Immigration pathway · CC-BY-4.0
Marriage-based consular processing — Florida cost, NVC stage, and embassy interview
Foreign spouse abroad obtains an immigrant visa via consular processing through a U.S. embassy. The default package totals $1,455–$1,755 in government fees: I-130 ($675), DS-260 ($325 to DOS/NVC), NVC Affidavit of Support review ($120), USCIS Immigrant Fee ($235), and a panel-physician medical exam ($100–$400 abroad). Lower total than domestic AOS because the EAD and advance parole filings are unnecessary.
Default Florida cost range: $1,455 – $1,755
Filing package
USCIS, DOS, and NVC fees in integer cents. Source: backend public API at /immigration/calculator/cost?pathway=marriage_based_consular.
I-130 — Petition for Alien Relative
$675 paper / $625 online
U.S.-citizen petitioner establishes the spousal relationship; approval triggers NVC processing.
- INA § 204
DS-260 — Immigrant Visa Application
$325 paper
Beneficiary's immigrant visa application, submitted electronically through the Consular Electronic Application Center after NVC document review.
- INA § 221 (immigrant visa issuance)
- 22 CFR § 42.62
I-864 review fee (NVC) — Affidavit of Support review fee
$120 paper
NVC processing fee for the I-864 review — only charged in consular processing, not in AOS.
- INA § 213A
USCIS Immigrant Fee — USCIS Immigrant Fee (post-visa, pre-LPR card)
$235 paper
Paid to USCIS after visa issuance and U.S. entry, before the LPR card is produced.
- 8 CFR § 103.7
Panel-physician exam — Medical examination by panel physician (abroad)
$100 paper
Designated panel physician completes the medical and vaccination assessment before the embassy interview.
Note — Range: $100–$400 depending on country. Cost varies dramatically — typical Latin American panel physicians charge less than European or Asian.
- INA § 232
Eligibility
1. Valid marriage + I-130 approval
Same bona fide marriage requirement as AOS. The petition must be approved by USCIS before NVC processing begins.
- INA § 204(c)
2. Beneficiary abroad at filing or willing to depart
Consular processing is the appropriate path when the beneficiary is outside the U.S. or entered without inspection (and § 245(i) doesn't apply). Domestic visa overstays usually prefer AOS to avoid triggering inadmissibility bars upon departure.
- INA § 212(a)(9)(B)
3. Not inadmissible at the embassy interview
The consular officer adjudicates inadmissibility at the interview. Departure after a U.S. overstay of 180+ days triggers a 3-year bar; 1+ year triggers a 10-year bar (INA § 212(a)(9)(B)) — requiring an I-601 or I-601A waiver.
- INA § 212(a)(9)(B)
- INA § 212(i)
Common pitfalls
Triggering the 3/10-year unlawful-presence bar by departing
A foreign spouse who overstayed and then departs the U.S. for the embassy interview triggers the bar. The I-601A provisional waiver, filed with USCIS before departure, is the standard mitigation.
- INA § 212(a)(9)(B)(v)
Failure to update DS-260 between approval and entry
Changes in employment, address, or marriage facts between visa issuance and U.S. entry must be disclosed at the port of entry. Material omissions can support a misrepresentation finding under INA § 212(a)(6)(C).
- INA § 212(a)(6)(C)
Missing the USCIS Immigrant Fee triggers no LPR card
The $235 USCIS Immigrant Fee is paid online after entry; until it is paid, USCIS does not produce the physical LPR card. The status itself is conferred at admission, but employers and DMV often require the physical card.
- 8 CFR § 103.7
Primary statutes
- INA § 204
- I-130 petition procedure.
- INA § 221 (8 U.S.C. § 1201)
- Immigrant visa issuance — governs DS-260 adjudication.
- 22 CFR § 42.62
- Consular interview requirements.
- INA § 212(a)(9)(B)
- Unlawful presence bars — the central risk for consular processing of a visa-overstaying spouse.
Frequently asked questions
- Why is consular processing cheaper than AOS?
- It omits the EAD ($260), advance parole ($630), and the higher-cost U.S. medical exam ($200–$650 → $100–$400 abroad). Total: $1,455–$1,755 vs $3,205–$3,655 for AOS.
- Can a Florida petitioner file I-130 if the spouse is abroad?
- Yes. The petitioner files I-130 with USCIS regardless of the beneficiary's location. After approval USCIS forwards the petition to NVC for consular processing.
- How long does consular processing take after I-130 approval?
- NVC document collection: 2-3 months. Visa interview wait time varies by post — Havana, Bogotá, Mexico City often 8-14 months as of 2026; some posts faster. The Department of State publishes wait times at travel.state.gov.
- What is the I-601A provisional waiver and when is it needed?
- If the foreign spouse triggered the 3/10-year unlawful-presence bar by accumulating overstays in the U.S., the I-601A provisional waiver — filed with USCIS BEFORE departure — preserves the marriage-based path. Standard for foreign spouses who entered with a visa and overstayed.
Sources
- 1U.S. Department of State — Immigrant Visa Process(accessed 2026-06-01)
- 2USCIS — I-601A Provisional Unlawful Presence Waiver(accessed 2026-06-01)
- 3DOS Visa Bulletin(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).