So me and my gf wanna get married in Alberta whenever i can come visit again after COVID. The original plan was to marry in alberta and then do spousal sponsorship for me to move to canada with her (I am US she is CAD citizen) And i basically knew the step by step process of the application process for moving there. However now we might decide to move her to the states with me. I can’t find the process for moving her here though is it the same? Is it harder to move a CAD to US than it is US to CAD? Someone told me that you HAVE to get married in US to move your spouse here is that true? Sorry for all the dumb questions it’s just trying to learn a whole new process after having one in mind is confusing
I've immigrated to the United States, and my wife is American. We are very close to sending our application off to have her immigrate to Canada.
I immigrated here quite a few years ago on the K-1 visa (the same one from 90 day fiance.) As far as immigrating is concerned, the K-1 is pretty nice, because it allows you to basically wait out the processing period in the United States while they scrutinize you for a green card. That being said, my understanding is that processing times under the new administration are *way* longer, but I don't know that much about it.
If nothing has changed, I would probably go the K-1 route if you were to bring her to the United States. I wouldn't get married first, because I believe that exposes you to a significantly longer wait (because you don't have the option of applying through the fiance visa.) That being said, a K-1 visa requires that you get married in the States.
Based on what I'm seeing, the effort to get to Canada is front-loaded. You seem to have to do it all at once, and there is less follow-up later on. If you go the K-1 route, you basically have to submit three different applications - the first to get the fiance visa, the second to "adjust your status" and get a conditional green card, and then the last to have the conditions lifted from your green card so that it's good for 10 years at a time. All of that happens over the span of 2 or 3 years.
Moving to the U.S.A. was a big adjustment for me. I found a good career and everything, but there is a lot to get used to (health care and so on.)
Alberta is probably the closest province that you can get to the U.S.A., so that works in your favor I suppose.
Make the decision very carefully. This is a process that you only want to do once (speaking as someone who has gone through it once and is going through it again.)