Your Green Card expiring? Form I-90 is the application for its renewal/replacement. Cards are valid for 10 years (or 2 years for conditional GC after marriage). Apply no later than 6 months before expiration.
Who Must File I-90
- Your Green Card is expiring or has expired
- The card was lost/stolen/damaged
- The card contains errors (typos in the name, incorrect date of birth)
- You received a Green Card when under 14 years old — replacement after turning 14
- Status as a conditional permanent resident (2-year card) — NOTE: THIS IS A DIFFERENT FORM, not I-90! Here you use Form I-751.
- Your name has changed (marriage, divorce, court order)
I-90 vs I-751 — KEY DIFFERENCE
| Situation | Form |
|---|---|
| 10-year GC is expiring | I-90 (renewal) |
| 2-year conditional GC (after marriage) | I-751 (remove conditions) |
| 2-year conditional GC (through EB-5 investment) | I-829 |
| Name change on 10-year GC | I-90 |
| Lost 10-year GC | I-90 |
| Lost 2-year conditional GC | I-90 (replacement) + plan to file I-751 separately |
MISTAKE #1: Many conditional GC holders file I-90 instead of I-751. This results in loss of status! Check the type of your card (on the back: "Card Expires" date — if it’s a 2-year card after marriage to a USC, it’s CONDITIONAL → I-751).
Costs (2026)
- Form I-90: $540 ($455 fee + $85 biometrics)
- Online filing: $415 (discount if filed online)
- Form I-751 (conditional removal): $750 ($595 fee + $85 biometrics + $70 — check current amounts)
- Attorney: not required for simple renewal, ~$500-1500 if complicated (name change + replacement)
When to File
- 10-year GC: no earlier than 6 months before expiration
- Lost/stolen: immediately
- Conditional GC (2-year): within 90 days before expiration, but this applies to I-751 NOT I-90
How to File I-90 — Step by Step
- USCIS online account — my.uscis.gov (free)
- Complete Form I-90 — online (preferred) or PDF
- Attach documents:
- A copy of both sides of your current Green Card (or an explanation of why it is missing)
- A copy of your passport (photo + visa/stamp if applicable)
- Proof of name change (if applicable): marriage certificate, court order, divorce decree
- Pay $540 — card or ACH when filing online
- Receipt Notice (Form I-797) — arrives in 2-4 weeks
- ADIT stamp — if you need proof of status, go to a USCIS field office for a stamp in your passport valid for 1 year
- Biometrics — 1-3 months after filing
- Decision + new card — 8-18 months later
Proof of Status During the Waiting Period
Your old card has expired and the new one hasn’t arrived? Receipt Notice (I-797) from I-90 extends the validity of the old GC by 24 months. Show it along with the old card as proof of status — to employers (I-9 verification), banks, airports.
If I-90 takes longer than 24 months — you need an ADIT stamp (Alien Documentation, Identification and Telecommunication). Schedule an appointment at your local USCIS field office, and you will receive a stamp in your passport valid for 1 year.
How Long It Takes (2026)
- Standard renewal: 8-14 months in most field offices
- Lost/stolen: 10-18 months
- Name change: 12-18 months
- Fastest offices: Chicago (8-10 months), Detroit (8-12 months)
- Slowest: San Francisco (16-22 months), Newark (14-18 months)
Common Mistakes
- Filing I-90 instead of I-751 for conditional GC (loss of status)
- Filing too early (more than 6 months before expiry) — USCIS may reject
- Filing too late — expired card = issues with work, travel
- Outdated address — letters with ADIT stamp and the new card return as undeliverable
- Lack of both sides of Green Card in the scan
- Not reporting address change — Form AR-11 required within 10 days of moving (online: uscis.gov/ar-11)
- Entering incorrect A-number (Alien Registration Number)
Traveling Abroad with an Expired GC
DO NOT TRAVEL without a valid GC or without an ADIT stamp! Airlines will not allow you to board a flight returning to the USA. What you have:
- Expired GC + I-797 Receipt (24 months validity): OK — most airlines accept
- Expired GC without I-797: RISKY — may have boarding issues
- Lost GC + no ADIT: DO NOT TRAVEL — you will face difficulties returning
Safest: wait for the ADIT stamp in your passport before planning travel.
What If I-90 Is Denied
- You will receive an RFE (Request for Evidence) — you have 87 days to supplement
- Or a NOID (Notice of Intent to Deny) — 33 days to respond
- You can file Form I-290B (Motion to Reopen/Reconsider) within 33 days
- Or start the process over
Official Links
Related: [[how-uscis-works-guide-for-immigrants]] · [[how-to-check-uscis-case-status]] · [[most-common-ways-to-get-a-green-card]]
Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first!