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Georgia Family-Based Immigration Lawyers

Family-based immigration allows U.S. citizens and permanent residents to sponsor certain family members. The process involves filing petitions, meeting income requirements, and navigating visa availability.

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Benefits of Hiring a Family-Based Immigration Attorney

Immigration law changes constantly — new executive orders, policy memos, and court decisions can affect your case overnight. An attorney stays current so you don't miss critical changes.

A single mistake on an application can result in years of delays, outright denial, or even trigger deportation proceedings. The stakes of getting it wrong are enormous.

USCIS and immigration courts have their own complex procedures, forms, and deadlines that are nothing like regular courts. An attorney navigates this system daily.

If you're in removal proceedings, you have no right to a court-appointed attorney. Having private counsel can be the difference between staying in the country and being deported.

An immigration attorney can identify visa categories or relief options you didn't know existed — there are dozens of pathways, and the right one depends on your specific situation.

Common Questions About Family-Based Immigration

General information only — not legal advice.

Which family members can I sponsor?

U.S. citizens can sponsor spouses, children, parents, and siblings. Permanent residents can sponsor spouses and unmarried children. Immediate relatives have no annual limits.

What is the affidavit of support?

A legally binding contract (Form I-864) where the sponsor promises to financially support the immigrant, demonstrating income at or above 125% of the federal poverty guidelines.