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First 30 Days in the USA — Checklist for New Immigrants

Just arrived in the USA? A complete checklist for your first month: SSN, driver's license, bank account, housing, health insurance, phone, work, and Polish community spots in your city, step by step.

The first 30 days in the USA are crucial. What to do, in what order, to avoid wasting time and money? A checklist for 4 weeks.

Week 1 — Urgent Matters

Day 1-2: Shelter + Phone

  • 📍 Temporary accommodation: AirBnb, motel, friends, Polish hostel (Greenpoint in NYC has several)
  • 📱 Prepaid phone: Mint Mobile ($15/month), Cricket, T-Mobile prepaid. No SSN needed. Provides you with a local number — essential for all other matters.
  • 🗺 Download apps: Google Maps, Uber/Lyft, WhatsApp (for contact with Poland), Venmo/Zelle (transfers in the USA)

Day 3-5: Social Security Number (SSN)

SSN is the "holy grail" — without it, almost nothing works in the USA.

  • Go to the local SSA office (make an appointment at ssa.gov/locator). Without an appointment: long lines.
  • Documents: passport + visa/Green Card + I-94 (entry confirmation) + proof of address (if you have it)
  • SSN arrives by mail in 2-4 weeks
  • ⚠️ Some newly granted GC holders receive SSN automatically from USCIS — check your welcome packet

Related: [[gdzie-wyrobic-ssn]]

Day 5-7: Bank Account

  • Polish banks in the USA: PSFCU (Polish & Slavic Federal Credit Union), PNA FCU — best for new immigrants, Polish staff
  • Without SSN: Bank of America, Chase, Wells Fargo — require ITIN or passport + proof of address
  • Online banks with no fees: Charles Schwab, Capital One 360, Ally — require SSN/ITIN
  • What you need right away: debit card, direct deposit setup, mobile banking

Related: [[jak-otworzyc-konto-bankowe-w-usa-bez-ssn]]

Week 2 — Paperwork + Transportation

Day 8-10: Driver's License / State ID

  • Exchanging a Polish driver's license is NOT automatic — most states require passing a knowledge test + road test
  • Test available in Polish in: NY, NJ, IL, MA, CA, MI (check locally)
  • If you don't have a driver's license from Poland: permit first (study), then road test after 6 months
  • State ID (if you don't drive): required as proof of identity — DMV/MVA. Often $10-30.

Related: [[jak-zdac-driving-test-w-usa]]

Day 10-14: Permanent Housing

  • Polish neighborhoods in major cities (cheap + Polish staff): NYC — Greenpoint, Maspeth, Ridgewood, Manhattan north. Chicago — Belmont/Avondale. NJ — Linden, Garfield, Wallington. Detroit — Hamtramck.
  • Without a credit score: harder. Requires a deposit, co-signer, or a Polish landlord.
  • Check: average 2.5-3x monthly rent required as income

Related: [[wynajem-mieszkania-w-usa-bez-credit-score]]

Week 3 — Health, Work, Formal Matters

Day 15-17: Health Insurance

  • Without insurance, one visit to a doctor can cost $100-300, an ER visit $1,000-10,000
  • If you have a new job — you typically wait 30-90 days for employer insurance
  • In the meantime: Marketplace (Healthcare.gov) available for GC holders, some states Medicaid (Medicaid for undocumented: non-standard, check locally)
  • Plans with a 6-month waiting period: short-term medical insurance ($50-150/month, limited coverage)
  • In case of emergency: Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHC) — visits for $20-40 regardless of insurance. List: findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov

Related: [[er-vs-urgent-care-vs-telehealth-kiedy-gdzie]] · [[jak-dziala-marketplace-medicaid-w-usa]]

Day 18-21: Work

  • With work authorization (Green Card, EAD, H-1B): Indeed, ZipRecruiter, LinkedIn, Glassdoor
  • Without papers: Polish FB groups ("Polska Praca NYC", "Polacy w Chicago — Praca"), Polish newspapers, Polish churches (bulletin boards)
  • First job for a new immigrant: typically construction, home, Polish shops, restaurants. Work on 1099 (no benefits) or cash (tax risky).
  • Build a U.S. resume: one page, no photo, no date of birth — different from Polish!

Related: [[cv-w-stylu-amerykanskim-vs-polskim]] · [[jak-znalezc-prace-w-usa-bez-angielskiego]] · [[praca-w-usa-bez-papierow-realia-i-alternatywy]]

Week 4 — Long-term

Day 22-24: ITIN (if without SSN)

  • If you do not qualify for SSN — apply for ITIN to be able to file taxes, open accounts, build credit
  • Form W-7 + passport, preferably through an Acceptance Agent

Related: [[itin-numer-podatkowy-co-to-jak-zdobyc]]

Day 25-27: Building Credit

  • Secured credit card: Discover, Capital One — $200-500 deposit, works like a normal card
  • After 6-12 months: first "real" credit card
  • Build the habit: pay 100% balance every month, no more than 30% utilization

Related: [[credit-score-w-usa-jak-budowac-od-zera]]

Day 28-30: Polish Consulate + Polish Matters

  • Register at the Polish consulate (online: gov.pl) — crucial in case of passport theft
  • Check if you need to renew your Polish passport (passport must be valid for at least 6 months when traveling)
  • Voting card for elections in Poland — if elections are taking place, you can vote at the consulate

Related: [[konsulaty-rp-usa-uk-niemcy-kontakt-sprawy]]

What to Ignore / Postpone

  • DO NOT pay immediately for things in stores — look for coupons (Walmart Savings Catcher, Ibotta), loyalty cards (Stop&Shop Card, Wegmans)
  • DO NOT take the first apartment you find — you will overpay
  • DO NOT buy a car until you have a job and address — insurance costs $150-400/month without credit
  • DO NOT take a cellular plan on contract until you have a credit history — you will overpay

Polish Map in Major Cities

🗽 NYC area

  • Greenpoint, Brooklyn — historic Polish center, many Polish shops, restaurants, churches
  • Maspeth, Queens — newer Polish community, middle class, many Polish businesses
  • Ridgewood, Queens — newest Polish community (fresh immigrants, Polish shops)
  • Garfield, NJ — average Polish community, Polish staff in banks, offices
  • Linden, NJ — large concentration, churches, shops
  • Wallington, NJ — densest Polish population in the USA (per capita)
  • Polish & Slavic Federal Credit Union (PSFCU) — Brooklyn HQ, branches in other cities
  • Nowy Dziennik — Polish weekly

🏙 Chicago area

  • Avondale + Belmont + Cragin — key Polish neighborhoods
  • Norridge and Niles — middle-class Polish community
  • Park Ridge + Des Plaines — upper class
  • PNA Federal Credit Union — Polish bank
  • Polonia Polish News and Dziennik Związkowy — newspapers
  • Basilica of St. Hyacinth — historic Polish church

🚗 Detroit area

  • Hamtramck — historic Polish community, but now multicultural
  • Sterling Heights + Troy — newer Polish community (better economy)

Polish Emergency Number in the USA

  • 911 — ambulance / police / fire (universal)
  • Polish Consulate in case of crisis:
    • NYC: +1 646 237 2100
    • Chicago: +1 312 337 8166
    • LA: +1 310 442 8500
    • Houston: +1 713 974 0461
    • Embassy Washington: +1 202 234 3800
  • Consulate on duty 24/7 (in emergencies of life loss, imprisonment, disaster) — emergency phone on consulate websites

First Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Renting an apartment without checking the landlord — scams with "wire deposit", fake listings. Check photos in Google Reverse Image, go see it before paying.
  2. Accepting the first job offer — often minimum wage below market rates. Ask colleagues, check Glassdoor.
  3. Overpaying for a phone — Verizon/AT&T contract = $80-100/month. Mint/Cricket/Visible = $15-30/month, same coverage.
  4. Not registering with the consulate — no registration = no help in case of passport theft/accident.
  5. Not having health insurance in the first week — 1 accident = bankruptcy. Even short-term is better than nothing.
  6. Transfers to Poland through traditional banks — fee $30-50 + bad exchange rate. Better: Wise (cheapest), Western Union (fast), Revolut.

Useful Links

Official sources

Related topics:

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