Abogados de Green Cards
315 abogados de Green Cards encontrados. Filtre por estado y ciudad.

Scott Legal

Law Offices of Paul Scott

Miranda Injury Lawyers

Thompson & Partners

The Tovey Firm

Radha Rothrock, Attorney at Law

The Vasilescu Firm

Law Offices of Raisa Cohen

Behr & Associates

Law Offices of Raymond Lahoud

The Redman Firm

Rhoda Agyeman, Attorney at Law

Agyeman Legal

Berman Injury Lawyers

Wilner Trial Lawyers

The Wilner Firm
Green Card Lawyers Across the United States
A green card grants lawful permanent resident status, allowing you to live and work anywhere in the country indefinitely. Getting one involves a complex application process with strict deadlines, extensive documentation, and government interviews. An experienced green card lawyer can make the difference between approval and denial.
What Green Card Law Covers
Green card lawyers handle every pathway to permanent residency. The most common route is family-based immigration, where a U.S. citizen or permanent resident sponsors a qualifying relative. Employment-based green cards require labor certification and employer sponsorship in most categories.
Attorneys in this area also handle adjustment of status applications for people already in the U.S. and consular processing for applicants abroad. They work on diversity visa lottery cases, asylee and refugee adjustments, and special categories like the EB-5 investor visa. If your application hits a snag — a Request for Evidence, a denial, or removal proceedings — a green card lawyer handles appeals and motions to reopen.
When to Hire a Green Card Lawyer
- Your employer is sponsoring you and the PERM labor certification process requires precise compliance with Department of Labor rules
- You have prior immigration violations, overstays, or criminal history that could trigger inadmissibility bars
- Your family-based petition involves complicated relationships, such as stepchildren or adopted children
- USCIS issued a Request for Evidence or denied your application and you need to respond within a tight deadline
- You need to file a waiver, such as an I-601 unlawful presence waiver, to overcome a ground of inadmissibility
How the Green Card Process Works
Most green card cases start with a petition — Form I-130 for family cases or Form I-140 for employment cases. Once approved, you either adjust status domestically using Form I-485 or attend a consular interview abroad. USCIS processing times vary widely. As of 2024, family-based I-130 petitions for immediate relatives average 12 to 18 months, while some employment preference categories face backlogs stretching years.
After filing, applicants submit biometrics, attend interviews, and undergo background checks. Your lawyer prepares you for each step, compiles supporting evidence, and communicates directly with USCIS on your behalf.
How Green Card Outcomes Are Determined
- Preference category determines your place in line — immediate relatives of U.S. citizens have no annual cap, while other categories face per-country limits
- Your country of birth affects wait times due to visa bulletin backlogs, with India and China facing the longest delays
- Employment-based applicants are evaluated on job qualifications, prevailing wage determinations, and labor market tests
- Any grounds of inadmissibility — health, criminal, or prior immigration violations — directly affect eligibility and may require waiver applications
- The strength of your documentary evidence, including financial sponsorship on Form I-864, determines whether USCIS approves or denies your case
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take to get a green card?
Timelines range from under a year to over a decade. Immediate relatives of U.S. citizens typically receive green cards fastest because no visa quota applies. Employment-based EB-2 and EB-3 applicants from high-demand countries may wait five to ten years or more due to per-country backlogs.
Can I work while my green card application is pending?
Yes. If you filed Form I-485 for adjustment of status, you can apply for an Employment Authorization Document (EAD) using Form I-765. USCIS typically issues combo EAD/advance parole cards, which also let you travel internationally without abandoning your pending application.

