I-730, Refugee/Asylee Relative Petition
If you are a principal refugee admitted to the United States within the past 2 years or a principal asylee who was granted asylum within the past 2 years, you (the petitioner) may use this Form I-730, Refugee/Asylee Relative Petition, to request that your spouse and unmarried children under 21 years of age (the beneficiaries) join you in the United States. In certain circumstances, unmarried children over 21 years old may be eligible for following-to-join immigration benefits. For more information, see our Child Status Protection Act page. In some cases, we may also grant a waiver of the 2-year filing deadline for humanitarian reasons. See the Instructions for Form I-730 for more information.
REMINDER: Please submit a passport-style photograph or a recently taken clear photograph of each family member you are petitioning for. If you do not provide the required photo, we may issue a request for evidence, and it could take longer to process your petition.
The processing of Form I-730 depends on various factors, including your status as a principal asylee or principal refugee and the current location of your beneficiary. Form I-730 processing is divided into three steps:
- Receipt and initial domestic processing;
- Beneficiary interview and additional processing; and
- Department of State returns (as appropriate).
Receipt and Initial Domestic Processing
See the Where to File section below for more information on filing Form I-730. After we receive Form I-730, USCIS Refugee and International Operations (RIO) performs initial domestic processing for initial eligibility review. Generally, USCIS processes Form I-730 petitions in the order we receive them. If we need additional evidence, we will issue you a request for evidence (RFE) and give you an opportunity to respond.
Beneficiary Interview and Additional Processing
Once we complete initial domestic processing of your Form I-730, and if we determine that your relative appears eligible as a follow-to-join asylee or refugee, we will send your petition to the appropriate office to interview your spouse or child and continue processing. After receiving your petition, the interviewing office will notify you, your spouse or child, and any representative of record, and provide additional instructions.
If your beneficiary is located within the United States, we will forward the petition to the appropriate USCIS domestic field office based on the beneficiary’s residence. We will send you a transfer notice listing the USCIS field office. You can find more information on USCIS domestic field offices on the USCIS Field Offices page.
If your beneficiary is located outside of the United States in a country where USCIS has an international field office with jurisdiction over your beneficiary’s location, we will forward the petition to the USCIS international field office. We will send you a transfer notice listing the USCIS international field office that will interview your beneficiary and complete processing. Currently, USCIS maintains international field offices in Bangladesh, China, Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, India, Kenya, Mexico, Qatar, and Turkey. Please note that the USCIS Nairobi Field Office also processes following-to-join refugee (FTJ-R) petitions for beneficiaries located in Burundi and Uganda. You can find information about USCIS international offices on the USCIS International Immigration Offices page.
If your beneficiary is located outside of the United States in a country with no USCIS international field office presence or jurisdiction, we will forward the petition through the Department of State’s (DOS) National Visa Center (NVC) to a U.S. embassy or consulate with jurisdiction over the beneficiary’s residence. A DOS embassy or consulate will interview and complete processing of your beneficiary on USCIS’ behalf and will determine your beneficiary’s eligibility to travel to the United States. You can find more information about U.S. embassies and consulates on the DOS U.S. Embassy Locator page, which also includes details on whether the U.S. embassy or consulate is open for interviews and additional processing.
Department of State Returns
If DOS interviews and processes the beneficiary outside the United States and finds a basis for ineligibility, DOS will return the petition to USCIS RIO, the initial domestic processing component, for further review.
Form Details
Dates are listed in mm/dd/yy format.
If you complete and print this form to mail it, make sure that the form edition date and page numbers are visible at the bottom of all pages and that all pages are from the same form edition. If any of the form’s pages are missing or are from a different form edition, we may reject your form.
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Mail your petition to:
U.S. Postal Service (USPS):
USCIS
Attn: I-730
P.O. Box 20018
Phoenix, AZ 85036-0018
FedEx, UPS, and DHL deliveries:
USCIS
Attn: I-730 (Box 20018)
2108 E. Elliot Rd.
Tempe, AZ 85284-1806
You can find the filing fee for Form I-730 on our Fee Schedule page.
Please do not submit this checklist with your Form I-730. The checklist is an optional tool to use as you prepare your form, but does not replace statutory, regulatory, and form instruction requirements. We recommend that you review these requirements before completing and submitting your form. Do not send original documents unless specifically requested in the form instructions or applicable regulations.
If you submit any documents (copies or original documents, if requested) in a foreign language, you must include a full English translation along with a certification from the translator verifying that the translation is complete and accurate, and that the translator is competent to translate from the foreign language into English.
Did you provide the following?
- Proof of your status as a principal asylee or refugee in the United States, for example:
- Form I-94, Arrival/Departure Record (granting you asylee or refugee status);
- A court order from an immigration judge;
- Form I-766, Employment Authorization Document (EAD);
- Form I-512, Authorization for Advance Parole; or
- Form I-571, Refugee Travel Document.
- A passport-style photograph or a recent, clear photograph of each family member you are filing for;
- A copy of both sides of your family member’s Form I-94, Arrival-Departure Record, if they are in the United States; and
- Primary evidence of a family relationship for each family member you are submitting a petition for:
- Spouse:
- A copy of your marriage certificate, evidence you each legally terminated any previous marriages (if either you or your spouse were previously married), and evidence of legal name changes (if applicable).
- Child:
- If you (the petitioner) are the child’s mother: A copy of your child’s birth certificate showing their name and your name, and evidence of legal name changes if the names on the birth certificate do not match the names on the petition.
- If you (the petitioner) are the child’s father: A copy of your child’s birth certificate showing the child’s name and your name, and a copy of your marriage certificate showing you were married to the child’s mother. If you were not married to the child’s mother, then you must either submit evidence that the child was legitimated by civil authorities or submit evidence that a bona fide parent-child relationship exists or existed between you and the child. Legitimation laws may vary by country. (For more information on evidence of legitimation for Form I-730, see the USCIS Policy Manual, Volume 4, Part C, Chapter 4.)
- Stepchild:
- A copy of your child’s birth certificate, a copy of the marriage certificate between you and the child’s natural parent, and evidence of legal name changes (if applicable).
- Adopted child:
- A certified copy of the adoption decree, evidence that you lived with the child for at least 2 years, a certified copy of the court order granting custody (if applicable), and evidence of legal name changes (if applicable).
- Spouse:
If primary evidence is not available from civil authorities, submit the following as secondary evidence:
- Religious institution record;
- School record; or
- Census record.
If secondary evidence is not available, submit affidavits (sworn written statements related to the facts at issue). If you submit affidavits, they must overcome the absence of primary and secondary evidence.
For a complete list of supporting documentation, see the Form I-730 Instructions. See also the USCIS Policy Manual, Volume 4, Part C, Chapter 4.
Filing Tips: Review our Tips for Filing Forms by Mail page for information on how to ensure we will accept your form.
Don’t forget to sign your form. We will reject any unsigned form.
Following-to-Join Refugee (FTJ-R) Petitions Only
On Feb. 1, 2018, USCIS and the Department of State (DOS) implemented procedures requiring additional information for FTJ-R beneficiaries to determine eligibility. You should submit a Form I-590, Registration for Classification as Refugee (PDF, 691.55 KB), for your FTJ-R relative along with the Form I-730; your relative does not need to complete Parts 5 or 8 or sign the Form I-590. We will not deny a Form I-730 that does not have a Form I-590, but we will request this information from petitioners if they do not submit it.
You cannot use Form I-590 to request refugee status directly with USCIS. For information about the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program, see our Refugees page.
Change of Address
It is important to notify USCIS or DOS if your contact information or your beneficiary’s contact information changes.
- Please visit uscis.gov/addresschange for information on how to change your address with USCIS.
- If your beneficiary is located outside the United States and a USCIS international field office will interview and process them, email the USCIS international field office if the beneficiary’s contact information changes from what is on their Form I-730. You can find contact information at the USCIS International Immigration Offices page.
- If your beneficiary is located outside of the United States and a U.S. embassy or consulate will interview and process them, contact the National Visa Center and the U.S. embassy or consulate. Find contact information for U.S. embassies and consulates at the DOS U.S. Embassy Locator page.
Form I-730 Beneficiaries Located Outside the United States Where There Is No U.S. Government Presence
USCIS is working closely with DOS to identify how to process Form I-730 petitions in locations outside the United States where there is not a U.S. government presence. If your beneficiary previously resided in a country without a U.S. government presence but has left that country, please update their address information, using the instructions above, so either USCIS or DOS can process them in a third country.
Outside of Normal Processing Times Inquiry
If the most recent notice you received indicated that a USCIS office is processing your Form I-730, and it is taking longer than the normal processing times listed for Form I-730 petitions on our Processing Times page, you may submit an “outside of normal processing times” inquiry for your pending Form I-730.
- For Form I-730 petitions being processed domestically by the HART Service Center, USCIS Refugee and International Operations, or a USCIS field office, you may call the USCIS Contact Center and submit a case inquiry. Please note that the USCIS Refugee and International Operations domestic office is not a public-facing office and does not accept requests or inquiries made in person.
- For Form I-730 petitions pending at a USCIS international field office outside the United States, please call the USCIS Contact Center or email the USCIS international office processing your petition. You can find contact information for international offices at the USCIS International Immigration Offices page.
- USCIS does not have processing time information for Form I-730 petitions pending with DOS. For Form I-730 petitions being processed by a U.S. embassy or consulate, see the Department of State U.S. Embassy Locator page for contact information.
Note: USCIS asylum offices do not have information about pending Form I-730 petitions and do not accept requests or inquiries about Form I-730 petitions. You should not visit a USCIS asylum office in person or contact any USCIS asylum office for inquiries or requests on Form I-730 petitions.
Expedite Requests
For information on making an expedite request for USCIS processing, please refer to our How to Make an Expedite Request page, which includes information on expedite criteria. Because granting an expedite request means that we would adjudicate that requestor's benefit before others who filed earlier, we carefully weigh the urgency and merit of each expedite request. If your situation matches any of the USCIS expedite criteria, you have already filed your Form I-730 with USCIS, and you would like to request expedited processing, please check the most recent notice you have received and use the chart below to submit your expedite request to the USCIS office processing your petition.
Please refer to your latest receipt notice or case transfer notice from USCIS.
If your Form I-730 is being processed by | Then submit your expedite request to |
---|---|
The HART Service Center, USCIS Refugee and International Operations domestic office, or a USCIS domestic field office | The USCIS Contact Center |
A USCIS international field office | The USCIS Contact Center or the international field office processing your petition. See the International Immigration Offices page for contact information. |
Corrections to Submitted Form I-730 Petitions
If you have filed your Form I-730 and need to update information or make changes, call the USCIS Contact Center. Please have your most recent receipt or transfer notice available when you call the USCIS Contact Center.