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Marriage Green Card Interview — Questions, Process, How to Prepare

The USCIS interview for a Marriage Green Card is a CRUCIAL moment in the process, providing a complete guide on duration (15-90 min), what to bring, typical questions (daily life, finances, intimacy), Stokes interview (separate rooms), fraud red flags, how to prepare with your spouse, and what to do after the decision.

Marriage Green Card interview is a critical point in the entire process. The USCIS officer assesses whether the marriage is "bona fide" (genuine) or "sham" (fake for paperwork). The officer's decision = approve, denial, further investigation (e.g., fraud unit), or Stokes interview. Preparation is important.

When the Interview Takes Place

  • Adjustment of Status (I-485) within the USA — typically 6-18 months after submission
  • CR-1/IR-1 from a consulate outside the USA — interview ABROAD at the Polish consulate in the USA, 8-15 months after petition
  • K-1 fiancé + AOS — interview after marriage in the USA, 4-10 months after I-485

Where and Who Conducts the Interview

  • USCIS Field Office — local office (not ASC). List: USCIS Office Locator
  • USCIS officer — typically experienced, knowledgeable in interview psychology
  • Your attorney MAY be present (recommended)

How Long It Lasts

  • Typically: 15-30 minutes for questions + 30-60 minutes for document review
  • Stokes interview (separate rooms, suspicion of fraud): 1.5-3 hours
  • Waiting in the lobby: typically 30-90 minutes (officers are often delayed)

What to Bring — Complete List

Mandatory Documents

  1. Interview notice (I-797C)
  2. Applicant's passport (with valid visa / Green Card if applicable)
  3. Driver's license / state ID of both spouses
  4. Marriage certificate (original + 2 copies)
  5. Birth certificates of both spouses (originals + translations if foreign)
  6. Divorce / death certificates from previous marriages (if applicable)
  7. I-94 of the applicant (or passport stamp / EAD)
  8. Form I-485 / I-130 copy with signatures

Evidence of Bona Fide Marriage (CRUCIAL)

Financial

  • Joint bank account — statements from the last 12-24 months, preferably with activity from both
  • Joint tax return (married filing jointly) — copies from 1-3 years
  • Joint credit cards — statements
  • Joint loans (mortgage, auto loan) — documents
  • Beneficiary designations — 401(k), life insurance where spouse is the beneficiary

Residential

  • Lease / mortgage with both names (or lease in one + proof that both live there)
  • Utility bills (Con Ed, ConEdison, water, gas, internet) with spouse's address
  • Phone bills, cable, streaming
  • Mail addressed to both at this address

Insurance

  • Health insurance — spouse as dependent
  • Auto insurance — joint
  • Life insurance — spouse as beneficiary
  • Renters / homeowners insurance with both names

Social / Life

  • Photos — wedding, honeymoon, vacations, holidays with family, daily life. Preferably with visible dates.
  • Flight tickets from joint travels
  • Hotel reservations from joint stays
  • Wedding invitations
  • Wedding announcements in newspapers
  • Holiday / birthday cards addressed to both
  • Social media posts (Facebook posts tagged together, joint profile pictures)
  • Family invitations addressed to both

Children (if any)

  • Birth certificates of joint children
  • School records, medical records showing both parents
  • Family photos

Typical Interview Questions

Easy (warm-up)

  • How did you meet?
  • When did you meet (date, place)?
  • When did the wedding take place (date, place)?
  • Who was at the wedding (witnesses, family)?
  • Where did you go on your honeymoon?
  • When did you propose?
  • Where do you currently live?
  • How long have you lived together?

Daily Life

  • What time does your spouse wake up in the morning?
  • What did your spouse eat for breakfast yesterday?
  • Who does the laundry, cooks, cleans?
  • Which side of the bed do you sleep on?
  • What is your spouse's favorite TV show?
  • What are your spouse's favorite foods?
  • What allergies does your spouse have?
  • What medications does your spouse take?
  • Who wakes up first?
  • How does your spouse commute to work?

Finances and Bills

  • What banks do you use?
  • Who pays the bills?
  • How much does your spouse earn?
  • What is the rent / mortgage amount?
  • What do you have in common (account, card, loan)?
  • Do you file taxes jointly?

Family and Community

  • What are your spouse's parents' names?
  • How many siblings does your spouse have?
  • Does your spouse have children from a previous relationship?
  • Where does your spouse's family live?
  • When did you last see your spouse's parents?
  • Do you plan to have children?

Intimate / Personal (sometimes)

The officer should NOT ask about intimate physical details (marks on the body, etc.) during the first interview. If there are suspicions of fraud, they may order a Stokes — see below. But typically acceptable:

  • Do you sleep together in one bed?
  • Does your spouse sleep with a pillow / without?
  • Who sleeps on which side?
  • What does your spouse look like when they wake up?

Trick Questions

  • What did your spouse give you for your birthday last year?
  • Did you talk this morning?
  • About what?
  • What color are their eyes? (the officer is watching)
  • Do you have pets? (if so, what are their names?)

Stokes Interview — When the Officer Suspects Fraud

If the officer has doubts, they may order a Stokes Interview:

  • Both spouses are asked in separate rooms
  • The same detailed questions about daily life
  • Answers are compared
  • If answers differ significantly → red flag
  • Duration: 1.5-3 hours

Red flags that lead to Stokes:

  • Spouses cannot describe their home
  • Different versions of "how you met"
  • Lack of joint finances
  • They do not travel together
  • Significant age/cultural difference without explanation
  • Marriage immediately after the applicant's arrival
  • Living separately ("for work")
  • Spouse does not remember basic facts about their partner

How to Prepare with Your Spouse

3 Months Before

  • Start gathering bona fide documents (if you don't have them already)
  • Open a joint bank account (if not already done)
  • Update insurance policies
  • Add each other as beneficiaries on 401(k) / life insurance

1 Month Before

  • Compile all documents
  • Create a photo album (chronologically)
  • Check if passports are valid

Week Before

  • Mock interview with an attorney — highly recommended!
  • Practice answers to typical questions (separately)
  • Review documents together
  • Check the calendar for joint events

Day Before

  • Get a good night's sleep
  • Pack all documents in a folder (one working copy, one backup)
  • Check the route to the field office
  • Resolve any conflicts if you had any — the atmosphere must be positive

On the Day of the Interview

  • Arrive 30 minutes early — security check + parking
  • Attire: business casual or formal (shirt, blazer, dress). No shorts/sandals.
  • Leave phones in the car (not everywhere allows them)
  • Tell the truth — omissions are forgivable, lies = denial + ban
  • If you don't remember — say "I don't remember," do not make up
  • DO NOT answer for your spouse if the officer asks one

Red Flags to Avoid

  1. Being late
  2. Lack of key documents (marriage certificate, passport)
  3. Conflicting answers with spouse
  4. Too "rehearsed" / artificial answers
  5. Pointing to spouse to answer
  6. Unawareness of basic life facts
  7. Unkempt appearance / hostile attitude
  8. Lies (officers are trained to recognize them)

After the Interview — What Next

Approve on the Spot

Sometimes the officer says "Welcome to the United States" and approves. You receive a stamp in your passport (or welcome notice) — the Green Card will arrive by mail in 2-8 weeks.

Continued / Further Investigation

The officer needs additional information. You will receive an RFE (Request for Evidence) or Notice of Intent to Deny. You typically have 30-87 days to respond.

Denial

The case is rejected. You can:

  • Motion to Reopen/Reconsider — 30 days
  • Appeal to BIA — 30 days
  • Contact an attorney immediately

Conditional Green Card (2-Year)

If the marriage was less than 2 years before approval → you will receive a conditional Green Card valid for 2 years. After 21-24 months, you must file Form I-751 (Remove Conditions on Residence). This is another interview — see [[marriage-green-card-cr1-ir1-step-by-step]].

Most Common Reasons for Denials

  1. Conflicting answers from both spouses
  2. Lack of bona fide evidence (e.g., living separately, lack of joint finances)
  3. Previous history of immigration fraud
  4. Multiple marriages with different sponsors
  5. Inconsistency with documents (e.g., saying "together for 5 years" but lease shows 6 months)
  6. Failure to appear at the interview without reason

Official Links

Related: [[marriage-green-card-cr1-ir1-step-by-step]] · [[k1-fiance-visa-marriage-to-us-citizen]] · [[uscis-interview-general-preparation]]

Official sources

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