Basic naturalization factors
The quiz starts with green card status, age, and residence time because most N-400 applicants must meet permanent resident and statutory-period requirements before filing.
Immigration Tools
Answer 7 source-backed questions to screen basic N-400 naturalization factors.
This free citizenship eligibility quiz screens basic USCIS naturalization factors for N-400 planning. It reviews permanent resident status, age, residence time, marriage to a U.S. citizen, continuous residence, travel concerns, criminal history, English requirements, and possible English-language exceptions. The result is a planning summary, not a legal eligibility decision, and USCIS makes the final decision after reviewing the full application and records.
The quiz starts with green card status, age, and residence time because most N-400 applicants must meet permanent resident and statutory-period requirements before filing.
Travel history, continuous residence, physical presence, tax history, and criminal records can affect timing and whether the case needs attorney review before filing.
Some long-term residents may qualify for English-language exceptions, and some applicants may need disability accommodation or N-648 planning before the interview.
Use these official pages to verify current form rules, filing posture, fees, processing-time data, and category limits. This page is a planning aid, not a filing decision.
Check current naturalization filing options, form edition, and eligibility materials.
Review interview, English, civics, and retest guidance before relying on quiz results.
Check age-based English exceptions, disability accommodations, and Form N-648 posture.
Confirm current fees and fee exemptions before preparing or filing a benefit request.
7 quick questions to screen your basic N-400 factors.
Disclaimer: This quiz provides general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Immigration law is complex and every case is unique. Results are based solely on the answers you provide and may not reflect your complete situation. Consult a qualified immigration attorney or accredited representative for advice specific to your case.