The Immigration Desk
Straight answers on U.S. immigration law.

The Immigration Desk publishes clear, practical answers to the immigration questions people are actually searching for — green cards, deportation defense, DACA, work visas, asylum, family petitions, and breaking policy news. No legal jargon. No fine print. Just honest information written by a licensed U.S. immigration attorney with years of experience handling cases across the country. Whether you are undocumented, hold a visa, or have a green card, every article here is written for you.

A couple in a green card marriage interview

How to Ace Your Marriage Green Card Interview

The biggest reason people fail their marriage green card interview is simple: they assume they don’t need to prepare. The truth is that U.S. immigration officers are trained to spot inconsistencies, and a confident, well-prepared couple stands out immediately. Here are the five areas the interviewer will focus on, plus bonus tips that could make […]

When Is It Safe to File for U.S. Citizenship in 2026?

Filing an N-400 (Application for Naturalization) is not just about reaching a calendar date. The real issue is whether you fit the right eligibility rule, have enough physical presence and continuous residence, and can withstand the full review USCIS performs from filing until the oath ceremony. Many applicants focus only on the headline timeline and

A U.S. Permanent Resident card and a U.S. passport on a table

Green Card vs. U.S. Citizenship: How to Choose

Permanent residence offers stability and rights, but U.S. citizenship offers something more: full integration into American life and protection from deportation. The decision to naturalize isn’t universal; it’s a tradeoff between preserving current ties and gaining broader rights. This guide presents both sides honestly so you can decide what matters most to your situation. Why

A Permanent Resident card

9 Mistakes That Can Put a Green Card at Risk

Permanent residence gives you the right to live and work in the United States—but that right isn’t guaranteed forever. The U.S. immigration system includes multiple ways USCIS or Customs & Border Protection (CBP) can determine that a resident has abandoned status, committed a deportable offense, or no longer qualifies to keep a green card. The

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