Form I-130: Petition for Alien Relative
Establishes a qualifying family relationship between a U.S. citizen or green card holder and a relative who wants to immigrate.
General filing.
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Verified from USCIS Form G-1055, edition 05/29/26. Fees change frequently — confirm before filing.
Who files Form I-130?
U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents petitioning for a spouse, child, parent, or sibling.
Most common I-130 mistakes that cause rejections
USCIS rejects or issues a Request for Evidence on filings every day for small, fixable errors. For I-130, the ones we see most often are:
- Names, dates of birth, or A-Numbers that don't match across the petition and supporting documents.
- Insufficient evidence of a bona fide marriage for spousal petitions.
- Selecting the wrong relationship category or filing for an ineligible relative.
- Missing certified translations for foreign birth or marriage certificates.
Check your I-130 before you file
Upload your completed I-130 and FormGuard reviews it for these exact rejection triggers in about a minute — for $39, one time. Your file is analyzed and never stored.
Check my I-130 for errors — $39 →How to file Form I-130 without getting rejected
- Use the current edition. USCIS rejects outdated editions — check the date printed at the bottom of the form against uscis.gov.
- Answer every field. Write “N/A” or “None” instead of leaving anything blank — blanks are a leading rejection cause.
- Be consistent. Your name, A-Number, and dates must match exactly across every form and supporting document.
- Sign and date correctly. An unsigned or wrongly-signed form is rejected outright.
- Translate foreign documents. Include a complete certified English translation of anything not in English.
- Pay the exact fee. Use the fee calculator and confirm on uscis.gov — the wrong amount gets the package returned.
Related forms
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Form I-130 — frequently asked questions
How much is the Form I-130 filing fee?
The USCIS filing fee for I-130 is $625 online / $675 paper (General filing), per the current G-1055 schedule (edition 05/29/26). Always confirm at the official USCIS fee calculator before filing.
Can I file Form I-130 online?
Many applicants can file I-130 through a USCIS online account, which is $50 cheaper than paper filing. Check uscis.gov for current online-filing availability for your situation.
What happens if my I-130 is rejected?
USCIS returns rejected forms without processing them, and filing fees are generally non-refundable — so you lose time and may have to pay again. Most rejections come from small, avoidable errors, which is why a pre-filing review is worth it.
FormGuard is a private, independent service and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) or any U.S. government agency. FormGuard is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. This page provides general information only; fees and form requirements come from published USCIS sources and change frequently — always verify current details at the official government website, uscis.gov, and consult a licensed immigration attorney for complex matters.