Timeline
I-130 Processing Time in 2026: Real Timelines by Case Type
Current I-130 processing times (mid-2026)
Processing time varies by USCIS service center (lockbox routing) and case type. The numbers below are USCIS-published 80th-percentile times — meaning 80% of cases complete within the range.
| Petition type | USCIS adjudication | Total to green card |
|---|---|---|
| Spouse of USC (immediate relative) | 12–18 months | 12–24 months with concurrent I-485 |
| Parent of adult USC | 10–16 months | 12–20 months with concurrent I-485 from inside U.S. |
| Unmarried minor child of USC | 10–16 months | 12–20 months |
| Spouse / minor child of LPR (F2A) | 14–22 months | Depends on visa bulletin (typically current as of 2026) |
| Unmarried adult child of USC (F1) | 14–22 months | 5–8 years + visa bulletin wait |
| Unmarried adult child of LPR (F2B) | 14–22 months | 6–9 years + visa bulletin wait |
| Married child of USC (F3) | 14–22 months | 12–14 years + visa bulletin wait |
| Sibling of USC (F4) | 14–22 months | 14–22 years for India/Mexico/Philippines |
Adjudication speed and visa-availability speed are two different things. The I-130 itself may take 12–22 months — but for preference categories (F1, F2A/B, F3, F4), the beneficiary then waits for a visa number to become available per the monthly Department of State Visa Bulletin. For F4 siblings from India/Mexico/Philippines, the visa-bulletin wait is multiple decades.
Why some I-130s are faster than others
Three structural factors decide which service center handles your case and how fast it moves.
- Filing location — paper-filed I-130s are routed by lockbox based on the petitioner's state of residence. Online filings through myUSCIS bypass the paper lockbox but still route to a service center.
- Service center workload — the four USCIS service centers (Texas, Nebraska, Vermont, Potomac) have varying inventory backlogs. A petition that lands at a backlogged center can take 6+ months longer than one at a lower-volume center, for identical facts.
- Case complexity flags — petitions with red-flag indicators (short marriage, large age gap, prior I-130s, RFE history) get triaged into deeper review queues that adjudicate slower.
Is Premium Processing available for I-130?
No. As of 2026, USCIS does not offer Premium Processing for Form I-130. Premium Processing ($2,805 for 15-business-day adjudication) is available for some employment categories — including I-140 NIW since 2023 — but I-130 family petitions are not on the Premium list.
What slows a petition down (and what doesn't)
Filing earlier in the calendar year does not help. The two real accelerants are (1) a clean, well-indexed petition that doesn't trigger an RFE, and (2) filing through myUSCIS online rather than paper.
- Slows down: RFE issuance (adds 4–8 months), wrong service center filing, missing translations, paper filing vs online, sham-marriage indicators.
- Does not change speed: which month you file, how thick the evidence package is, whether you used an attorney, whether you paid the fee by check vs credit card.
Concurrent I-485 and EAD/AP timelines
If the beneficiary is inside the U.S. and you file I-485 concurrently with the I-130, two milestones happen well before the green card is issued.
- EAD (Form I-765, work authorisation) — typically 5–7 months after concurrent filing. Valid 1–2 years and renewable.
- AP (Advance Parole, travel permission) — typically 5–9 months after concurrent filing. Lets the beneficiary travel abroad while I-485 is pending without abandoning the application.
- Biometrics — typically 1–3 months after filing. A brief appointment at a USCIS Application Support Center for fingerprints and photo.
- Green-card interview — typically 8–18 months after filing, scheduled at the USCIS field office serving the beneficiary's address.
Checking your own case status
Three official tools.
- egov.uscis.gov/casestatus — enter your receipt number for status updates.
- myUSCIS account — links all your USCIS filings and shows real-time status changes.
- USCIS Contact Center (800-375-5283) — escalation if your case is outside posted processing times.
Official sources
This guide is based on official U.S. government sources. Forms, fees, and processing details change — always confirm current requirements directly:
- USCIS — Form I-130, Petition for Alien RelativeOfficial I-130 form, instructions, edition date, and filing fee — the petition that establishes a qualifying family relationship.
- U.S. Department of State — Visa BulletinOfficial monthly Visa Bulletin showing immigrant visa priority date availability (final action dates and dates for filing).
Frequently asked questions
- How long does I-130 take in 2026?
- For a spouse-of-USC petition (the most common case), 12–18 months for USCIS to adjudicate I-130 alone. With a concurrent I-485 adjustment of status from inside the U.S., total time to green card is typically 12–24 months. Preference categories (F1, F2A/B, F3, F4) have a separate visa-bulletin wait on top.
- Can I-130 be premium processed?
- No. As of 2026, USCIS does not offer Premium Processing for Form I-130. Premium Processing is available for some employment categories (including I-140 NIW since 2023) but not for family-based I-130 petitions. Expedite requests are available but only for narrow humanitarian or government-interest reasons.
- Will hiring a lawyer speed up my I-130?
- No. Whether you DIY, use Visacub, or hire an attorney has no impact on USCIS processing speed. What does matter is petition quality — a clean, well-indexed filing avoids RFEs (which add 4–8 months) and triages into faster review queues.
- Why is my I-130 taking longer than the posted times?
- Three common reasons. (1) Your case has a complexity flag (short marriage, large age gap, prior I-130) that routes it into a deeper review queue. (2) Your service center is backlogged — Texas and Nebraska have varied in 2025–2026. (3) An RFE was issued and you didn't notice because the notice hasn't arrived yet. Check egov.uscis.gov/casestatus or call the USCIS Contact Center.
- Can I travel while I-130 is pending?
- It depends on the beneficiary's current immigration status. If the beneficiary is outside the U.S., travel is unrestricted (the petition just sits at USCIS). If inside the U.S. on a non-immigrant visa, travel is generally fine until I-485 is filed. After I-485 is filed, the beneficiary needs Advance Parole (AP) before international travel — leaving without AP abandons the I-485.
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