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Green Card For Siblings: Petitioning A Brother Or Sister

TL;DR:
A U.S. citizen who is at least 21 can petition for a brother or sister, but the sibling category, called F4, has the longest wait in the family immigration system. As of 2026, that wait runs roughly 15 to 20 years for most countries, and longer for Mexico and the Philippines. Green card holders cannot petition for siblings. The priority date locks in the day USCIS receives your petition, so filing early matters.

Sponsoring a brother or sister is one of the most meaningful petitions you can file, and one of the most patient. The path is real and thousands of families complete it, but the wait is measured in years, not months. Here is who qualifies, how long it takes, and why filing sooner protects your place in line.

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Who Can Sponsor A Sibling For A Green Card

Only a U.S. citizen who is at least 21 can petition for a brother or sister. This is a citizen-only door: green card holders cannot sponsor a sibling. Your sibling relationship can be biological, meaning you share at least one parent, or through adoption or a step-relationship created before the relevant age cutoff. You prove it by showing you both trace back to a common parent.

How Long Is The F4 Sibling Wait In 2026

Siblings fall into the fourth family preference category, known as F4, which carries the heaviest backlog of any family category. As of 2026, the wait for most countries runs roughly 15 to 20 years, and longer for siblings born in Mexico or the Philippines, where decades of high demand built the longest lines. The reason is simple math: only about 65,000 F4 visas are available worldwide each year, against demand from millions of families, and no country may take more than a small share. These dates shift month to month, so the current Visa Bulletin is the only reliable place to track the line.

Why You Should File Even Though The Wait Is Long

This is the part many families get wrong. The wait feels so long that some put off filing, but that delay only costs you. Your priority date, the date USCIS receives your petition, locks in your place in line the moment you file. Every year you wait to file is another year added to the end. Filing now, even knowing the green card may be two decades away, is almost always the right move, because the clock does not start until your petition is in.

Sponsoring A Sibling Vs. A Parent: Why The Gap Is So Wide

It surprises people how differently these two petitions move. A parent of a U.S. citizen is an immediate relative, with a visa always available and no waiting line. A sibling is a preference relative, stuck behind an annual cap. The form is the same, but the outcome could not be more different: a parent may finish in a year or so, while a sibling waits well over a decade. The relationship determines the speed, not the paperwork.

What Happens To Your Sibling’s Spouse & Children

Good news for families: when you petition your sibling, their spouse and unmarried children under 21 can generally come along as derivative beneficiaries. The Child Status Protection Act may help protect a child who turns 21 during the long wait, though those rules are complex and case-specific. If a child marries or ages out without protection, they usually lose their derivative place, one more reason timing matters in a category this slow.

What Happens After The I-130 Is Approved

Approval does not mean a green card is ready; it means your sibling has secured their spot and now waits for a visa number. Once the priority date is close to current, the case moves to the National Visa Center, and from there your sibling either completes consular processing abroad or, if eligible and living in the U.S., adjusts status here. There is no premium processing for sibling petitions, and expedites are granted only in rare, urgent situations.

Ready To Lock In Your Sibling’s Place In Line?

A sibling petition is a long commitment, and small mistakes early can cost you years you cannot get back. If you want to lock in your brother’s or sister’s priority date correctly and avoid the errors that derail these cases, we can help. Schedule a confidential evaluation with Lincoln-Goldfinch Law today, and we will get your petition filed cleanly and explain the road ahead, just as we would for our own family. You will leave knowing exactly where you stand. We’ve got your back.

About the Author: Kate Lincoln-Goldfinch

I am the managing partner of Lincoln-Goldfinch Law. Upon graduating from the University of Texas for college and law school, I received an Equal Justice Works Fellowship in 2008, completed at American Gateways. My project served the detained families seeking asylum. After my fellowship, I entered private immigration practice. My firm offers family-based immigration, such as green cards and naturalization, deportation defense, and humanitarian cases such as asylum, U Visa, and VAWA. Everyone at Lincoln-Goldfinch Law is bilingual, has a connection to our cause, and has demonstrated a history of activism for immigrants. To us, our work is not just a job.
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