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Preguntas frecuentes — Trámites de inmig

Helpful Guides

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Required Forms

Learn which forms are necessary for your application. This guide explains common immigration forms such as I-130, I-485, I-765, I-131, N-400, I-90, and more. We help you understand what each form is used for, what general information it requires, and how documents are typically organized. We do not tell you which form you should file—that is considered legal advice.

Preparing Documents

Get tips on organizing your documents effectively. We provide templates for labeling evidence, checklists for common documents (IDs, civil records, financial proof, travel history), and instructions for FOIA organization. Our goal is to make your submission clean, clear, and professionally structured. We do not judge or evaluate the strength of your evidence.

Consultation Steps

Understand how to prepare for your consultation. Your administrative consultation covers: – Reviewing required information – Collecting documents – Confirming timelines – Explaining how to self-submit your forms Consultations do not include legal analysis, case predictions, or legal recommendations.

Important Links

USCIS Forms Library

USCIS Case Status

FOIA Request Portals (USCIS, CBP, ICE)

IRS (EIN, ITIN W-7)

FinCEN BOI Reporting

Texas Secretary of State Filings

SBA Loan Portal

SBA FOIA / SBA Resources

Understanding Immigration Terms

Familiarize yourself with essential immigration terminology.

Petition

A request for immigration benefits. A petition is the formal request submitted to USCIS to establish that a qualifying relationship or eligibility category exists under immigration regulations. For example, a U.S. citizen may file a petition for a family member to demonstrate the relationship recognized by law. A petition does not grant status on its own—it is simply the first administrative step that allows USCIS to determine whether the beneficiary may continue the process. Our role is to assist with the clerical preparation and organization of petition forms and supporting documents based solely on the information you provide.

Form

Official paperwork for immigration. Immigration forms are standardized documents required by USCIS or other federal agencies to collect personal, biographical, and case-related information. Each form has a specific purpose and set of instructions. Our assistance focuses on: – Helping you complete the form using the information you provide – Ensuring fields are filled neatly and consistently – Organizing attachments and evidence. We do not advise which form you should select or interpret how a form applies to your case. Our support is strictly administrative.

Application

A formal request for immigration status. An application is a complete request for an immigration benefit—such as permanent residence, work authorization, naturalization, or travel documents. Applications typically require supporting evidence, biometrics, interviews, and follow-up communication from the agency. Our role is to assist with: – Organizing the information you choose to submit – Preparing application forms based solely on your responses – Preparing FOIA records if needed – Helping you review your packet before you self-file. We do not evaluate eligibility, give legal recommendations, or provide case strategy.

Consultation

A meeting to discuss immigration issues. An administrative consultation allows us to review your documents, collect information for form preparation, and clarify the steps involved in your immigration process from an organizational and clerical perspective. During the consultation, we may: – Explain what information is required by forms – Identify which documents you need to gather – Provide checklists and review your materials – Guide you through FOIA or online account setup Consultations do not include legal analysis, legal advice, case evaluation, predictions, or representation. All decisions remain with the client.

LEGAL BASE & DISCLAIMER

LEGAL NOTICE & DISCLAIMER (Required in Texas)

Federal Law — Allowed Activities

✔ 8 CFR 292.5(b): Clients have the right to self-represent before USCIS.
✔ 8 CFR 1003.102: Non-legal assistance is permitted.
✔ INA Sec. 274(a): Allowed to assist as long as we do not present ourselves as attorneys.


Texas Law — Unauthorized Practice of Law (UPL)

Texas regulates UPL through:
– Texas Government Code § 81.101
– Texas Penal Code § 38.122

These laws prohibit acting as an attorney without a license but do not prohibit administrative services such as document preparation, translations, clerical support, or form completion based solely on the client’s information.
 

Required Public Disclaimer (Website Use)

I am not an attorney and I am not licensed to practice law. I do not provide legal advice.
My services are limited to administrative assistance, document preparation, and clerical support based solely on the information provided by the client.

We are not attorneys. We do not provide legal advice.
We do not offer representation, we do not file G-28, and we do not communicate with USCIS or any agency on behalf of clients.
The client is fully responsible for the accuracy of the information they provide and for submitting their own forms.

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