Two paths lead to the same green card. Adjustment of Status (AOS) means you process your application inside the United States. Consular Processing (CP) means you finish at a U.S. embassy or consulate abroad. Choosing wrong can cost a year, separate your family, or trap you outside the country.
| Factor | Adjustment of Status (AOS) | Consular Processing (CP) |
|---|---|---|
| Where you process | Inside the U.S. | U.S. embassy/consulate abroad |
| Main form | I-485 | DS-260 (online) |
| Authority | USCIS | Department of State |
| Who qualifies | Inspected & admitted to U.S.; usually maintained status | Anyone with approved petition + visa available |
| Typical timeline (immediate relatives) | 8-18 months | 6-18 months |
| Work authorization while waiting | Yes — file I-765 (EAD) | No, until you enter U.S. |
| Travel during process | Yes with Advance Parole (I-131); leaving without it abandons app | You're already abroad |
| Upfront cost | Higher (~$2,000-3,500 with EAD/AP) | Lower (~$1,200-2,000) |
| Interview | Local USCIS field office (sometimes waived) | Mandatory at consulate |
| If denied | May face removal proceedings while in U.S. | Stranded abroad; reapply later |
Adjustment of Status — when AOS is right
AOS is generally preferred when you're already legally inside the U.S. The reasons: you keep your life intact, you can work and travel, you avoid the risk of being stranded abroad if something goes wrong, and the process feels familiar (USCIS field office, English-language interview).
Eligibility for AOS
- Inspected and admitted — entered the U.S. with inspection at a port of entry (visa, ESTA, parole) — OR inspected and paroled
- Maintained status — generally must have lawful status at time of filing (with exceptions for immediate relatives of U.S. citizens, INA §245(i) grandfathering, VAWA self-petitioners, asylees, etc.)
- Visa number available — your priority date must be current per the Visa Bulletin chart applicable for your category
- Admissible — no inadmissibility grounds (criminal, fraud, health, public charge, etc.) — or eligible for waiver
AOS benefits beyond the green card
The "AOS package" — I-485 + I-765 (work permit) + I-131 (advance parole) — gives you authorization to work and travel within months of filing. EADs typically issue in 3-7 months. Many applicants get jobs at major U.S. employers during the wait.
Consular Processing — when CP is right
CP is required if you're outside the U.S. and have no current valid status to enter. It's also chosen by some who are inside the U.S. but believe CP will be faster, cheaper, or strategically better (especially with certain inadmissibility waivers).
The CP process
- USCIS approves the underlying petition (I-130, I-140, I-526E, etc.)
- Approved petition transfers to the National Visa Center (NVC)
- NVC notifies you when visa number becomes available; collects fees, civil documents, and DS-260
- NVC schedules visa interview at U.S. embassy/consulate in your country
- Medical exam, biometrics, and visa interview at the consulate
- Visa issued (placed in passport); you travel to U.S.
- Upon admission at port of entry, you become a permanent resident
CP advantages
- Sometimes faster end-to-end (especially after NVC qualification)
- Lower upfront costs (no EAD/AP filing)
- May avoid backlogged USCIS field offices
- Provisional waiver (I-601A) option for certain inadmissibility issues — adjudicated before leaving U.S.
CP disadvantages
- Must leave the U.S. (or stay abroad) — family separation possible
- No work authorization during waiting period
- Embassy wait times vary widely by country (3-12+ months for interview in some posts)
- Higher risk of being stuck abroad if denied or delayed
- More document-intensive (police certificates from every country lived in since age 16)
How to decide
You're inside the U.S. legally. AOS is almost always better. You keep your life, work, and family intact while waiting.
You're inside the U.S. but out of status. Complex. Immediate relatives of USC may still adjust. Others may need consular processing with provisional waiver.
You're outside the U.S. Consular processing is your only path.
Employment-based, priority date current, you're abroad. CP — and it can be faster than AOS in 2026 due to USCIS field office backlogs.
You have unlawful presence concerns. Talk to an attorney about provisional waivers (Form I-601A) before deciding.