Why Choose Us?
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Unmatched Expertise
Trust in Peter Chu's 75+ years of collective experience to guide you through complex immigration matters.
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Tailored Solutions
Our personalized strategies adapt to your unique circumstances, ensuring we meet your specific immigration needs.
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Proven Success
Benefit from our solid track record in achieving favorable outcomes in various immigration cases across San Diego.
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Dedicated Service
Experience our client-first approach that ensures constant support and guidance throughout your immigration journey.
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Comparing Your Options for IR-2 Child Visa Denver Representation
Families pursuing IR-2 visas in Denver typically consider three paths: filing the I-130 petition without legal assistance, hiring a general immigration paralegal service, or retaining a Colorado-licensed immigration attorney. DIY filings avoid upfront legal fees but carry high RFE rates. Families unfamiliar with USCIS evidence standards often submit incomplete relationship documentation, missing translations, or improperly completed Affidavits of Support that delay approval by months. Paralegal services offer lower-cost document preparation but cannot provide legal advice, represent clients before USCIS, or respond to Requests for Evidence involving legal interpretation. Here's the honest answer: IR-2 cases with complex relationship evidence. Children born outside marriage, prior name changes, or foreign adoption. Benefit significantly from attorney review before filing. Simple cases with complete documentation may succeed with self-filing, but the cost of a single RFE response often exceeds the cost of initial attorney review.
| Option | Cost Range | RFE Risk | Professional Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|
| DIY Filing | $0–$200 (filing fees only) | High. Incomplete evidence common | Best for straightforward cases with complete original documents; high risk if relationship evidence is complex |
| Paralegal Service | $400–$800 | Moderate. Document prep only | Cannot provide legal advice or represent you if USCIS requests additional evidence |
| Licensed Immigration Attorney | $1,500–$3,500 | Low. Attorney reviews evidence standards | Required for cases involving paternity establishment, foreign adoption, or prior immigration violations |
Frequently Asked Questions
Find answers to common questions about our services
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Current processing timelines for IR-2 visas filed from Denver average 12-18 months from I-130 filing to visa issuance, though this varies significantly based on the child's country of residence and consular post workload. USCIS Denver Field Office I-130 p
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Essential documents for an IR-2 petition include the child's original or certified birth certificate showing the parent-child relationship, proof of the petitioner's U.S. citizenship (passport, naturalization certificate, or birth certificate), evidence o
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If the child is in the U.S. and you filed for adjustment of status (I-485) along with the I-130 petition, the child can remain in Denver legally during processing and attend Colorado public schools under state law requiring schools to enroll all resident
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The petitioning parent must submit Form I-864 Affidavit of Support demonstrating income at least 125% of the federal poverty guidelines for their household size. For a family of three in 2026, this requires annual income of approximately $28,500 or higher
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If USCIS denies an I-130 petition, the denial notice will specify the reason. Most commonly insufficient evidence of relationship, failure to establish petitioner's U.S. citizenship, or adverse findings related to prior immigration violations. Denver fami
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Many straightforward IR-2 cases. Child born in wedlock, complete original birth certificate listing both parents, petitioner with clear proof of U.S. citizenship. Succeed with self-filing. However, even simple-seeming cases benefit from attorney review if
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USCIS allows expedite requests for I-130 petitions in limited circumstances: severe financial loss to a company or individual, emergency situations, humanitarian reasons, nonprofit organization requests furthering U.S. cultural or social interests, or U.S
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The most frequent errors include submitting photocopies instead of original or certified documents, omitting required translations for foreign-language documents, failing to establish paternity with sufficient evidence for children born outside marriage,
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