Green Card renewal

Author
Discussion

h0b0

Original Poster:

7,598 posts

196 months

Thursday 20th January 2022
quotequote all
I am frankly stunned right now. Requested a renewal on my Green card last week and have it in my hands today. The application took less than 5 minutes and no need for anything else. No biometrics, no trip to Ottawa. My experience of USCIS was everything takes months and when you think you are at the finish line you have only really made it to the start.

I had considered becoming a citizen just to avoid this process. Not any more.

The Moose

22,847 posts

209 months

Saturday 22nd January 2022
quotequote all
yikes

That’s rather astonishing…we’re planning on citizenship when we get to 5 years for similar reasons.

h0b0

Original Poster:

7,598 posts

196 months

Saturday 22nd January 2022
quotequote all
That’s why I posted. I could not believe how quick and easy it was. I was expecting photocopies and scans of everything before attending 3 biometric sessions and then waiting months for a response. My green card was delivered yesterday after staring last week.

If I had known how easy it was going to be it would have eased something that has been bugging me for years.

NNH

1,518 posts

132 months

Saturday 22nd January 2022
quotequote all
I'm finding that each stage is easier than the last. From application to citizenship ceremony took 65 days.

dvs_dave

8,624 posts

225 months

Saturday 22nd January 2022
quotequote all
Coming up on my the expiration of my original green card (2023) I decided it was time for citizenship. Especially as I was the only non citizen in our little family unit, and don’t fancy potentially having to surrender SS benefits now I’m time served eligible should I no longer be in the country after 65. Who knows, right?

I applied for my citizenship September 1, had the interview Nov 4th, then the Oath ceremony where you actually become a citizen Dec 16th. 3-1/2 months end to end. Unheard of! Normally 15-18 months. Just waiting on my passport now…

NNH

1,518 posts

132 months

Saturday 22nd January 2022
quotequote all
dvs_dave said:
Coming up on my the expiration of my original green card (2023) I decided it was time for citizenship. Especially as I was the only non citizen in our little family unit, and don’t fancy potentially having to surrender SS benefits now I’m time served eligible should I no longer be in the country after 65. Who knows, right?

I applied for my citizenship September 1, had the interview Nov 4th, then the Oath ceremony where you actually become a citizen Dec 16th. 3-1/2 months end to end. Unheard of! Normally 15-18 months. Just waiting on my passport now…
I applied for my passport on Nov 12th, got the passport card in early December, and the booklet just before Christmas. I think the change of management has helped a bit!

dvs_dave

8,624 posts

225 months

Saturday 22nd January 2022
quotequote all
NNH said:
I applied for my passport on Nov 12th, got the passport card in early December, and the booklet just before Christmas. I think the change of management has helped a bit!
Must be. My neighbor applied mid-2020 and his oath ceremony ended up being only 3 weeks before mine.

BertieWooster

3,278 posts

164 months

Saturday 29th January 2022
quotequote all
dvs_dave said:
Coming up on my the expiration of my original green card (2023) I decided it was time for citizenship. Especially as I was the only non citizen in our little family unit, and don’t fancy potentially having to surrender SS benefits now I’m time served eligible should I no longer be in the country after 65. Who knows, right?

I applied for my citizenship September 1, had the interview Nov 4th, then the Oath ceremony where you actually become a citizen Dec 16th. 3-1/2 months end to end. Unheard of! Normally 15-18 months. Just waiting on my passport now…
What was the application process and interview like if you don't mind me asking? I've been eligible to apply for citizenship for a couple of years now and am thinking I should probably get on and do it.

Matt Harper

6,618 posts

201 months

Saturday 29th January 2022
quotequote all
BertieWooster said:
What was the application process and interview like if you don't mind me asking? I've been eligible to apply for citizenship for a couple of years now and am thinking I should probably get on and do it.
Not sure if my own experience is typical, but I''ve no reason to believe it isn't (other than the interview itself).

I had been in the US (on a succession of different employment-based visas) for 10 years when my permanent resident alien status was finalized in 2011. I applied for naturalization in 2016 through INS service center, Dallas TX.

Biometrics was organized in less than 6 weeks from mailing the paperwork.

The interview step came-up really fast too, I had my interview at the USCIS office in Orlando FL. The interview process itself was a little surreal, in the the officer was originally Chinese and I could hardly understand a word she was uttering to me, her accent was so strong.

So we had a bizarre situation where I was attempting, as an Englishman, to demonstrate my competence in spoken English to a Chinese woman, who seemed to struggle with the absolute basics.

My dog could have passed the civics test - however I read somewhere that more than 50% of US citizens would fail it, if tested.

We then had a long wait - about 11 months, before a letter arrived in the mail, asking me to attend the naturalization ceremony that same week!

There were at least 150 other folks at the ceremony - it was distinctly un-ceremonial. Most of the inductees were Cuban or Colombian. They had a very hokey show of hands for the various nationalities and when the various South American countries were called out, a huge eruption of cheers and whoops ensued. This made me wonder, if they loved their latin mother-nations so much, what the fk were they doing here?

Everybody has their own reasons for naturalizing or not, What I would note is that if you have a possibility to generate income outside of the US in your future, this may not be a smart move as USC's must pay tax on worldwide income - which would be very punishing for some.



dvs_dave

8,624 posts

225 months

Sunday 30th January 2022
quotequote all
BertieWooster said:
What was the application process and interview like if you don't mind me asking? I've been eligible to apply for citizenship for a couple of years now and am thinking I should probably get on and do it.
Very simple. Fill in the N400 form and pay the fee all online. Then wait for the various correspondence from USCIS, culminating in the interview (blew through it in about 15 mins, and make sure you’re current with your taxes!), and then the oath ceremony. Was 12 weeks end to end for me, despite them telling at the point of application to expect 15-18 months.

“Hardest” (but not at all) parts; listing all the dates and destinations I’d been out of the country the past 5 years, and studying for the civics test for which the USCIS: Civics Test app was very good for.

NNH

1,518 posts

132 months

Sunday 30th January 2022
quotequote all
Matt Harper said:
Everybody has their own reasons for naturalizing or not, What I would note is that if you have a possibility to generate income outside of the US in your future, this may not be a smart move as USC's must pay tax on worldwide income - which would be very punishing for some.
This is true, but most major countries have a dual-taxation agreement with the USA. For us, this means that we've been reporting all UK income to the IRS, and noting that since UK tax rates are higher than US, we don't owe anything extra to the US Treasury. Where it becomes a problem is if you have significant income in places like the Gulf with lower tax rates than the US so you have to pay the difference to the IRS.

BertieWooster

3,278 posts

164 months

Sunday 30th January 2022
quotequote all
Matt Harper said:
Everybody has their own reasons for naturalizing or not, What I would note is that if you have a possibility to generate income outside of the US in your future, this may not be a smart move as USC's must pay tax on worldwide income - which would be very punishing for some.
I did all my tax free earning when I worked for NATO before we moved here. All income is US based now - apart from a UK pension which I doubt I'll be getting for quite a while. smile

dvs_dave said:
Very simple. Fill in the N400 form and pay the fee all online. Then wait for the various correspondence from USCIS, culminating in the interview (blew through it in about 15 mins, and make sure you’re current with your taxes!), and then the oath ceremony. Was 12 weeks end to end for me, despite them telling at the point of application to expect 15-18 months.

“Hardest” (but not at all) parts; listing all the dates and destinations I’d been out of the country the past 5 years, and studying for the civics test for which the USCIS: Civics Test app was very good for.
Thanks for that - I downloaded the civics test app so will get studying. I might as well get the process started as I'm guessing it won't get any cheaper. I'm surprised it only took you 12 weeks - I know it takes some people ages.

alabbasi

2,511 posts

87 months

Sunday 30th January 2022
quotequote all
Unfortunately all of that can change with the next administration

Edited by alabbasi on Sunday 30th January 23:34

The Moose

22,847 posts

209 months

Sunday 30th January 2022
quotequote all
NNH said:
Matt Harper said:
Everybody has their own reasons for naturalizing or not, What I would note is that if you have a possibility to generate income outside of the US in your future, this may not be a smart move as USC's must pay tax on worldwide income - which would be very punishing for some.
This is true, but most major countries have a dual-taxation agreement with the USA. For us, this means that we've been reporting all UK income to the IRS, and noting that since UK tax rates are higher than US, we don't owe anything extra to the US Treasury. Where it becomes a problem is if you have significant income in places like the Gulf with lower tax rates than the US so you have to pay the difference to the IRS.
I also thought that if the IRS deemed you to be a US person (which you’re almost certainly going to meet as a GC holder due to the substantial presence test), you were taxed on your worldwide income anyway?

I thought the difference between a GC holder and a US citizen was that if you choose to leave the US, you have to pay taxes in the US even though you are not resident here (dual-taxation treaty etc aside).

If my tax advisor and I have this wrong, I’d very much like to know!

dvs_dave

8,624 posts

225 months

Sunday 30th January 2022
quotequote all
GC Holder and Citizens are regarded equally by the IRS, but not by the SSA. As a citizen you can claim SS wherever you are in the world. As a GC holder, you can only claim whilst present in the US.

See here for more on U.S. International Social Security Agreements.. Which countries have agreements, what the taxation agreements are, etc. Important thing is that US recognizes and credits UK Social Security contributions (National Insurance) and vice versa.

NNH

1,518 posts

132 months

Monday 31st January 2022
quotequote all
The Moose said:
I also thought that if the IRS deemed you to be a US person (which you’re almost certainly going to meet as a GC holder due to the substantial presence test), you were taxed on your worldwide income anyway?

I thought the difference between a GC holder and a US citizen was that if you choose to leave the US, you have to pay taxes in the US even though you are not resident here (dual-taxation treaty etc aside).

If my tax advisor and I have this wrong, I’d very much like to know!
As dvs_dave said below, citizens and GC holders are treated equally by the IRS, but it's a lot easier to drop your Green Card if you suddenly get a $1m job offer in Dubai!

dvs_dave

8,624 posts

225 months

Monday 31st January 2022
quotequote all
NNH said:
As dvs_dave said below, citizens and GC holders are treated equally by the IRS, but it's a lot easier to drop your Green Card if you suddenly get a $1m job offer in Dubai!
That’s true, but no one is getting $1m expat job offers in Dubai. The market doesn’t exist.

h0b0

Original Poster:

7,598 posts

196 months

Monday 31st January 2022
quotequote all
dvs_dave said:
NNH said:
As dvs_dave said below, citizens and GC holders are treated equally by the IRS, but it's a lot easier to drop your Green Card if you suddenly get a $1m job offer in Dubai!
That’s true, but no one is getting $1m expat job offers in Dubai. The market doesn’t exist.
Maybe not, but it has been a pain in the backside for Boris Johnson who ended up renouncing his citizenship in 2016 after paying between $50k and $100k in additional tax charges on the sale of a house.

The Moose

22,847 posts

209 months

Monday 31st January 2022
quotequote all
NNH said:
The Moose said:
I also thought that if the IRS deemed you to be a US person (which you’re almost certainly going to meet as a GC holder due to the substantial presence test), you were taxed on your worldwide income anyway?

I thought the difference between a GC holder and a US citizen was that if you choose to leave the US, you have to pay taxes in the US even though you are not resident here (dual-taxation treaty etc aside).

If my tax advisor and I have this wrong, I’d very much like to know!
As dvs_dave said below, citizens and GC holders are treated equally by the IRS, but it's a lot easier to drop your Green Card if you suddenly get a $1m job offer in Dubai!
That's what I thought...but hoped I was wrong and Matt Harper knew something I didn't hehe

NMNeil

5,860 posts

50 months

Monday 31st January 2022
quotequote all
The Moose said:
yikes

That’s rather astonishing…we’re planning on citizenship when we get to 5 years for similar reasons.
When i had my citizenship interview the young lady asked if I spoke English. My reply of, "Perfectly, and I'm now trying to learn to speak American", had her laughing so much the interview ended very quickly, and she approved my application. biggrin