Several U.S residents desire to adopt children from overseas nations and then taking them to the U.S to stay together as a household member. To be eligible to do so, the adopted child should have a lawful U.S permit and be permitted to arrive the U.S. When U.S nationals complete adoption process outside of the U.S, in the adopted child’s home nation, then the child is qualified to get the IR-3 visa. The IR-3 permission permits the child to come and stay in the U.S with the adopted parents, appear school, getting admitted in a higher education studies, do job without an Employment Authorization Document (EAD), and finally get U.S nationality when appropriate. The IR-3 visa as all the permits in the Immediate Household group does not have a cover, so any child likely to obtain the IR-3 permit will be managed upon application and does not require to wait for their priority date to become current.
There are two kinds of adoption standard by the U.S government, and they rest on the nation from where the child was accepted and these are:
The Hague Adoption Convention was signed in 1993 and specified rules and regulations about intercountry adoption. Depending on whether the U.S citizen adopts the child from a Hague Convention Country or a Non-Hague Convention Country, the application procedures change. The following countries are part of The Hague Convention Countries; however, U.S citizens are not allowed to adopt children from the countries in bold due to other political reasons.
Hague Convention Countries |
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Albania |
Cote d’Ivoire |
Haiti |
Mexico |
Seychelles |
Andorra |
Costa Rica |
Hungary |
Moldova |
Slovakia |
Armenia |
Croatia |
Iceland |
Monaco |
Slovenia |
Australia |
Cuba |
India |
Mongolia |
South Africa |
Austria |
Cyprus |
Ireland |
Montenegro |
Spain |
Azerbaijan |
Czech Republic |
Israel |
Namibia |
Sri Lanka |
Belarus |
Denmark |
Italy |
Netherlands |
Swaziland |
Belgium |
Dominican Republic |
Kazakhstan |
New Zealand |
Sweden |
Belize |
Ecuador |
Kenya |
Norway |
Switzerland |
Bolivia |
El Salvador |
Kyrgyzstan |
Panama |
Thailand |
Brazil |
Estonia |
Latvia |
Paraguay |
Togo |
Bulgaria |
Fiji |
Lesotho |
Peru |
Turkey |
Burkina Faso |
Finland |
Liechtenstein |
Philippines |
United Kingdom |
Burundi |
France |
Lithuania |
Poland |
Uruguay |
Cambodia |
Georgia |
Luxembourg |
Portugal |
Venezuela |
Canada |
Germany |
North Macedonia |
Romania |
Vietnam |
Cape Verde |
Ghana |
Madagascar |
Rwanda |
Zambia |
Chile |
Greece |
Mali |
San Marino |
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China |
Guatemala |
Malta |
Senegal |
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Colombia |
Guinea |
Mauritius |
Serbia |
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Adopting from any other countries than those above means that the U.S citizen is adopting outside the Hague Convention rules and other regulations and application procedures will apply.
The IR-3 visa has necessities for both the child being adopted as well as the U.S residents. These obligations decide the suitability of the child for the IR-3 visa and are as follows:
If the U.S inhabitant has already adopted the child and has lived with them in a overseas nation for at least two years, then the child is qualified for an IR-2 visa and does not require to go through the IR-3 visa application procedure.
There are different measures for obtaining the IR-3 permit based on the nation that the adoption is being done, below will be the appeal processes equally for The Hague and Non-Hague Country Agreements.
Hague Country Agreement Application Processes
Non-Hague Agreement Appeal Process
Reliant on which application process you will follow, you must pay the fees associated with filing the forms as well as other supporting charges. The amounts are decided by USCIS, but in overall, these are the charges that apply: