Building America’s Future,

One Child at a Time.

Overview

  • The INA Definition of a Child

  • Adjustment of Status for Children

  • Consulate Processing for Children

  • Child Status Protection Act

  • Naturalization for Children

  • Acquired Citizenship for Children

  • Why Team with Mulder Law

The INA Definition of a Child

A Child is defined in the Immigration and Nationality Act as an individual who is under the age of 21 and is your biological child, step child, or child through adoption. Your child is considered an Immediate Relative for immigration purposes. A visa is immediately available for your child upon the approval of an Alien Relative Petition or as a derivative .

Sons and Daughters are defined in the Immigration and Nationality Act as individuals who are 21 years of age or older or married. A Son or Daughter is a Priority Relative and a visa is not immediately available to him or her. With few exceptions a Son or Daughter will not qualify as the derivative of a parent.

The process for bringing your child to the United States can vary depending on whether the child is your biological child, adopted child or step child. It will also vary depending on other criteria.

Adjustment of Status for Children

There are a number of requirements that must be adhered to in order for a child to adjust status in the United States. The below are some of the most common and important requirements. This in not a complete list of requirements. To know that you meet all requirements in your particular situation it is strongly suggested that you consult with an experienced immigration attorney before you begin the process:

  • Age and Relationship

    Definition of a Child: A child is defined as under the age of 21 years of age. Once a child turns 21 s/he is considered a son or daughter and is no longer an immediate relative. A visa is no longer immediately available to the son or daughter through the parent.

    The Child Status Protection Act: The issues of age comes into play when the parents begin the process while the child is under the age or 21 and the child turns 21 before the process is complete. This is when the Child Status Protection Act is applied to the situation.

    Adjustment through a step-parent: The marriage that esablished the step-parent relationship must have taken place before the child’s 18th birthday.

    Adjustment through adoption: For a Child to adjust status through a parent that has adopted him or her, the adoption must have taken place before the child turned 16 or with some exceptions the adoption process must have begun before the child turned 16.

  • Process

    There is no derivative status available to children who are the immediate relatives of United States citizen parents.

    A child must have a petition filed in his or her name separate from a parent. The child must also have an application to adjust status separate from the parents application.

    A mistake I have seen often in my 34 years experience is, when parents do not file an application to adjust status on behalf of a child, assuming the child will automatically become a United States citizen when they become a United States citizen.

    A child only becomes a United States citizen through a parent if s/he is first a permanent resident.. The application to adjust status must be filed and granted. The child must be a Lawful Permanent Resident.

    The child does not need to be a Lawful Permanent Resident for 3 or 5 years. S/he automatically becomes a Naturalized United States citizen when the Application to adjust status is granted.

  • Adoption

    There are special rules that must be complied with for an adopted child to become a Lawful Permanent Resident through a parent. The first rule is that the adoption must take place before the child’s 16th birthday.

    There are three methods of international adoption: The Hague Convention, The Orphan Process, and, The Family-Based Petition.

    Before you adopt a child, contact the Mulder Law Office to discuss the requirments. I can not tell you the number of parents who have called me AFTER they have adopted a child in a foreign country only to find out that they can not bring the child to the United States because they did not comply with the requirements.

  • VAWA and Children

    A child may file a VAWA petition or a parent may file on behalf of a child.

    You may file for yourself if you are an abused child under 21, unmarried and have been abused by your U.S. citizen or permanent resident parent. Your children may also be included on your petition. You may also file for yourself as a child after age 21 but before age 25 if you can demonstrate that the abuse was the main reason for the delay in filing.

    A child may benefit from the VAWA petition filed by a parent.and a parent may benefit from a VAWA petition filed by a child.

Consulate Processing for Children

Children of a USC born in a foreign country and that country is their permanent residence: As a USC you can sponsor your child to come to the United States on an immigrant visa. Provided all other requirements are met; Once the child arrives in the United States s/he is an LPR and eligible to file the N-600 to obtain a Certificate of Citizenship.

Step Children of a USC or Children of a Fiance: There is not derivative status for family members of an immediate relative or a fiance. The child must have their own petition or immigrant visa filed by you as the petitioner and the child is a beneficiary. The child receives a visa through the US Consulate.

Adopted Children: When adopting a child internationally the adoption must first be completed in the foreign country. The parent may then go through consulate processing to bring the child to the United States. The primary intent of the US Consulate is to review the adoption and make sure the process was completed according to the laws of the foreign country.

Children of Permanent Residence: You may petition for your children who are considered F2A preference relatives. As preference relatives the children may not receive an immigrant visa until their priority date is current. The priority date for F2A family members is current as of the October, 2021 visa bulletin. This means that your children will be scheduled for an interview at the US consulate upon approval .

Congress recognized that many children were aging out due to large USCIS processing backlogs, so it enacted the Child Status Protection Act (CSPA) to protect certain children from aging out.

The CSPA does not change the definition of a child. Instead, CSPA provides a method for calculating a person’s age to see if they meet the definition of a child for immigration purposes. The calculated age is the child’s “CSPA age.” This allows adults who qualify to remain classified as children beyond their 21st birthday.

CSPA does not change the requirement that you must be unmarried in order to remain eligible for classification as a child.

CSPA applies to the following persons:

  • Immediate relatives (including derivatives of widow(er)s);

  • Family-sponsored preference principal applicants and derivative applicants;

  • Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) self-petitioners and derivative applicants;

  • Employment-based preference derivative applicants;

  • Diversity Immigrant Visa (DV) derivative applicants;

  • Derivative refugees; and

  • Derivative asylees.

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The Child Status Protection ACT

Automatically Acquiring Citizenship at Birth Abroad

A child is a United States citizen at birth when born abroad to a United States citizen parent who meet the requirements of passing citizenship to the child. It is important that the United States citizen parent register the child’s birth at the closest U.S. Consulate as soon after the birth as possible. Every effort should be made to register the birth at least with in twelve (12) months. The child’s U.S. Passport may be applied for at most consulates.

Automatically Acquiring Citizenship after Birth

A child born outside of the United States automatically becomes a U.S. citizen when all of the following conditions have been met on or after February 27, 2001:

*The child has at least one parent who is a U.S. citizen by birth or through naturalization (including an adoptive parent);

*The child is under 18 years of age;

*The child is a lawful permanent resident (LPR); and

*The child is residing in the United States in the legal and physical custody of the U.S. citizen parent.

Legal and Physical Custody of U.S. Citizen Parent

Legal custody refers to the responsibility for and authority over a child. For purposes of this provision, USCIS presumes that a U.S. citizen parent has legal custody of a child and recognizes that the parent has lawful authority over the child, absent evidence to the contrary, in all of the following scenarios

USCIS considers a U.S. citizen parent who has been awarded “joint custody” to have legal custody of a child. There may be other factual circumstances under which USCIS may find the U.S. citizen parent to have legal custody to be determined on a case-by-case basis.

Children of Armed Forces Members or U.S. Government Employees or their Spouses

On March 26, 2020, the Citizenship for Children of Military Members and Civil Servants Act was enacted into law. This Act provides that, under certain conditions, children of U.S. armed forces members or U.S. government employees (or their spouses)who are residing outside the United States acquire citizenship under INA 320. This applies to such children who were under the age of 18 on that date.

A child born outside of the United States acquires automatic citizenship under INA 320 in cases where the child is an LPR and is in the legal and physical custody of his or her U.S. citizen parent who is:

  • Stationed and residing outside of the United States as a member of the U.S. armed forces;

  • Stationed and residing outside of the United States as an employee of the U.S. government; or

  • The spouse residing outside the United States in marital union with a U.S. armed forces member or U.S. government employee who is stationed outside of the United States.

In cases involving the child of a U.S. armed forces member residing outside the United States, the child must be authorized to accompany and reside with the U.S. armed forces member as provided by the member’s official orders. If the spouse of the U.S. armed forces member is the qualifying U.S. citizen parent, the spouse must be authorized to accompany and reside with the U.S. armed forces member as provided by the member’s official orders.

The official orders that authorize a child and, if applicable, his or her U.S. citizen parent, to accompany and reside with the member of the U.S. armed forces outside of the United States are a statutory requirement for that child to acquire citizenship under INA 320. If the child (and, if applicable, U.S. citizen parent) being added to the orders is the last action for the child to qualify for acquisition, then the date of the order becomes the date of acquisition. There is no statutory requirement for children of U.S. government employees or their spouses to be included on the employee’s official orders. 

The child of a U.S. armed forces member or a U.S. government employee (or his or her spouse) must meet the general requirements under INA 320(a)(1)-(2) in addition to being an LPR residing in the legal and physical custody of his or her U.S. citizen parent. All statutory requirements must be met before the child reaches the age of 18, including, if applicable, the issuance of the official orders for the child (and, if applicable, the U.S. citizen parent) to accompany and reside with the U.S. armed forces member who is stationed outside the United States.

 Acquiring Citizenship Before the Child Citizenship Act of 2000

The Child Citizenship Act (CCA) applies only to those children born on or after February 27, 2001, or those who were under 18 years of age as of that date. Persons who were 18 years of age or older on February 27, 2001, do not qualify for citizenship under INA 320. For such persons, the law in effect at the time the last condition was met before reaching 18 years of age is the relevant law to determine whether they acquired citizenship.

In general, former INA 321 applies to children who were already 18 years of age on February 27, 2001, but who were under 18 years of age in 1952, when the current Immigration and Nationality Act became effective.

In general, a child born outside of the United States to two noncitizen parents, or one noncitizen parent and one U.S. citizen parent who subsequently lost U.S. citizenship, acquires citizenship under former INA 321 if:

  • The child’s parent(s) meet one of the following conditions:​

    • Both parents naturalize;​

    • One surviving parent naturalizes if the other parent is deceased;​

    • One parent naturalizes who has legal custody of the child if there is a legal separation of the parents; or​

    • The child’s mother naturalizes if the child was born out of wedlock and paternity has not been established by legitimation.

  • The child is under 18 years of age when his or her parent(s) naturalize; and

  • The child is residing in the United States pursuant to a lawful admission for permanent residence at the time the parent(s) naturalized or thereafter begins to reside permanently in the United States.

As originally enacted in 1952, this section did not apply to adopted children of naturalized citizens.[23] Beginning on October 5, 1978, however, INA 321 became generally applicable to an adopted child if the child was residing in the United States at the time the adoptive parent or parents naturalized and the child was in the custody of his or her adoptive parents pursuant to a lawful admission for permanent residence.[24]

Application for Certificate of Citizenship (Form N-600)

A person who automatically obtains citizenship is not required to file an Application for Certificate of Citizenship. A person who seeks documentation of such status, however, must submit an application to obtain a Certificate of Citizenship from USCIS. A person may also apply for a U.S. passport with the Department of State to serve as evidence of his or her U.S. citizenship.

USCIS will issue proof of U.S. citizenship in the form of a Certificate of Citizenship if the Application for Certificate of Citizenship is approved and the person takes the Oath of Allegiance, if required to do so.

The US Government may require a person provide a Certificate of Citizenship as evidence of citizenship before a U.S. Passport is granted. This is becoming more common. There are reasons for getting a Certificate of Citizenship even when a U.S. Passport is granted; A person who acquires citizenship by birth in the United States will have two pieces of evidence to indicate citizenship: A Birth Certificate and a U.S. Passport. A person who acquires citizenship after birth abroad may only have one document to prove U.S. Citizenship unless the birth was registered abroad with the U.S. Consulate. This can be a problem later in life as an example: When the child applies to colleges and for financial aide.

Why You Should Team with Mulder Law

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