Petitioner and relationship category
The quiz separates U.S. citizen and permanent resident petitioners, then checks whether the relationship may fit an immediate-relative or family-preference path.
Immigration Tools
Answer 7 source-backed questions to screen basic I-130 family petition planning factors.
This free family petition quiz screens basic I-130 planning factors. It reviews petitioner status, qualifying family relationship, beneficiary location, deportation history, visa overstay concerns, sponsor income planning, and prior I-130 history. The result is a planning summary, not a legal eligibility decision, and USCIS, the Department of State, or an immigration judge may review separate evidence, admissibility, and waiver questions.
The quiz separates U.S. citizen and permanent resident petitioners, then checks whether the relationship may fit an immediate-relative or family-preference path.
Beneficiary location, overstay history, deportation history, and admissibility concerns can affect whether later steps happen in the United States or through a consulate.
Family cases often need Affidavit of Support planning after the petition stage, including household size, income, assets, and possible joint-sponsor records.
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 petitioner status, qualifying relationship, filing options, and current instructions.
Review family-based immigrant visa process steps when the beneficiary will use consular processing.
Check financial sponsorship rules and evidence before relying on income-related quiz results.
Confirm current fees and fee exemptions before preparing or filing a benefit request.
7 quick questions to assess your eligibility to sponsor a family member.
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.