I have had my green card for almost 4 years. My neighbor told me I need to wait 5 years but my spouse is a US citizen. Do different rules apply for me and when exactly can I file?
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The 3-year spouse rule has an often-missed catch: you must remain married to the same US citizen continuously until you take the Oath of Allegiance — not just when you file. If you separate or divorce between filing and the oath, you lose the 3-year eligibility and may need to wait until you have served the full 5 years total. USCIS will ask at the naturalization interview whether your marital status has changed since filing. Also, if your spouse was not a US citizen for the entire 3-year period — for example, they naturalized only 2 years ago — you do not qualify for the 3-year track and must wait the full 5 years. Confirm the exact dates of your spouse’s citizenship.
Filing readiness checklist:
Processing time varies by field office: 6–18 months currently.
I was in the 3-year category and filed at exactly 2 years and 9 months (90 days early). The 90-day early filing window is really valuable — processing takes several months and you want to become a citizen as soon as possible. My N-400 was approved about 8 months after filing. The biggest thing I wish someone had told me: your continuous residence clock can be broken by extended absences — even one absence over 6 months creates a presumption of interrupted continuous residence. Check your travel history carefully before filing and calculate your physical presence precisely using your passport stamps and I-94 records.
The general naturalization requirement is 5 years of continuous residence as a lawful permanent resident. However, spouses of US citizens qualify under an expedited 3-year rule — you may apply after 3 years of LPR status, provided you have been married to and living with the same US citizen for all 3 years and your spouse has been a US citizen for the full 3 years. Physical presence requirement also differs: the standard 5-year track requires 30 months of physical presence; the 3-year spouse track requires 18 months of physical presence within those 3 years. With nearly 4 years of LPR status, if you meet the marriage requirements, you are already eligible to file. USCIS allows filing up to 90 days before reaching the 3-year mark.