Immigration pathway · CC-BY-4.0
K-1 fiancé(e) visa + post-marriage AOS — Florida cost, 90-day rule, and dual-phase filing
Foreign fiancé(e) enters on a K-1 nonimmigrant visa, marries the U.S.-citizen petitioner within 90 days of entry, then adjusts status. The two-phase Florida package totals $3,370–$3,670: pre-entry I-129F ($675) + DS-160 ($265 to DOS) + panel-physician medical ($100–$400 abroad), plus post-entry I-485 ($1,440) + I-765 ($260) + I-131 ($630). Higher total than consular processing because both phases bear filing fees.
Default Florida cost range: $3,370 – $3,670
Filing package
USCIS, DOS, and NVC fees in integer cents. Source: backend public API at /immigration/calculator/cost?pathway=k1_fiance.
I-129F — Petition for Alien Fiancé(e)
$675 paper
Establishes the bona fide intention to marry within 90 days of entry. Paper-only; no online filing option.
- INA § 101(a)(15)(K)
- INA § 214(d)
DS-160 — Nonimmigrant Visa Application (K-1)
$265 paper
Submitted to the consular post once NVC forwards the I-129F approval. Fee paid at the embassy.
- INA § 222
Panel-physician exam — Medical examination (abroad)
$100 paper
Performed abroad by the panel physician before the K-1 visa interview.
Note — Range: $100–$400 abroad.
- INA § 232
I-485 (post-marriage) — Adjustment of Status after marriage
$1,440 paper / $1,375 online
Filed within 90 days of entry, after the marriage is solemnized.
- INA § 245
- 8 CFR § 245.1
I-765 (concurrent EAD) — Employment Authorization (concurrent with AOS)
$260 paper
Authorizes work while the I-485 is pending. K-1 entry includes 90 days of automatic work authorization; the I-765 covers the post-AOS-filing period.
- 8 CFR § 274a.12(c)(9)
I-131 (advance parole) — Application for Travel Document
$630 paper / $580 online
Allows international travel during the AOS adjudication period.
- INA § 212(d)(5)
Eligibility
1. Bona fide intent to marry within 90 days
INA § 101(a)(15)(K) requires the parties to have met in person within 2 years prior (subject to limited cultural or extreme-hardship waivers) and to intend to marry within 90 days of K-1 entry.
- INA § 101(a)(15)(K)
- 8 CFR § 214.2(k)
2. U.S.-citizen petitioner
Only U.S. citizens can file I-129F. Lawful permanent residents must use the marriage-based consular or AOS path instead.
- INA § 214(d)
3. Foreign fiancé(e) not married + admissible
Both parties must be legally free to marry — prior marriages must be terminated by divorce or death and documented. The foreign fiancé(e) must clear INA § 212(a) inadmissibility at the K-1 interview.
- INA § 212(a)
Common pitfalls
Marrying someone other than the K-1 petitioner
The K-1 visa is fiancé-specific. Marriage to a different U.S. citizen within the 90-day window does NOT support AOS — the foreign spouse must depart and consular-process or seek a § 245(d) waiver.
- INA § 245(d)
Failing to marry within 90 days
If the parties do not marry within 90 days of K-1 entry, status terminates and the foreign fiancé(e) must depart. There is no extension mechanism.
- 8 CFR § 214.2(k)(10)
Treating K-2 children as automatic AOS qualifiers
K-2 children (under 21, unmarried) accompanying the K-1 must independently file I-485 to adjust status. They follow the K-1 parent but aren't automatic LPRs.
- 8 CFR § 245.1(i)
Primary statutes
- INA § 101(a)(15)(K)
- K-1 fiancé(e) nonimmigrant classification.
- INA § 214(d)
- Visa issuance criteria for K-1 applicants.
- 8 CFR § 214.2(k)
- Regulatory implementation of the K-1 visa.
- INA § 245(d)
- AOS limited to marriage to the K-1 petitioner — bars marriage to a different U.S. citizen.
Frequently asked questions
- Why is K-1 more expensive than consular processing?
- K-1 charges fees in both phases — pre-entry ($675 + $265 + $100-$400 = $1,040–$1,340) and post-entry AOS ($1,440 + $260 + $630 = $2,330). Total: $3,370–$3,670 vs $1,455–$1,755 for direct consular processing.
- Can a K-1 holder work in Florida immediately on entry?
- Yes — for 90 days. K-1 admission includes employment authorization for the validity period (90 days). After AOS filing, the I-765 EAD covers the subsequent period.
- Does K-1 require an in-person meeting before filing?
- Yes — INA § 101(a)(15)(K) requires the parties to have met in person within 2 years before filing, subject to limited cultural or extreme-hardship waivers documented at I-129F filing.
- Is K-1 faster than direct consular processing?
- Sometimes. K-1 processing at USCIS typically runs 8-12 months; consular CR-1/IR-1 (direct spouse visa) is now often comparable. Choice depends on whether the parties prefer the foreign fiancé to arrive before or after the marriage.
Sources
- 1USCIS — Fiancé(e) Visas(accessed 2026-06-01)
- 2U.S. Department of State — Nonimmigrant Visa Statistics(accessed 2026-06-01)
Legal
This data is generated by the Unilegal Florida immigration methodology model for educational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. The Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C.), Title 8 of the Code of Federal Regulations, USCIS policy manual, the Federal Register fee rules (incl. 89 FR 6194), Public Law 119-21 (H.R. 1, 2025), and Florida Statutes are the authoritative sources. USCIS fees and EOIR caselaw change frequently; always verify against uscis.gov + justice.gov/eoir.
Immigration matters affect lawful status, employment authorization, and removal exposure. Consult a Florida-licensed attorney verified at floridabar.org — never a 'notario' or non-attorney consultant. Notarios cannot give legal advice in the United States; fraudulent representations to USCIS trigger lifetime inadmissibility under INA § 212(a)(6)(C).