
Change your life!
We help you process your U Visa to secure your status in the U.S. from San Diego
If you were a crime victim and helped the police, you may get legal status and work authorization

Change your life!
If you were a crime victim and helped the police, you may get legal status and work authorization
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The U Visa is for individuals who have been victims of certain crimes within the U.S. and have actively cooperated with law enforcement during the investigation or prosecution. This visa grants temporary legal status and opens the door to permanent residency.
Eligible applicants include those who suffered physical or mental harm as a result of a qualifying crime (such as domestic violence, sexual assault, kidnapping, etc.) and can prove they cooperated with authorities. They must also demonstrate substantial hardship caused by the crime.
The U Visa’s main purpose is to provide immigration relief to victims who support law enforcement efforts. In return, recipients gain legal status, work authorization, access to certain public benefits, and the ability to apply for a Green Card after three years of continuous presence.
Discover the key advantages the U Visa offers for your safety and future in the U.S.
Stay in the U.S. legally during the initial four-year period.
You are allowed to work legally once the visa is approved.
You may apply for derivative status for your spouse, children, or sometimes parents.
You may qualify for healthcare, assistance, or education depending on local laws.
We help you understand your immigration situation and the steps you can take.
Check if you meet the essential criteria to apply for a U Visa as a crime victim.
Because your case deserves real attention, legal experience, and a human approach from the very first contact.

U status gives victims of certain serious crimes up to four years of lawful stay, an automatic work permit, access to some public benefits, and a path to permanent residence.
You must have suffered substantial physical or mental abuse from a qualifying criminal activity in the United States, possess information about that crime, and be helpful or willing to be helpful to law-enforcement authorities.
The strongest proof is Form I-918 Supplement B, signed by a police, prosecutor, judge, or other certifying agency confirming your helpfulness; USCIS can accept alternative credible evidence if the certification is unavailable.
Victims under 16 or those unable to cooperate due to trauma may satisfy the requirement through a parent, guardian, or next friend who assists investigators on their behalf.
Congress caps principal U-1 approvals at 10 000 per fiscal year; when the cap is met, qualified petitions are placed on a waiting list and granted deferred action plus work authorization until a slot opens.
USCIS first reviews the filing for completeness and public-safety concerns; once deemed bona fide, it issues interim work authorization while the full review continues, a phase that can still take several years because USCIS has not published a fixed timeline.
Yes, you may request an Employment Authorization Document after a bona fide determination or if you are on the waiting list for a full visa grant.
If you are over 21 you may add your spouse and unmarried children; if you are under 21 you may also include parents and unmarried siblings under 18, with special age-out protections for derivatives.
After three years in valid U status, or once the investigation is complete, you may file Form I-485 to adjust status to lawful permanent resident if you have continued to help law enforcement and meet the other eligibility rules.
International travel is risky; you must first obtain advance parole with Form I-131, and leaving without it can cause the loss of your U status, so consult legal counsel before any trip.