
The USA green card process gives foreign nationals permanent residency rights. This guide covers who qualifies, the steps involved, costs, and tips for 2026.
The USA green card process is one of the most searched immigration topics for people around the world. A green card, officially called a Permanent Resident Card, gives foreign nationals the right to live and work anywhere in the United States permanently. This guide covers who qualifies, the different routes available, and what the application process actually involves in 2026.

A green card is proof of your status as a lawful permanent resident of the United States. It is not citizenship, but it gives you most of the same rights. You can live in any US state, work for any employer, and eventually apply for US citizenship after meeting the residency requirements.
Green cards are officially called Form I-551 or Permanent Resident Cards. Despite the name, the card is not always green. The card is valid for 10 years for permanent residents and must be renewed before it expires. Your status as a permanent resident does not expire with the card, but you need a valid card as proof.
Around one million green cards are issued by the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) each year. The demand is far higher than that number, which is why wait times for certain categories can stretch for years or even decades.

There are several main routes to a green card. Each has different eligibility requirements and wait times. Understanding which route applies to your situation is the first step.
The most common route to a green card in 2026 is through a family member who is a US citizen or already a permanent resident. US citizens can sponsor the following relatives:
Permanent residents can sponsor spouses and unmarried children, but these fall under preference categories with annual limits, meaning wait times apply.
Employers in the United States can sponsor foreign workers for permanent residence. There are five preference categories for employment-based green cards:
Most employment-based applications require a Labour Market Test first, where the employer must show no qualified US workers are available for the role. This process is called PERM Labour Certification.
The Diversity Immigrant Visa Program, also called the green card lottery, gives up to 55,000 green cards each year to people from countries with low rates of immigration to the US. The UK is not eligible because too many British nationals already immigrate to the United States. Countries in Africa, Eastern Europe, and parts of Asia typically have the highest chances.
People who have been granted refugee status or asylum in the United States can apply for a green card after one year of continuous residence. This is one of the few routes that does not require a sponsor.

The exact steps depend on your route, but the general process follows a similar pattern for most applicants.
Before filing any forms, confirm you qualify for one of the green card categories. If you are going through family sponsorship, the petitioning family member files first. If through employment, your employer typically initiates the process.
For family-based cases, the US citizen or permanent resident files Form I-130 (Petition for Alien Relative). For employment cases, the employer files Form I-140 (Immigrant Petition for Alien Workers) after completing labour certification if required. USCIS reviews the petition and either approves, requests more evidence, or denies it.
Once the petition is approved, you may need to wait for a visa number to become available. This applies to preference categories with annual limits. The State Department publishes a monthly Visa Bulletin showing which priority dates are current. Immediate relatives of US citizens skip this step as their categories have no annual limits.
If you are already in the United States on a valid visa, you apply to adjust your status to permanent resident using Form I-485. If you are outside the US, you go through consular processing at a US embassy or consulate in your country.
Along with the main form, you submit supporting documents including identity documents, civil documents (birth certificate, marriage certificate if applicable), police certificates, and photographs.
USCIS schedules a biometrics appointment where they take your fingerprints, photograph, and signature. This is used for background checks.
You must complete a medical examination with a USCIS-designated civil surgeon. The exam checks for communicable diseases and required vaccinations. Results are submitted on Form I-693.

Most green card applicants are called for an interview at a USCIS field office (for adjustment of status) or at a US embassy (for consular processing). The officer reviews your application and asks questions to confirm the information you provided. For marriage-based cases, officers sometimes interview spouses separately to verify the relationship is genuine.
After the interview, USCIS issues a decision. If approved, your green card is mailed to you or your visa is stamped for consular processing cases. If there are issues, you may receive a Request for Evidence (RFE) asking for more information. If denied, you have options to appeal.
Processing times vary significantly depending on your category and your country of birth. Immediate relatives of US citizens often see the fastest processing, sometimes under a year from initial filing to approval.
Employment-based categories for applicants from India and China can take decades because the annual limits are shared among all nationalities and demand from these countries is extremely high. The State Department Visa Bulletin shows the current priority dates, which tells you roughly how far back in the queue USCIS is currently processing.
Adjustment of status applications from inside the US typically take 8 to 24 months in 2026. Consular processing can be faster in some cases but depends heavily on appointment availability at the relevant embassy.
The USA green card process involves multiple government fees. As of 2026, the main costs include:
Total costs for a straightforward case typically range from $2,000 to $7,000 or more. The EB-5 investor route has far higher costs due to the minimum investment requirement.

Understanding why applications fail helps you avoid the same mistakes. Common reasons for denial include:
Several things can make the process smoother and improve your chances of approval:

The USA green card process is legal by nature and many people complete it without a lawyer. However, the forms are complex and errors can delay or damage your case. An immigration attorney is particularly helpful in cases that have complications such as a prior visa denial, criminal history, prior immigration violations, or complex employment situations.
If you use a lawyer, choose one licensed to practise US immigration law. Be cautious of notarios or non-lawyers who offer immigration services. Only a licensed attorney or an accredited representative can legally provide immigration legal advice.
Here are answers to the questions most people ask when they are working through the US green card process.
If you applied for your green card inside the United States using Form I-485, you can apply for an Employment Authorization Document while you wait. This is filed as Form I-765 alongside your I-485. The EAD allows you to work legally for any employer while USCIS processes your case. It is typically valid for one to two years and can be renewed.
Travelling abroad while your I-485 is pending can cause serious problems. If you leave without advance parole, USCIS may treat your application as abandoned. You must apply for advance parole on Form I-131 before travelling. Once approved, you can travel and return to the US without abandoning your case. Do not book international travel until you have your advance parole document in hand.
In this situation, you wait. Your petition has been approved, meaning USCIS acknowledges you qualify. But because the annual limit for your category is reached each year, you must wait until your priority date becomes current in the Visa Bulletin before you can proceed to the next step. People in this situation should check the monthly Visa Bulletin and consider working with an immigration attorney to ensure they move quickly when their date becomes current.
Getting a green card is not the end of the process. You need to maintain your status as a permanent resident. Key rules include:
Abandoning your permanent resident status, either intentionally or by staying abroad for long periods without a reentry permit, is irreversible. Treat your green card as the serious legal status that it is.
Once you have held a green card for the required period, you can apply for US citizenship. The standard requirement is five years as a permanent resident. If you obtained your green card through marriage to a US citizen, the wait is three years, provided you are still married to and living with that citizen. Citizenship comes with additional benefits including the right to vote, a US passport, and protection against deportation.
Have you started the US green card process or are you planning to apply? Share your questions or experience in the comments below. What part of the process would you find most helpful to know more about?