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Welcome to Vietnam-US
Immigration, a website dedicated to providing
information about immigration from Vietnam to the
United States. We hope you enjoy the site and find
it useful.
Legal immigration to the United States totals
approximately 800,000 per year, including 480,000
family-sponsored immigrants, 140,000
employment-based immigrants, and 120,000 refugees
annually. Vietnam is the second leading source
country behind Mexico in legal immigration to the
United states, with 78,000 Vietnamese immigrants
arriving in the United States each year. They
include immediate relatives (spouses, children and
parents), siblings, adult children and fiancées of
U.S. citizens, and spouses and children of lawful
permanent residents.
In 1994, a new
chapter opened between the United States and Vietnam
when President Clinton lifted the U.S. trade
embargo. The United States established a liaison
office in Vietnam in January 1995, and relations
between the countries normalized in July 1995. Two
years later, the United States opened a consulate in
Ho Chi Minh City and sent its first ambassador to
the country since 1975. Since then, the United
States presence in Vietnam has grown rapidly, with
an embassy in Hanoi and consulate in Ho Chi Minh
City.
There are many
different methods of emigrating from Vietnam to the
United States, including:
TEMPORARY
VISAS
B-1/B-2
Visitor's Visas
Available for visits to the U.S. for business or
pleasure. B-1 business visitor visas are for a short
duration and must not involve local employment.
Nationals of certain countries may be eligible to
visit the U.S. for up to 90 days without obtaining a
visa.
E-1/E-2 Treaty
Trader and Investor Visas
Investors and traders and their employees may
receive visas to carry on their businesses in the
U.S. if their home country has a commercial treaty
with the U.S. conferring visa eligibility.
F-1 and M-1
Student Visas
Persons seeking to pursue full-time study at a
learning institution in the U.S. may be eligible for
a visa for the course of their study plus, in some
cases, a period for practical training in their
field of study.
H-1B Specialty
Occupation (Professional) Visas
Professional workers with at least a bachelor's
degree (or its equivalent in work experience) may be
eligible for a non-immigrant visa if their employers
can demonstrate that they are to be paid at least
the prevailing wage for the position.
K-1 Fiancé Visas
A fiancé of a U.S. citizen is eligible for a
non-immigrant visa conditioned on the conclusion of
the marriage within 90 days of entry into the U.S.
K-3 Spouse Visas
A spouse of a U.S. citizen is eligible to apply for
a non-immigrant visa in order to enter the U.S.
during the pendency of a permanent residence
petition.
L-1 Intracompany
Transfer Visas
L-1 visas are available to executives, managers and
specialized knowledge employees transferring to
their employer's U.S. affiliate. Executives and
managers holding L-1 visas may be eligible for
permanent residency without the need for a labor
certification.
R-1 Religious
Worker Visas
Religious workers may be eligible for an R-1 visa.
TN Status Under
the North American Free Trade Agreement
A special category has been set up for nationals of
Canada and Mexico under the provisions of the North
American Free Trade Agreement.
PERMANENT
RESIDENCY VISAS (“GREEN CARDS”)
Family Sponsored
Immigration
U.S. citizens may petition for permanent resident
status for spouses, parents, children and siblings.
Permanent residents may also petition for spouses
and children.
B-3 Skilled
Workers and Professionals
Visa holders in this category normally must have a
job offer and the potential employer must complete
the labor certification process.
EB-4 Special
Immigrant Visas for Religious Workers
Ministers of religion are eligible for permanent
residency.
EB-5
Investor/Employment Creation Visas
Under the 1990 Immigration Act, Congress has set
aside up to 10,000 visas per year for foreign
investors in new commercial enterprises that create
employment for at least 10 individuals. There are
two groups of investors under the program - those
who invest at least $500,000 in "targeted employment
areas" (rural areas or areas experiencing high
unemployment of at least 150% of the national
average rate) and those who invest $1,000,000
anywhere else. No fewer than 3,000 of the annual
allotment of visas must go to targeted employment
areas.
DV-1 Visas (the
"Green Card Lottery")
55,000 visas are annually allotted in a random
drawing to individuals from nations underrepresented
in the total immigrant pool.
Refugee and
Asylum Applications
Persons with a well-founded fear of persecution on
account of race, religion, nationality, membership
in a particular social group, or political opinion
may be eligible to apply for asylum or refugee
status in the U.S.
For direct
assistance with legal questions and issues
concerning immigration from Vietnam to the United
States, please go to
www.b-nlaw.com or contact us at
mail@vietnam-immigration.com.
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