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Immigration consulting requires careful vetting — errors in applications, missed deadlines, or the wrong visa category can cause significant delays or jeopardize your case. This guide helps you find a qualified immigration professional who will review your situation and walk you through your options before you submit anything. The American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA) recommends working only with credentialed practitioners and verifying their qualifications before sharing any personal documents.
Official source for US immigration forms, processing times, and eligibility requirements.
The professional body for immigration attorneys — use the member directory to verify credentials.
Dùng các câu hỏi này trong cuộc gọi làm quen hoặc buổi đầu tiên để nhanh chóng đánh giá mức độ phù hợp và chuyên môn.
1.Have you handled cases exactly like mine — same nationality, same visa category, same destination country?
Vì sao điều này quan trọng: Immigration nuances are highly specific. An expert in US employment visas may have limited knowledge of Canadian or UK immigration. Directly relevant experience matters more than general immigration knowledge.
2.What's the realistic timeline and what are the main things that could delay it?
Vì sao điều này quan trọng: Sets honest expectations and reveals whether they understand the current processing environment, which changes constantly.
3.What are the strongest and weakest parts of my application as it stands?
Vì sao điều này quan trọng: Gets you a candid assessment of your position — what to strengthen, what's at risk. Advisors who say 'it looks fine' without specifics aren't giving you real value.
4.What happens if this application is denied — what are my options?
Vì sao điều này quan trọng: Understanding the downside scenario and alternatives is essential for any high-stakes application. Good advisors always plan for this.
5.Are there any ways I could inadvertently jeopardize my current status while this application is pending?
Vì sao điều này quan trọng: A common and costly mistake. Activities that seem harmless — travel, changing employers, taking on freelance work — can have serious immigration consequences depending on your status.
Immigration consulting sessions begin with a clear assessment of your situation — your current status, goals, timeline, and eligibility. Your expert will walk you through your options, flag risks, and outline the most viable path. Expect direct, plain-language guidance on a topic that's often unnecessarily opaque.
O-1 Visa
The O-1 visa is a US nonimmigrant visa for individuals who possess extraordinary ability in their field — defined as the top of their occupation — in science, arts, education, business, or athletics.
H-1B Visa
The H-1B is a US nonimmigrant work visa for specialty occupation workers — typically requiring at least a bachelor's degree in a relevant field — sponsored by a US employer.
Green Card (Permanent Resident Card)
A green card (officially the Permanent Resident Card) grants foreign nationals lawful permanent residence in the United States — the right to live and work permanently without requiring a separate visa. Green card holders can apply for US citizenship after 3–5 years of residency.
Naturalization
Naturalization is the legal process by which a foreign national becomes a US citizen. To qualify, applicants must generally have been a lawful permanent resident for 3–5 years, meet continuous residence and physical presence requirements, demonstrate good moral character, pass an English and civics test, and take an oath of allegiance.
F-1 Visa
The F-1 visa is the most common US student visa, allowing foreign nationals to pursue full-time academic study at a USCIS-approved institution. F-1 students may work on campus and, after completing a degree, qualify for Optional Practical Training (OPT) to work in the US for up to 3 years in STEM fields.
Bài viết bởi James Chae — Đồng sáng lập, Expert Sapiens
Chuyên môn trên nền tảng: Tư vấn di trú và dịch vụ visa · Rà soát lần cuối Tháng 4 2026