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baby birth and us citizen
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deepocean
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Is it good to have a baby born in USA or in Nepal when only a father(not mother) of a baby about to born is a green card holder?
nepal ma janmayera kati samaya pachi usa lyayera gc and citizen lai apply garna sakinca? Kei hassle ta hudaina ni?
busenitz
· Snapshot 92
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I am assuming the mother is here already so I am not sure what is the reasoning behind giving birth in Nepal. Are u concerned about the finances or what?
If I were you, I would just deliver the baby so that he/she can be entitled for all of the benefits as a US citizen. I do not see any point of going back to Nepal and initiate the immigration process just to bring the baby back here. Even babies born from illegals are US citizens so I am not sure why you mentioned mom does not have a GC and stuffs.
StatusPidit
· Snapshot 128
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Guys, forget about GC/citizen/benefits. It's not safe to travel during pregnancy.
SuperSixNine
· Snapshot 217
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Generally speaking, children born ab roadto US Green Holders can be sponsored by their GC holder parent (father or mother) as long as the child has not crossed 21 years of age and is unmarried.

In this particular case, the child, if born abroad, will fall under F2A category and you can apply for a GC for him, immediately after his/her birth or at a later time.....and it will take around 2 years for to get his/her own GC status.

ALSO, if you sponsor your child and he/she become a GC holder, and then you become a US citizen, your child automatically can apply for citizenship because he/she is a minor child and is dependent on a US Citizen parent. There should be no hassle as long as you're able to provide proper documentations about the child's birth and the verify relationship between you and him/her.

Whether to have the child take birth in Nepal or US is a personal choice, but from risk-free and convenience perspective, if your choice is to have him/her apply for a US citizenship at a later time anyways, it is better to have the birth take place in the US.
Last edited: 25-Jul-16 03:24 PM
ujl
· Snapshot 272
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Make sure the expectant mother is stress free. New babies' mind are affected by the mental modifications of the mother and also of the mental modifications of both partners during copulation. Make sure the expectant mother sits in a comfortable position and listens this "Garbha Mantra." The whole universe is excited about this new birth !!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0hkZCM_UTXU
deepocean
· Snapshot 272
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Guys, thank you for your suggestion.

- My wife is back in Nepal and she is 6-7 months pregnant. I am a GC holder but she is not yet.
I have a health insurance via my employer. If I get my wife here for the birth of my child,
she could be included in my health insurance as my spouse via special enrollment (life changing events).
However, even after including her in my health insurance via my employer, it is not sure whether the expenses for the delivery of a child would be covered via the insurance
- Since I would be US citizen after couple of years, I could apply for a US citizenship for my baby at a later time anyways.
Is there any significant advantage for a US citizen born in USA than a US citizen(being US citizen later on) not born in USA?
maxpayne
· Snapshot 318
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He/She could miss out on being the first Nepalese President of the United States.

best for the baby :)
ny2
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@deepocean, it would take 1.5 to 2 year to bring your wife in the US. So unless you already have filed the petition years ago, there is no chance your wife would be in the US during the delivery.
deepocean
· Snapshot 494
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@ny2,
I am aware of it.
I believe, i can try for visitor visa if I plan to bring my wife here in usa.
adhikari_bandhu
· Snapshot 548
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Is it good to have a baby born in USA or in Nepal when only a father(not mother) of a baby about to born is a green card holder?
>> First of all congratulation to you as a would be parent. 
Babies born in USA are Citizens by birth whereas those born outside USA to non citizen parents will be naturalized citizens. Like Maxpayne said the only drawback for naturalized citizen is they can not be US President. If you intend to make your child qualified to be a future US president please make necessary arrangement to have the delivery in USA. There is not much difference as such.
God luck !  
ny2
· Snapshot 584
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You can definitely try for a visitor visa, but a pregnant woman with her LPR husband in US will have very slim chance of getting approved since a visitor visa requires non immigrant intent.
theDim
· Snapshot 601
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From USCIS website:
Availability of Immigrant Visas

The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) sets the number of immigrant visas that may be issued to foreign nationals seeking to become lawful permanent residents (get a Green Card) each year.

Immigrant visas for “immediate relatives” of U.S. citizens are unlimited, so they are always available. Immediate relatives include:

The spouses of U.S. citizens,
The children (unmarried and under 21 years of age) of U.S. citizens,
The parents of U.S. citizens at least 21 years old, and
Widows or widowers of U.S. citizens if the U.S. citizen filed a petition before his or her death or if the widow(er) files a petition within 2 years of the citizen’s death.

Immigrant visas for the family-sponsored and employment-based immigrant preference categories are numerically limited, so they are not always immediately available. For more information, please see the Green Card Eligibility page.

The U.S. Department of State (DOS) is the agency that allocates immigrant visas. In general, family-sponsored preference visas are limited to 226,000 visas per year and employment-based preference visas are limited to 140,000 visas per year. (By statute, these annual visa limits may be exceeded when certain immigrant visas from the previous fiscal year’s allocation were not fully used.) Both categories are further divided into several sub-categories, each of which receives a certain percentage of the overall visa numbers as prescribed by law. In addition, there are limits to the percentage of visas that can be allotted based on an immigrant’s country of chargeability (usually the country of birth).

When the demand is higher than the supply of visas for a given year in any given category or country, a visa queue (waiting list or backlog) forms. To distribute the visas among all preference categories, DOS allocates the visas according to a prospective immigrant’s preference category, country of chargeability, and priority date. The priority date is used to determine an immigrant’s place in the visa queue. When the priority date becomes available, or is “current,” immigrants may be able to apply for adjustment of status and obtain lawful permanent resident status, if otherwise eligible.

Finding Your Priority Date

If you are a prospective immigrant, you can find your priority date on Form I-797, Notice of Action, for the petition filed on your behalf. The waiting time before receiving an immigrant visa or adjusting status depends on:

The demand for and supply of immigrant visas.
The per-country visa limitations.
The number of visas allocated for your preference category.

Priority Dates for Family-Sponsored Preference Cases

For family-sponsored immigrants, the priority date is the date that the Form I-130, Petition for Alien Relative, or in certain instances the Form I-360, Petition for Amerasian, Widow(er), or Special Immigrant, is properly filed with USCIS.
Priority Dates for Employment-Based Preference Cases

For employment-based immigrants, the priority date depends on the following:
If Then your priority date is the date:
Your preference category requires a labor certification from Department of Labor (DOL)

The labor certification application is accepted for processing by DOL.

To preserve the priority date, the petitioner must file Form I-140, Immigrant Petition for Alien Worker, with USCIS within 180 days of the DOL approval date on the labor certification or else the labor certification is no longer valid.

Your preference category does not require a DOL labor certification USCIS accepts Form I-140 for processing to classify the sponsored worker under the requested preference category.
You are a fourth preference special immigrant, including religious workers USCIS accepts Form I-360, Petition for Amerasian, Widow(er) or Special Immigrant, for processing.
You are a fifth preference investor USCIS accepts Form I-526, Immigrant Petition by Alien Entrepreneur, for processing.
magorkhe1
· Snapshot 658
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कहा जन्मिए ठिक बेठिक सबै आफ्नो आफ्नो सोच को कुरा हो |
त्यो भन्दा ठुलो कुरा : बच्चा जन्माउने आमा को Health Insurance छ कि छैन ? Insurance छैन भने कति खर्च लाग्छ त्यो तिर ध्यान दिनु भएको छ कि छैन ? ४०-५० हजार को बिल आउछ तर पछि तिर्दै जाउला भन्ने सोच छ भने राम्रै हो | बच्चा चै पियोर अमेरिकन नै होस् मुला खर्च को के हिसाब गरि राख्ने ?
OcRam
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you can easily get insurance for about 6-700/month and after you have the baby, you can change it to cheaper option. That is what I did last year. Getting insurance from employer can be expensive, it was expensive for me.
Last edited: 26-Jul-16 09:43 AM
collegefootballrocks
· Snapshot 876
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deepocean bro,

Since you said your wife is 6 to 7 months pregnant, it is better for her and the child to be delivered where she is right now. Citizenship would be similar whether u are born here or born elsewhere and get ur citizenship here, except everyone mentioned being the president....Rather than involving in hectic and long travelling, insurance stuffs etc etc, I would suggest her to be where she is but make sure you choose a nice (ajhai bhanum expensive) and reknowned hospital and doctors..Good luck and Congratulations!!!!!
deepocean
· Snapshot 900
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thank you everyone for input of yours and wishing me.
i am much grateful for respond from you guys.
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