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Can a Peruvian traveller move to the United States with family?

Partner / Family visa requirements · See all destinations for Peruvian travellers

Most Peruvian travellers go through the embassy or consulate before they travel when heading to United States for partner / family.

The route most travellers use is the K-1 Fiancé(e) Visa — United States. Stays of up to 90 days, expect to pay around $800 in mandatory fees, processing usually takes 180–360 days.

The paperwork is heavy — approval depends heavily on the documents and circumstances you can show.

1 other route sit below if this one doesn't fit.

Straight from travel.state.gov.

Partner / Family visas have major life consequences.

Long-stay visa decisions affect your right to live, work, study, or remain with family. Always verify with a qualified immigration adviser or the destination's embassy before making travel, employment, or relocation decisions.

2 options available — review and choose the one that matches your trip.

Embassy visaPartner / Family

K-1 Fiancé(e) Visa — United States

Max stay
90days
Processing
180–360days
Fee
$800.00
Difficulty2/10·Realism7/10
Why? ▾

Difficulty

Heavy paperwork
2/10

Lots of documentation, eligibility thresholds, or a sponsor required. Start months ahead and consider professional advice.

Why this score?
  • Embassy/consulate visa application
  • -2Long processing time (up to 360 days)
  • -0.5Proof of funds required
  • -0.5Biometrics appointment required
  • -0.5Moderate documentation list (5 items)

Approval realism

Approval depends on you
7/10

Approval depends heavily on the documents and circumstances you can show. Read the warning above — it points to what tends to move the needle.

What drives this score?
  • Embassy visa applications generally succeed when documentation is complete and ties to home are clear
Step-by-step checklist

Your application checklist

  1. 1

    Check your passport validity

    570+ days before

    Most countries require 6+ months of validity beyond your travel dates and at least one blank page. If it's close, renew before applying.

  2. 2

    Gather supporting documents

    554+ days before

    You'll need: Fiancé(e) of a US citizen (NOT permanent resident); Met in person within the past 2 years (limited religious/cultural waivers); Both parties legally free to marry; Marriage must occur within 90 days of arrival in the US; and others (see full list above).

  3. 3

    Prepare proof of funds

    554+ days before

    Bank statements covering 3–6 months are standard. Include both savings and recent income flow — adjudicators look for stability, not just balance.

  4. 4

    Book a biometrics appointment (US embassy / consulate)

    547+ days before

    Biometrics centres often have 1–3 week waitlists. Book the slot the moment your application is submitted, not after.

  5. 5

    Submit the application to the embassy or consulate

    540+ days before

    In person at the consulate with jurisdiction over your residence. Bring originals + photocopies of every document. Most consulates require a prior appointment.

  6. 6

    Track the application; print the approval

    7+ days before

    Decisions typically take 180–360 days. Print or save a clear PDF of the approved visa — airlines check this at check-in.

  7. 7

    On the day of travel

    day of travel

    Carry: passport (printed visa if applicable), onward ticket, proof of accommodation, proof of funds, travel insurance. Border officers retain discretion regardless of visa status.

Show full requirements, fees, and source
Passport valid 6+ monthsProof of fundsBiometrics (US embassy / consulate)

What you need

  • Fiancé(e) of a US citizen (NOT permanent resident)
  • Met in person within the past 2 years (limited religious/cultural waivers)
  • Both parties legally free to marry
  • Marriage must occur within 90 days of arrival in the US
  • After marriage, file I-485 Adjustment of Status to become permanent resident

Fee breakdown

  • I-129F petition fee$535.00
  • Consular processing fee$265.00
View primary source (travel.state.gov)
Embassy visaPartner / Family

IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse of US Citizen — Immigrant Visa

Max stay
9999days
Processing
300–540days
Fee
$1,240.00
Difficulty1/10·Realism7/10
Why? ▾

Difficulty

Heavy paperwork
1/10

Lots of documentation, eligibility thresholds, or a sponsor required. Start months ahead and consider professional advice.

Why this score?
  • Embassy/consulate visa application
  • -2Long processing time (up to 540 days)
  • -0.5Proof of funds required
  • -0.5Biometrics appointment required
  • -1Long documentation list (8 items)

Approval realism

Approval depends on you
7/10

Approval depends heavily on the documents and circumstances you can show. Read the warning above — it points to what tends to move the needle.

What drives this score?
  • Embassy visa applications generally succeed when documentation is complete and ties to home are clear
Step-by-step checklist

Your application checklist

  1. 1

    Check your passport validity

    840+ days before

    Most countries require 6+ months of validity beyond your travel dates and at least one blank page. If it's close, renew before applying.

  2. 2

    Gather supporting documents

    824+ days before

    You'll need: US-citizen spouse files Form I-130 Petition for Alien Relative; Bona-fide marriage evidence (joint accounts, lease, photos, communication, statements from family/friends); US-citizen spouse meets income threshold (125% of Federal Poverty Guidelines) or has a co-sponsor; Form I-864 Affidavit of Support from the sponsor; and others (see full list above).

  3. 3

    Prepare proof of funds

    824+ days before

    Bank statements covering 3–6 months are standard. Include both savings and recent income flow — adjudicators look for stability, not just balance.

  4. 4

    Book a biometrics appointment (US embassy / consulate + USCIS Application Support Center on arrival)

    817+ days before

    Biometrics centres often have 1–3 week waitlists. Book the slot the moment your application is submitted, not after.

  5. 5

    Submit the application to the embassy or consulate

    810+ days before

    In person at the consulate with jurisdiction over your residence. Bring originals + photocopies of every document. Most consulates require a prior appointment.

  6. 6

    Track the application; print the approval

    7+ days before

    Decisions typically take 300–540 days. Print or save a clear PDF of the approved visa — airlines check this at check-in.

  7. 7

    On the day of travel

    day of travel

    Carry: passport (printed visa if applicable), onward ticket, proof of accommodation, proof of funds, travel insurance. Border officers retain discretion regardless of visa status.

Show full requirements, fees, and source
Passport valid 6+ monthsProof of fundsBiometrics (US embassy / consulate + USCIS Application Support Center on arrival)

What you need

  • US-citizen spouse files Form I-130 Petition for Alien Relative
  • Bona-fide marriage evidence (joint accounts, lease, photos, communication, statements from family/friends)
  • US-citizen spouse meets income threshold (125% of Federal Poverty Guidelines) or has a co-sponsor
  • Form I-864 Affidavit of Support from the sponsor
  • Police certificate from every country lived in 6+ months since age 16
  • Medical examination by a panel physician at the consulate
  • DS-260 Immigrant Visa Application after I-130 approval
  • IR-1 if married 2+ years (10-year green card); CR-1 if married <2 years (2-year conditional card, file I-751 to remove conditions)

Fee breakdown

  • Form I-130 filing fee$675.00
  • DS-260 + immigrant visa fee$345.00
  • USCIS Immigrant Fee$220.00
View primary source (uscis.gov)

What you'll need

Partner / Family visa for United States

Specific to Peruvian passport holders.

Start ~0–12 weeks before your intended travel date.

Order these first — they have the longest lead time

  • Police certificate

    Background2–12 weeks

    A criminal-record clearance from every country you've lived in for 6+ months in the past 10 years. Universally required for work, study, family and PR routes.

    How: FBI Channeler (US), ACRO (UK), AFP National Police Check (AU), state police of each country lived in.

  • Valid passport

    Identity2–8 weeks

    Most countries require your passport to be valid for at least six months beyond your departure date, with two or more blank pages.

    How: Renew via your own country's passport office if expiring within 12 months.

  • Evidence of genuine relationship

    Relationship2–4 weeks

    Joint financial accounts, lease/mortgage in both names, photos across the relationship, communication logs, statements from family/friends — every modern partner visa requires this.

    How: Self-compile over time. Most routes want 12+ months of co-habitation evidence; some accept communication-only for long-distance.

  • Medical examination

    Medical1–4 weeks

    Conducted by a panel physician approved by the destination's immigration authority. Includes chest X-ray, blood tests, and an interview.

    How: Book directly with a panel physician — find them on the destination's immigration website.

  • Apostille / certified document copies

    Credentials1–4 weeks

    Hague Apostille on civil documents (birth, marriage, education certificates) for countries that recognise the convention. Other countries require consular legalisation instead.

    How: US: state Secretary of State or US State Dept. UK: FCDO Legalisation Office. Other: ministry of foreign affairs of the issuing country.

Then gather these

  • Marriage / civil-partnership certificate

    Relationship1–4 weeks

    Original or certified copy of the marriage or civil-partnership registration, apostilled if applicable.

    How: Issuing registry office of the country where the marriage was registered.

  • Birth certificate (and children's)

    Relationship1–4 weeks

    For family and dependent-child routes. Original or certified copy, apostilled if applicable.

    How: Vital records office of the country of birth.

  • Biometrics (fingerprints + photo)

    Background1–4 weeks

    Captured at a Visa Application Centre (VFS, BLS, TLScontact). Walk-in is rarely possible — appointment slots fill up.

    How: Book on the VAC website after submitting your online application.

  • Sponsor's income evidence

    Financial1–3 weeks

    Last 6–12 months of payslips, employment letter, or tax returns from the citizen-sponsor in the destination country.

    How: Sponsor supplies. Tax returns may need an IRS / HMRC / CRA transcript, which takes a few weeks to order.

  • Certified translation of documents

    Credentials1–2 weeks

    If your documents are not in the destination's official language, you may need a sworn or certified translator.

    How: ATA-certified (US) / ITI-qualified (UK) translators, or a sworn translator registered with the destination's consulate.

  • Proof of funds (long-stay)

    Financial1–2 weeks

    Country-specific minimum savings — e.g. ~CAD 14,000 (Canada study/work permits, single applicant), ~£1,334/month + £8,000 reserve (UK family), proof of income for digital-nomad routes.

    How: Bank statements going back 3–6 months, sometimes a sworn affidavit of support from a sponsor.

  • Passport-style photograph

    Identity1–3 days

    A recent biometric photo to the destination's specifications. Most consulates require their own dimensions, not your home country's.

    How: Any high-street photo studio, or app-based services that meet ICAO 9303 spec.

  • Online visa application form

    Application1–3 days

    The destination's online form (DS-160 for US, gov.uk for UK, IRCC portal for Canada, ImmiAccount for Australia, e-Visa portal for most others).

    How: Apply directly on the destination government website — never via a third-party paid service.

  • Application fee payment

    Application1 day

    Payable to the destination government directly. Fees range from ~$25 (e-Visas) to $2,500+ (US EB-1).

    How: Card payment on the destination's portal. Receipt required for the application.

Lead times are global averages. Country-specific channels can be faster (FBI Channeler in days vs FBI Mail in months) — always check the destination's embassy or visa portal for current timelines.

Make your case

★ Hand-written for this route

Tailored guidance — Peruvian applying for a partner / family visa to United States

The same things a £1,000 immigration consultation would tell you — what evidenceUnited States's caseworkers actually weight, a personal-statement skeleton you can adapt to United States's framing, common mistakes that get peruvian applications refused, and when it's worth hiring a lawyer.

What caseworkers actually weight

  1. 1

    Family-based green card via IR-1 / CR-1 / F-2A / F-2B / F-1 / F-3 / F-4

    Peruvians use standard US family-based immigration system. IR-1/CR-1 (spouse of US citizen — IR-1 unconditional 10-year, CR-1 conditional 2-year if marriage <2 years), IR-2 (unmarried child of US citizen under 21), IR-5 (parent of US citizen 21+), F-1 (unmarried adult child of US citizen — current backlog ~7 years), F-2A (spouse/minor children of LPR), F-2B (unmarried adult children of LPR — backlog ~7 years), F-3 (married children of US citizen — backlog ~15 years), F-4 (siblings of US citizen 21+ — backlog ~20+ years for Peru). Current visa bulletin shows F-4 Peru as one of the longest waits globally.

  2. 2

    Peruvian civil documents + Apostille via Cancillería Lima

    Peruvian birth certificates, marriage certificates, divorce decrees, death certificates need Apostille via Peruvian Cancillería (Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores — Peru is Hague signatory since 2010). Apply at Cancillería Lima (Jr. Lampa 545) or regional offices (Arequipa, Cusco, Trujillo, Piura, Iquitos, Pucallpa, Tacna, Tarapoto). Cost PEN 100-200 (~USD 28-56)/document, 3-7 working days. Pre-2007 Peruvian birth records often handwritten and may need rectification via Peruvian notary (Notario Público) before Apostille.

  3. 3

    Affidavit of Support (I-864) + Peruvian-American sponsor compliance

    US sponsor (citizen or LPR) files Form I-864 — must show income at 125% of Federal Poverty Guidelines for household size + sponsored beneficiary (~$25k single, $33k for 2-person, $42k for 3-person). Joint sponsors accepted if primary insufficient. Peruvian-American sponsors should attach: 3 years of US tax returns (Form 1040), W-2s, employer letter, bank statements, asset valuations. Peruvian-American community concentrated in Paterson NJ, Miami FL, Houston TX, Washington DC area.

  4. 4

    Peruvian Police Clearance + medical exam at Lima panel physician

    Peruvian Certificado de Antecedentes Penales from RENIEC (Registro Nacional de Identificación y Estado Civil) Lima or via online portal — PEN 28 (~USD 8), 1-3 days. INTERPOL clearance also available for some categories. Medical exam at US-designated panel physician in Lima — most common: International Health & Medical (IHM) Lima, MedicalServ. Cost USD 200-400. Yellow fever vaccination required (most Peruvians have it from childhood — bring carnet de vacunación).

Personal-statement skeleton

Fill in each section with your own facts, dates, and details. The structure mirrors what caseworkers expect to find.

  1. Your visa category and relationship

    State explicit visa category and family relationship. IR-1/CR-1 (spouse of US citizen), IR-2 (child under 21), IR-5 (parent), F-1 (unmarried adult child), F-2A (spouse/minor children of LPR), F-2B (unmarried adult children of LPR), F-3 (married children), F-4 (siblings — long backlog for Peru). Document priority date if file is in National Visa Center queue.

  2. Your relationship narrative

    For spousal cases (IR-1/CR-1), document bona fide marriage: when/where/how met (Peru, US, third country), wedding details, photos, joint financial records, joint travel, communication history (WhatsApp, video calls — preserve evidence), family integration. CR-1 is 2-year conditional pending I-751 removal of conditions; IR-1 is 10-year unconditional. Document timeline carefully.

  3. Family ties + Peruvian context

    Document your Peruvian history: residence (Lima / Arequipa / Cusco / Trujillo / Chiclayo / Piura district level), parents' occupation, siblings, education at Peruvian universities (PUCP Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, UNMSM, UPC, U de Lima, ESAN, UPC), Peruvian property with Registro de Predios title, Peruvian bank accounts. Peruvians are typically not flagged for special security screening — straightforward documentation.

  4. US sponsor compliance + future plan

    US sponsor relationship + I-864 sponsorship capacity. State settlement plan: where you'll live (typically with US sponsor or near Peruvian-American community in Paterson NJ / Miami FL / DC metro / Houston TX), work plan (Peruvian credentials evaluated via WES/ECE), child education plan (US public school enrolment via local district), eventual naturalisation timeline (3 years for IR spouse with marriage, 5 years otherwise).

Mistakes that cost real money

  • Family-based visa total fee per applicant: I-130 petition $675 + NVC processing $445 + medical $200-400 + I-864 affidavit $120 = typically $1,400-1,800
  • Apostille via Peruvian Cancillería Lima: PEN 100-200/document — don't use 'tramitadores' charging PEN 500+
  • Don't pay 'asesores migratorios' USD 5,000-15,000 — USCIS forms are free at uscis.gov; immigration attorney costs $1,500-5,000 depending on complexity
  • Peruvian-American legal aid: Asociación de Peruanos en Maryland, Peruvian Society of New Jersey, Peruvian American Coalition — low-cost consultation
  • Translation: certified Spanish-English translation USD 25-50/page
  • Medical exam at IHM Lima / MedicalServ Lima: USD 200-400 — direct booking; don't use agency middlemen
  • Use Wise USD/PEN, Western Union, Banco Continental, or BCP for remittance — competitive vs traditional bank transfer
  • Peruvian Certificado de Antecedentes Penales: PEN 28 via online RENIEC portal — don't pay agents PEN 200+
  • Peruvian Embassy DC + Consulates (Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Hartford CT, Houston, LA, Miami, NY, Newark NJ, Paterson NJ, Philadelphia, Phoenix, San Diego, SF) offer free notarisation for Peruvian citizens
  • F-4 sibling petition has 20+ year backlog for Peru — start applications NOW even if relative is years away from coming

DIY or hire a lawyer?

✓ DIY is fine if

  • Standard I-130 petition for spouse / immediate family member with clean record
  • I-485 Adjustment of Status (if already in US under valid status)
  • Naturalisation (N-400) after 3 years marriage to US citizen or 5 years LPR
  • F-1 / F-2A / F-2B / F-3 / F-4 priority date tracking and waiting

⚠ Get a specialist if

  • Prior US visa refusal or US overstay (B1/B2 overstay common)
  • Peruvian criminal record (drug-related cases under Ley 23330)
  • Family member with prior US asylum claim from Peru (Sendero Luminoso era, MRTA, Fujimori-era cases)
  • Adoption-related petition where Peruvian adoption documentation incomplete
  • Same-sex spouse — Peru doesn't recognise same-sex marriage federally (some same-sex marriages recognised from abroad under 2024 Inter-American Court ruling); US recognises; documentation chain via third-country marriage cert (Argentina, Spain, US)
  • Past unauthorised US entry / border crossing
  • Peruvian-American sponsor with prior tax delinquency affecting I-864 sponsorship
  • Multi-country Peruvian migration history (Peru → Argentina → Chile → US complicates beneficiary documentation)
  • Dual Peruvian-other passport (Peruvian-Spanish, Peruvian-Italian common — apply via Peruvian passport)
This guidance is general — not legal advice. For high-stakes routes (refusal history, criminal record, complex finances), spend the money on a qualified immigration adviser regulated by your destination (UK: OISC / SRA; AU: MARA; US: bar-admitted attorney).

Email me if United States's policy changes

ONE email when the rules change for Peruvian travellers. No account, no marketing.

Other visa types for this route

We also have data on these visa categories between PE and US.

Related routes

Compare other partner / family-visa routes

Sources & references

Every link below is a primary government source. We aggregate; the source is the authority. If anything on this page disagrees with a link below, the link wins.

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Who needs a visa for United States?

Informational only. A valid visa permits entry subject to officer discretion at the border. Always verify with the destination's embassy or official source before travel, employment, or relocation.