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Consular Processing vs Adjustment of Status - Which to Choose

Quick answer

Consular processing (CP) is the path to a US green card for applicants who are outside the United States or who prefer to receive their immigrant visa abroad. After USCIS approves your I-130 or I-140, the case transfers to the National Visa Center, which collects fees and documents, then schedules an interview at the nearest US embassy. You enter the US as a permanent resident on arrival.

What consular processing is

If you are outside the US, or inside on a non-immigrant visa but want to pick up your green card abroad, you take the consular processing path. The application moves from USCIS to the State Department's National Visa Center (NVC), which handles fees, documents, and embassy scheduling.

Step-by-step

  • 1. Petition approved - I-130 (family) or I-140 (employment) approved by USCIS.
  • 2. USCIS transfers the case to NVC once the priority date is current.
  • 3. NVC fees - pay the immigrant visa fee and affidavit of support fee.
  • 4. DS-260 - complete the online immigrant visa application.
  • 5. Civil documents - upload birth certificate, marriage certificate, police certificates, etc.
  • 6. Documentarily qualified - once NVC accepts everything, the case is ready for interview.
  • 7. Interview scheduled - at the US embassy/consulate covering your residence.
  • 8. Medical exam - completed by a panel physician before the interview.
  • 9. Interview - typically 5-15 minutes; bring originals.
  • 10. Visa issued and travel - green card mailed once you enter the US.

AOS vs CP comparison

FactorAdjustment of Status (AOS)Consular Processing (CP)
LocationInside the USUS embassy abroad
FormI-485DS-260
EAD while waitingYes (C09)No
Travel while pendingOnly with advance paroleFree - you are abroad anyway
75-country freeze (2026)Not affected by freezeAffected - interviews paused at frozen posts
Processing time8-16 months6-12 months (no freeze)
Cost (approximate)$1,440$700 (NVC + interview)
Decision stylePaper review + occasional interviewSingle in-person interview
Refusal handlingMotion to reopen / appeal at USCISLimited; usually must re-petition

When to choose CP

  • You are already outside the US and have no reason to move temporarily.
  • Your home country embassy has shorter waits than USCIS field offices.
  • You want a single decisive interview rather than years of paper review.
  • You need to travel freely during the process.

When to stay with AOS

  • You are already in the US in valid status.
  • Your country is on the 2026 freeze list - CP interviews are paused.
  • You need the EAD or advance parole benefits while waiting.
  • You prefer flexibility to respond to RFEs in writing rather than at interview.

Frequently asked questions

Which is faster - AOS or consular processing?

Consular processing is usually 4-6 months faster, but the 2026 freeze on 75 countries has reversed the comparison for affected applicants.

Can I switch from CP to AOS mid-process?

Yes, but it requires written request to NVC and re-entering the US in valid status. The reverse is also possible by filing I-824.

What is the 75-country freeze?

A 2026 executive measure pausing immigrant visa issuance at US embassies in 75 listed countries. Consular processing for nationals there is on hold; AOS in the US remains available.

Can I work in the US during consular processing?

Only on whatever non-immigrant visa you already hold. CP itself gives no EAD. AOS, by contrast, provides EAD while pending.