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June 2026 · Green Cards · By Felipe Montoya, Esq.

Green Cards in Miami: How Lawful Permanent Residence Works

A "green card" is one of the most common goals in immigration — and one of the most misunderstood. This is a plain-English overview of what lawful permanent residence is, the main ways people qualify, and why two people who both "have a case" can be on very different timelines.

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What a green card actually is

A green card gives a person lawful permanent resident (LPR) status — the right to live and work permanently in the United States. The physical card is officially the Permanent Resident Card (Form I-551). Permanent residents have important rights and responsibilities: they can live and work here, but they must follow U.S. law, file taxes, and (unlike citizens) cannot vote in federal, state, or local elections. After meeting the requirements, many LPRs can eventually apply for U.S. citizenship through naturalization.

The main paths to a green card

There is no single "green card application." A person must qualify under a specific eligibility category. The main ones are:

Most paths begin with someone filing an immigrant petition for the applicant (a family member or employer), not the applicant filing for themselves.

Two ways to get there: adjustment vs. consular processing

Once a petition is approved and a visa is available, there are two principal routes:

Which route applies depends on where the person is and the specifics of their case.

Why timing varies: priority dates and the Visa Bulletin

This is the part that surprises people most. Immediate relatives of U.S. citizens (spouses, unmarried children under 21, and parents of citizens who are 21 or older) have visas always available — no annual cap. But most other family and employment categories are numerically limited, so applicants wait until their place in line (their "priority date") becomes current under the U.S. Department of State's monthly Visa Bulletin. Depending on the category and country, that wait can be long.

A 2026 note: approval is discretionary

In May 2026, USCIS issued a policy memo (PM-602-0199) reaffirming that adjustment of status is a matter of discretion — being eligible is not, by itself, always enough. We covered what that memo does and does not say in a separate post. The practical takeaway: documenting the positive equities of a case (ties, history, a clean record) matters.

The bottom line

Getting a green card is less about a single form and more about identifying the right category, building a well-documented case, and understanding the timeline that comes with it. Because the categories, processes, and current rules each carry their own requirements — and because immigration rules change — the most useful first step is a case-specific conversation with an immigration attorney.

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This article is general legal information, not legal advice, and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Immigration categories, processing, fees, and wait times change, and how the law applies depends on the specific facts of each case. Consult a qualified immigration attorney about your situation. This website is attorney advertising.

Sources

  • USCIS, Green Card (overview) — uscis.gov/green-card.
  • USCIS, Green Card Eligibility Categoriesuscis.gov.
  • USCIS, Adjustment of Status and Consular Processinguscis.gov.
  • USCIS, Visa Availability and Priority Dates; U.S. Dept. of State, Visa Bulletintravel.state.gov.
  • USCIS, Rights and Responsibilities of a Green Card Holderuscis.gov.
  • USCIS Policy Memorandum PM-602-0199 (discretion in adjustment of status), May 21, 2026.