Residency Requirements & Legal Guide in United States
Legal requirements, residency pathways, and administrative processes for expats
Legal System
US employs adversarial common law with strong judicial independence, accessible via small claims courts (limits $5k-$25k by state) and class actions. Predictable for foreigners via equal protection clause; contingency fees aid access without upfront costs. Federal courts handle immigration/property; state variations exist but English-language proceedings ensure accessibility.
Consumer Protection
FTC enforces federal laws like FTC Act against unfair practices; state AGs handle local issues. Strong warranties (Magnuson-Moss), cooling-off periods for door-to-door sales, and dispute resolution via BBB, arbitration, or courts. Credit reporting regulated by FCRA with free annual reports.
- ✓3-day rescission for certain contracts
- ✓Implied warranties on goods
- ✓FCRA credit dispute rights
- ✓TCPA no-robocall rules
- ✓Lemon laws for vehicles
- ✓CLASS action lawsuits allowed
Bureaucracy & Administrative Efficiency
Digitized federal portals (USCIS, IRS.gov) allow online apps/filings with e-signatures; processing times vary (visas 3-24 months). State-level friction: DMV waits, varying tax rules. No national ID; SSN/ITIN key. Regional differences huge (e.g., CA strict emissions vs. TX lax). APIs/trackers improve transparency but backlogs persist post-COVID.
Residency Pathways
- •H-1B Work Visa: Employer-sponsored for specialty occupations; annual cap 85k; lottery system. Leads to green card path.Bachelor's degree · Job offer · Labor condition app · Prevailing wage
- •L-1 Intracompany Transfer: For managers/execs from multinational; no cap; up to 7 years.1yr prior employment abroad · Qualifying relationship
- •EB-5 Investor: Green card via $800k+ investment creating 10 jobs; regional centers common.Source of funds proof · Job creation
- •F-1 Student: For academic studies; OPT work post-graduation.I-20 form · SEVIS fee · English proficiency
- •Family Reunification: Immediate relatives (spouse/parent/child of citizen) no wait; others queued.Petition I-130 · Proof of relationship
- •O-1 Extraordinary Ability: For top talents in sciences/arts/business; renewable indefinitely.Evidence of sustained acclaim
- •E-2 Treaty Investor: For nationals of treaty countries investing substantial capital.50% ownership · Active management
Property Ownership
Foreigners buy property like citizens via realtor/title company; financing possible but harder (higher rates/down payments). Record deed at county level; title insurance standard. FIRPTA requires 15% withholding on sales over $300k unless treaty-exempt.
Banking Access
Foreigners open accounts easily at major banks (Chase, BoA) or online (Chime); no SSN needed initially (use passport/ITIN). KYC via Patriot Act; non-residents get basic accounts. Digital onboarding common; credit building via secured cards.
- Valid passport/ID
- Visa or I-94
- Proof of US address
- SSN/ITIN (preferred)
- Tax ID form W-8BEN
Insurance Requirements
No federal health mandate post-2019; state variations (e.g., CA penalty). Auto liability mandatory in all states (min $10k-$50k by state). Homeowners/renters advised but not required.
- Workers' comp for employers
- Professional liability varies
Citizenship Requirements
- Residency:
- 5 years (3 years if married to citizen; continuous residence; physical presence 30 months/18 months.)
- Language:
- English reading/writing/speaking (age 50+ exempt with 20yr residency)
- Integration:
- Civics test (100 questions, pass 6/10); US history/government
- Dual Citizenship:
- Allowed - No renunciation required; some countries restrict.
- Additional Information:
- Naturalization via Form N-400 after green card; USCIS interview/civics test. Military/expedited paths exist.
Areas Requiring Further Research
- •2026 state-specific auto insurance minimums
- •Current USCIS visa processing times
Sources & References (6)
USCIS Green Card Eligibility Categories
US Citizenship and Immigration Services
View source →How to Open a Bank Account in the US as a Non-Resident
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
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