence matters more than the quantity. USCIS officers look for proof that two lives are genuinely intertwined, so documents that show shared finances and shared responsibility carry the most weight. A joint bank account used over time, a lease with both names, or insurance policies naming each other tell a stronger story than a stack of photos. Photos and affidavits help, but they work best as support rather than the centerpiece. Organizing this evidence clearly, with the strongest items first, is what makes an officer’s job easy and your approval more likely.

Any document in a foreign language must include a certified English translation, a step that quietly causes more delays than almost anything else.

Glossary

What Is A Request For Evidence (RFE)?

Request For Evidence (RFE)

A formal notice from USCIS asking for more information or documents before it can decide your case.

An RFE is not a denial. It means an officer needs something else, often clearer proof of your relationship, a missing translation, or an updated form, before approving the petition. You’ll be given a deadline to respond, and a complete, on-time answer usually puts the case back on track. The best way to avoid an RFE is to file a thorough packet the first time, which is one of the clearest reasons families choose to work with a lawyer.

Web Article

Income Requirements To Sponsor A Relative

When you sponsor a relative, you promise the U.S. government you can support them financially so they won’t need public benefits. You make that promise on Form I-864, the Affidavit of Support, and it carries real weight.

The core requirement: your household income must equal or exceed 125% of the federal poverty guidelines for your household size, which includes you, your dependents, and the relative you’re sponsoring. The exact figure changes each year and rises with each additional person in the household.

If your income falls short, you have options. You can count certain assets, add a household member’s income, or bring in a joint sponsor who meets the requirement on your behalf. A joint sponsor is often a relative or close friend who is a citizen or permanent resident and agrees to take on the same financial responsibility you do. Assets such as savings, stocks, or property can also count toward the requirement, usually valued at a portion of their worth, which helps petitioners whose income alone doesn’t quite reach the line.

The obligation lasts until your relative becomes a citizen, earns 40 qualifying work quarters, leaves the country permanently, or passes away, and notably, it survives divorce. That last point surprises many people: signing the Affidavit of Support is a contract with the government, and ending a marriage does not end it. Because the stakes are long-term and the math changes every year with the poverty guidelines, this is a section worth getting right the first time.

Comparison Table

Do You Need A Lawyer To File Form I-130?

You’re allowed to file Form I-130 yourself. Many people do. The honest answer to whether you should is: it depends on how complex your case is and how much certainty you want. Here’s a clear-eyed comparison.

CONSIDERATION FILING YOUR OWN WORKING WITH A LAWYER
Simple, clean cases Workable with care Adds peace of mind
Prior immigration or criminal issues Higher risk of missteps Strategy before you file
Risk of an RFE or denial You catch your own errors Packet reviewed before filing
Cost Government fees only Government fees plus attorney fees
Your time and stress You manage every detail Guided through each step

If your case is straightforward and you have time to be meticulous, filing yourself is reasonable. If anything about your history is complicated, or a denial would be devastating, a lawyer’s review before you file is where the value lives.

FAQ

Questions To Ask In Your Consultation

A consultation is your chance to interview the lawyer, not the other way around. Walk in with questions, and you’ll leave knowing whether the fit is right.

Have you handled cases like mine before?

Family petitions vary widely. Ask specifically about your relationship type and any complications in your history.

Who will actually work on my case?

Find out whether you’ll work with the attorney, a paralegal, or both, and how you’ll reach them.

What are the likely risks in my case?

A straight answer about what could go wrong tells you more than any promise about what will go right.

How and when do you communicate updates?

Immigration cases are long. Knowing how you’ll hear about progress prevents months of anxious silence.

How do your fees work?

You’ll want this in plain terms before you commit, which is exactly what the next section covers.

How-To Steps

How To Verify A Lawyer’s Credentials In Texas

Before you hire anyone, confirm they’re licensed and in good standing. It takes a few minutes and protects you from the notarios and unlicensed “consultants” who prey on immigrant families.

  • Ask for the attorney’s State Bar number. Every licensed Texas attorney has one.

  • Look it up on the State Bar of Texas website. You can confirm the license is active and check for any public disciplinary history.

  • Confirm they’re an attorney, not a “notario”. In the U.S., a notary public cannot give legal advice, no matter what the title means in your home country.

  • Check that they’re a member of professional immigration associations. Membership in the American Immigration Lawyers Association is a reassuring sign.

When you reach out to an immigration attorney, a licensed professional will welcome these questions rather than dodge them.

Pricing

What A Family Petition Lawyer Costs In Austin

Cost is one of the biggest sources of worry, so let’s be transparent about the two layers of expense: the government’s fees, which everyone pays, and attorney fees, which depend on your case.

GOVERNMENT FILING FEES (2026)
Form I-130 $625 online / $675 paper
Form I-485 (if adjusting status in the U.S.) $1,440
Consular fee (if processing abroad) $325
Medical examination $200 to $500

Many families are surprised that the I-130 fee is only the first of several. From petition to green card, government fees alone often total somewhere between about $1,300 and $3,000, depending on whether your relative is inside or outside the country.

Attorney fees: flat fee vs. hourly. Most family petition lawyers charge a flat fee for a defined case, so you know the full cost upfront. Some charge hourly, which can suit unusually complex matters. A flat fee gives you predictability; an hourly arrangement gives you flexibility. Ask which model applies to your case and exactly what it includes, so there are no surprises later.

How-To Steps

What Happens After Your I-130 Is Approved

Approval of your I-130 is a milestone, and a common point of confusion. The petition approval confirms your family relationship; it does not, by itself, grant a green card. Here’s what comes next.

  • A visa number must be available. Immediate relatives have one right away. Preference categories wait for their priority date to become current on the Visa Bulletin, which the U.S. Department of State publishes each month. Your priority date is the day USCIS received your I-130, and it marks your place in line.

  • Choose your path based on where your relative lives. Inside the U.S. and eligible means adjustment of status. Abroad means consular processing.

  • File the next application. Adjustment of status uses Form I-485. Consular processing moves through the National Visa Center to a U.S. embassy.

  • Complete the medical exam and interview. Both paths end with a review of eligibility, including a medical examination by an authorized doctor and an interview where an officer confirms the relationship and reviews the file.

  • Receive the green card. Once approved, your relative becomes a lawful permanent resident.

Two paths, one destination. The right one depends on your relative’s location and history, and choosing well early can save months later. If a relative entered the country without inspection or has a prior immigration issue, the choice between these paths becomes more delicate, and that’s a moment where a careful review pays off.

Comparison Table

Adjustment Of Status vs. Consular Processing

This is the fork in step two above, and it deserves a closer look because the right choice depends entirely on your situation.

FEATURE ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS CONSULAR PROCESSING
Where your relative is Already inside the U.S. Outside the U.S.
Main form Form I-485 DS-260 through the consulate
Travel during the wait Possible with advance parole Waits abroad
Can work while waiting Yes, with a work permit Not until arrival
Final interview location USCIS office in the U.S. U.S. embassy or consulate abroad

If your relative is lawfully in the U.S. and eligible, adjustment of status lets them stay here throughout. If they’re abroad, consular processing is the path. A lawyer can confirm which one your relative qualifies for, since eligibility rules carry exceptions that aren’t obvious from the outside.

FAQs

Family Petition Questions, Answered

As of 2026, USCIS processes Form I-130 in roughly 11 months on average, though times vary by relationship and service center.
Immediate relatives of U.S. citizens often can file concurrently when the relative is in the U.S. and eligible. Preference categories generally cannot until a visa is available.
Sibling petitions fall in the family preference system and can take many years, depending on the priority date and country of origin.
No. USCIS keeps the filing fee regardless of the outcome, which is one more reason to file accurately the first time.
No. Only U.S. citizens who are at least 21 can petition for their parents. Permanent residents cannot.
You may use assets, a household member’s income, or a joint sponsor to meet the requirement on Form I-864.

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