I am a US citizen and I am engaged to someone abroad. My friend said the K-1 fiancé visa is faster than a spousal green card. Is that true? What are the requirements and what happens after the K-1 holder arrives in the US?
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K-1 was faster for us by about 4 months compared to the spousal route — but it added the pressure of a 90-day marriage deadline after arrival, which creates stress you should not underestimate. We were fine, but I have seen couples rush into weddings they were not emotionally ready for because of that clock. Also, the K-1 holder cannot work legally until they file for work authorization after arriving, which added another 3–5 month wait after the wedding. One underrated advantage of the spousal visa: the spouse arrives already married with a green card in hand — no 90-day countdown, no separate adjustment of status filing.
K-1 Process:
Important: K-1 holders may not work between entry and their EAD approval — plan finances accordingly.
The K-1 vs spousal visa debate misses the bigger picture for most couples. If you are already legally married, use the spousal route — the K-1 exists specifically to allow couples to get married in the US. If you are not yet married and want the ceremony to happen in the US for sentimental or family reasons, K-1 makes sense. Cost comparison often favors K-1 slightly in government fees but the AOS filing after marriage adds substantial costs. Also, consider that if your fiancé enters on K-1 and you choose not to marry within 90 days for any reason, they must depart — there is no alternative. The 90-day clock cannot be extended under any circumstances.
The K-1 fiancé visa allows a foreign national engaged to a US citizen to enter the US for the specific purpose of marriage. Requirements include: both parties must be legally free to marry, must have met in person within the past two years (waivers available in limited circumstances), and the USC must intend to marry within 90 days of the K-1 holder’s entry. After marriage within the 90-day window, the foreign national must file Form I-485 to adjust status to lawful permanent resident — they cannot use the K-1 to leave and re-enter as a permanent resident. The K-1 is not inherently faster than consular processing in all cases; current total K-1-to-green-card timelines are often 18–30 months, comparable to the spousal visa route.