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The Naturalization Timeline Calculator estimates the total time from green card to U.S. citizenship through the naturalization process, including the eligibility waiting period, application processing time, interview and testing, and the oath ceremony. Naturalization is the legal process by which a foreign national becomes a U.S. citizen, governed by the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) Section 316 for general naturalization and Section 319 for spouses of U.S. citizens. Approximately 900,000 to 1,000,000 individuals are naturalized each year, making it the largest annual conferral of citizenship by any country. The general naturalization requirement is 5 years of continuous residence as a lawful permanent resident (green card holder), during which the applicant must have been physically present in the United States for at least 30 months (half of the 5-year period). Spouses of U.S. citizens benefit from a reduced requirement of 3 years of continuous residence with 18 months of physical presence, provided the marriage remains intact and the citizen spouse has been a U.S. citizen throughout the 3-year period. Military service members have expedited pathways, including immediate eligibility during wartime service. The naturalization interview includes two tests: an English language test (demonstrating the ability to read, write, and speak basic English) and a civics test (correctly answering 6 out of 10 questions drawn from a pool of 100 about U.S. history and government). Applicants aged 50 or older with 20 years of permanent residence, or aged 55 or older with 15 years of permanent residence, are exempt from the English test and may take the civics test in their native language through an interpreter. Applicants with qualifying disabilities may request accommodations or waivers. Processing times vary dramatically by USCIS field office, ranging from 5 months in some offices to 24 months or more in others. The national median processing time for the N-400 application is approximately 8-10 months as of 2024, though backlogs in major metropolitan areas (New York, Los Angeles, Miami) can extend this significantly. The complete timeline from filing to oath ceremony includes initial receipt, biometrics appointment, interview scheduling, the interview itself, and the oath ceremony, which may occur the same day as the interview or weeks later.
Total Naturalization Timeline = Eligibility Wait + Filing to Interview + Interview to Oath Eligibility Requirements: General: 5 years continuous residence, 30 months physical presence Spouse of citizen: 3 years continuous residence, 18 months physical presence Early filing: Can file N-400 up to 90 days before meeting the residence requirement Processing Timeline (2024 estimates): N-400 receipt to biometrics: 2-6 weeks Biometrics to interview scheduling: 4-18 months (varies by field office) Interview to oath: Same day to 3 months Total processing: 5-24 months from filing Worked Example — Spouse of U.S. Citizen: Green card issued: January 15, 2022 Earliest N-400 filing (3 years minus 90 days): October 17, 2024 Processing time (median): 8 months Estimated interview: June 2025 Estimated oath: June-July 2025 Total from green card to citizenship: ~3 years 6 months Worked Example — General Naturalization: Green card issued: March 1, 2019 Earliest N-400 filing (5 years minus 90 days): December 2, 2023 Processing time (median): 10 months Estimated interview: October 2024 Estimated oath: October-November 2024 Total from green card to citizenship: ~5 years 8 months
- 1Determine your eligibility category and the earliest date you can file the N-400. For general naturalization, you must have held your green card for 5 years. For spouses of U.S. citizens, the requirement is 3 years. You can file the N-400 up to 90 days before meeting the continuous residence requirement (the early filing rule). Calculate your earliest filing date by counting forward from your green card issue date and subtracting 90 days. Verify that you meet the physical presence requirement by counting your days in and out of the United States.
- 2Verify that you meet all naturalization requirements beyond residence. Requirements include continuous residence (no single absence exceeding 6 months, or you must rebut a presumption of abandonment for absences of 6-12 months; absences over 12 months generally break continuity unless you filed N-470 before departure), good moral character (no disqualifying criminal convictions, tax compliance, child support compliance, no immigration fraud), attachment to the principles of the U.S. Constitution, and the ability to pass the English and civics tests.
- 3Prepare and file the N-400 Application for Naturalization. The application requires detailed personal information, travel history for the past 5 years (all trips outside the U.S. with dates), employment history, marital history, children's information, criminal history disclosure, and tax filing status. Filing can be done online through the USCIS website or by mail. The filing fee is $725 plus $85 for biometrics ($810 total). Fee waivers are available for low-income applicants.
- 4Attend the biometrics appointment. Within 2-6 weeks of filing, USCIS will schedule a biometrics appointment at a local Application Support Center (ASC) for fingerprinting, photograph, and signature collection. The biometrics are used for FBI background checks. Missing the biometrics appointment without rescheduling can result in application abandonment. The background check typically completes within a few weeks but can take months for applicants with common names or prior immigration issues.
- 5Prepare for the naturalization interview and tests. Study the 100 civics questions and answers published by USCIS (you will be asked 10 and must answer 6 correctly). Practice reading and writing simple English sentences. During the interview, a USCIS officer will also review your N-400 application under oath, verify your identity and documents, and ask questions about your background, travel, and moral character. Bring your green card, passport, travel documents, tax returns, and any other documents requested in the interview notice.
- 6Attend the naturalization interview at your designated USCIS field office. The interview typically lasts 15-30 minutes. The officer will administer the English test (reading a sentence, writing a sentence, and conversational speaking during the interview), the civics test (10 questions), and review your application. If you pass both tests and the officer is satisfied with your eligibility, you may receive an approval at the interview. If you fail either test, you will be scheduled for a retest within 60-90 days. If there are issues with your application, additional evidence may be requested.
- 7Take the Oath of Allegiance at a naturalization ceremony. Some USCIS offices conduct same-day oath ceremonies immediately after the interview. Others schedule a separate ceremony days to weeks later, often as part of a group ceremony at a courthouse or civic venue. During the ceremony, you will take the Oath of Allegiance to the United States, surrender your green card, and receive your Certificate of Naturalization. You are a U.S. citizen from the moment you take the oath and can immediately apply for a U.S. passport.
This applicant filed the N-400 approximately 90 days before their 5-year anniversary at a field office with fast processing times. The Denver field office currently processes N-400 applications in approximately 6 months. With same-day oath administration, the total timeline from green card to citizenship is just over 5 years. This represents the fastest realistic scenario for general naturalization applicants.
This spouse of a U.S. citizen files the N-400 90 days before their 3-year green card anniversary. The Chicago field office has a moderate processing time of approximately 10 months. The total timeline of 3 years 8 months is typical for the spouse category at a moderately busy office. The 3-year category saves nearly 2 years compared to general naturalization, making it one of the most significant benefits of marriage to a U.S. citizen.
The New York City field office has one of the longest processing backlogs in the country, with processing times reaching 18-24 months. This applicant waits 20 months from filing to interview, extending the total timeline to 6 years 6 months from green card to citizenship. Applicants in backlogged offices may consider filing a mandamus lawsuit in federal court if processing exceeds normal timeframes, which can compel USCIS to adjudicate the case. However, litigation adds $5,000-$10,000 in legal costs.
This applicant's single trip exceeding 6 months creates two complications: a presumption of abandonment of continuous residence (which can be rebutted with evidence of maintained U.S. ties) and a shortfall in physical presence (28 months instead of the required 30). The applicant must wait until they have accumulated 30 months of physical presence before filing. Extended absences also reset the continuous residence clock in some cases. Careful travel documentation and U.S. ties evidence (maintained home, employment, bank accounts, tax filing) are critical for applicants with travel complications.
Immigration attorneys use timeline calculators to advise clients on optimal filing dates, accounting for early filing rules, physical presence calculations, and field office processing times. Accurate timeline projections help clients plan around important deadlines such as upcoming travel, elections (naturalized citizens can vote immediately), and sponsorship of family members (citizens can sponsor parents and siblings, which permanent residents cannot).
USCIS field offices use workload projections based on filing volumes and processing times to allocate adjudication officers and schedule interview slots. The agency's goal of processing N-400 applications within 6 months is met by some offices but significantly exceeded by others, driving ongoing efforts to redistribute cases and increase efficiency.
Civic engagement organizations use naturalization timelines to plan voter registration drives around oath ceremony dates, as newly naturalized citizens are immediately eligible to vote. Organizations like the National Partnership for New Americans and local naturalization programs coordinate with USCIS to attend oath ceremonies and help new citizens register to vote on the spot.
Employers of green card holders use naturalization timelines to understand when their employees will become U.S. citizens, which affects visa sponsorship obligations, security clearance eligibility, and certain job requirements that are restricted to U.S. citizens. Government contractors in particular track employee naturalization timelines for positions requiring citizenship.
Military naturalization provides expedited pathways for service members.
Under INA Section 328, service members with one year of qualifying military service during peacetime can naturalize without meeting the 5-year residence requirement. Under INA Section 329, service members who served during designated periods of hostility (including the current period beginning September 11, 2001) can naturalize immediately upon filing, regardless of time in permanent resident status. Military naturalizations are processed on an expedited basis and may be conducted overseas at military installations.
Derived citizenship applies to children of naturalized citizens.
A child who is under 18 and a lawful permanent resident automatically becomes a U.S. citizen when their parent naturalizes, provided the child is in the legal and physical custody of the citizen parent. This automatic citizenship under the Child Citizenship Act of 2000 (INA Section 320) does not require a separate N-400 filing. However, obtaining proof of citizenship (by applying for a Certificate of Citizenship using Form N-600 or a U.S. passport) is recommended to document the child's status.
Applicants with criminal history face additional scrutiny during the good moral character determination.
Certain convictions are permanent bars to naturalization (murder, aggravated felony as defined in immigration law). Others are conditional bars during the statutory period (5 or 3 years before filing through the oath). Controlled substance offenses, imprisonment for 180 days or more, and failure to file taxes can all prevent naturalization. Applicants with any criminal history should consult an immigration attorney before filing, as a denied N-400 can trigger removal proceedings in some cases.
| Field Office | Median Processing Time | 80% Processed Within | Office Category |
|---|---|---|---|
| Denver, CO | 5 months | 8 months | Fast |
| Phoenix, AZ | 6 months | 9 months | Fast |
| Dallas, TX | 8 months | 12 months | Moderate |
| Chicago, IL | 10 months | 14 months | Moderate |
| Los Angeles, CA | 14 months | 20 months | Slow |
| Miami, FL | 16 months | 22 months | Slow |
| New York, NY | 18 months | 24 months | Backlogged |
| Newark, NJ | 15 months | 20 months | Slow |
Can I file the N-400 before meeting the 5-year requirement?
Yes, you can file the N-400 up to 90 days before meeting the continuous residence requirement. This is known as the early filing rule and allows applicants to begin the process before their 5-year (or 3-year for spouses) anniversary. However, you must actually meet the residence requirement by the date of your naturalization interview. If your interview is scheduled before you meet the requirement (which is rare given current processing times), it will be rescheduled. The early filing rule allows you to take advantage of processing time rather than waiting until you are fully eligible before entering the queue.
What happens if I fail the civics or English test?
If you fail either the English or civics test at your initial interview, you will be scheduled for a retest within 60 to 90 days. You will only be retested on the portion you failed (English, civics, or both). If you fail the retest, your N-400 application will be denied. You can refile a new N-400 (with new filing fees) and start the process again. There is no limit on how many times you can refile. The 100 civics questions and answers are publicly available on the USCIS website for study, and many community organizations offer free citizenship preparation classes.
What breaks continuous residence?
A single absence from the United States of more than 6 months but less than 1 year creates a rebuttable presumption that you have broken continuous residence. You can overcome this presumption by demonstrating maintained ties to the U.S. (home, job, family, tax filing, bank accounts). An absence of 1 year or more automatically breaks continuous residence, and you must restart the residence clock unless you obtained an N-470 (Application to Preserve Residence for Naturalization Purposes) before departure. Frequent shorter trips that total a significant time abroad may also raise questions about continuous residence even if no single trip exceeds 6 months.
What is the civics test and how should I prepare?
The civics test consists of 10 questions selected by the USCIS officer from a pool of 100 published questions about American government and history. You must answer 6 out of 10 correctly to pass. Topics cover principles of American democracy, system of government, rights and responsibilities, colonial period, the Civil War, and recent American history. USCIS publishes the complete list of 100 questions and answers on its website and in a free study booklet. Many libraries, community colleges, and immigrant service organizations offer free citizenship preparation classes. Applicants aged 65 or older with 20+ years of permanent residence are tested on a reduced list of 20 questions.
How do I check my naturalization processing time?
USCIS publishes estimated processing times for N-400 applications by field office on its website at egov.uscis.gov/processing-times/. Processing times vary significantly — some offices complete cases in 5-6 months while others take 18-24 months. After filing, you can track your individual case status using your receipt number on the USCIS Case Status Online tool. If your case exceeds the posted processing time for your field office, you can submit a case inquiry through the USCIS Contact Center or, if significantly delayed, consult with an immigration attorney about filing a mandamus action in federal court.
Can I travel while my N-400 is pending?
Yes, you can travel outside the United States while your N-400 is pending. However, you should avoid trips longer than 6 months, as this can raise continuity of residence issues. You must also ensure you will be available for your biometrics appointment and naturalization interview. If you are abroad when these are scheduled, you can request rescheduling, but this will delay your case. Carry your green card and a copy of your N-400 receipt notice when traveling. Very frequent or extended travel during the pending period may prompt the officer to question your intent to reside permanently in the United States.
What are the age and disability accommodations for the tests?
Applicants aged 50 or older with 20 years of permanent residence (50/20 rule), or aged 55 or older with 15 years of permanent residence (55/15 rule), are exempt from the English language test and may take the civics test in their native language through an interpreter. Applicants with physical or mental disabilities that prevent them from meeting the English or civics requirements may file Form N-648 (Medical Certification for Disability Exceptions), completed by their doctor, to request a waiver. The N-648 must document how the disability prevents the applicant from learning or demonstrating knowledge, and USCIS officers closely review these waivers.
Uzman İpucu
Start tracking your physical presence in the United States from the day you receive your green card by maintaining a travel log that records every departure and return date. Many applicants realize too late that their business or family travel has reduced their physical presence below the 30-month (or 18-month) threshold. A simple spreadsheet with departure date, destination, return date, and days abroad is sufficient. Some immigration apps and websites also provide physical presence calculators. File the N-400 as early as possible (90 days before eligibility) to enter the processing queue, especially if your field office has a long backlog.
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The 100 civics questions used in the naturalization test have become an unofficial benchmark for civic knowledge in the United States. Studies have found that only about 36% of native-born Americans can pass the naturalization civics test, compared to the 91% pass rate among naturalization applicants. This disparity has prompted several states to require high school students to pass a civics test based on the naturalization questions as a graduation requirement. The test was most recently redesigned in 2020 and then reverted to the 2008 version in 2021.