What Happens at a USCIS Interview? A Walkthrough

The USCIS interview is the step in the immigration process that most people feel anxious about. For most applicants with straightforward cases and organized documents, it's more of a verification meeting than an interrogation. Understanding what happens and why makes it much less stressful.

Which Applications Require an Interview

Not every application leads to a USCIS interview. Here's what generally triggers one:

What to Bring

Bring originals of everything you submitted with your application. USCIS keeps photocopies in the file but will want to see original documents to confirm authenticity. Standard items:

If you have an attorney, they can come with you and be present in the interview room.

What the Officer Is Checking

Regardless of the application type, the officer is doing three main things:

Officers work from your application file. They go through it essentially page by page, asking you to confirm or clarify information you already submitted.

The Interview Itself

When you're called in, you'll be asked to raise your right hand and swear or affirm that you'll tell the truth. The oath matters — lying to a USCIS officer is a federal crime.

The officer will review your application and ask questions from it. The pace and depth vary by officer and case type:

Common Reasons Interviews Get Complicated

Most interviews go smoothly. These are the things that tend to cause problems:

Preparation is straightforward: read your entire application before you go. Officers often ask specific questions about details — your old address from 4 years ago, your employer's exact name, your entry date. You submitted this information months ago. Review it so you don't have to guess.

If USCIS mailed you a notice for an interview, review your entire application before you go — officers often ask about specific details you submitted months ago.

What to Do If You're Asked Something You Don't Know

Say "I don't know" or "I don't remember." Officers expect applicants to be uncertain about some things — dates, exact addresses from years past, specific numbers. They're looking for patterns of dishonesty, not perfect recall.

Do not guess at an answer you're not sure about. A wrong answer is worse than saying you don't recall. If something is in your documents, you can ask to refer to them.

After the Interview

The officer may tell you the outcome before you leave — this is more common for naturalization cases. For most green card interviews, the officer will say they're recommending approval and that you'll receive a notice in the mail. You typically don't get an approval card in the room.

If approved for a green card, you'll receive a "Welcome Notice" in the mail followed by the actual permanent resident card separately.

If the officer cannot approve that day — because something needs further review, or a document was missing — they may issue a Request for Evidence (RFE) or schedule a follow-up. This doesn't mean a denial, but you will need to respond promptly.

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Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or immigration advice. Immigration law changes frequently. Consult a qualified immigration attorney for advice specific to your situation.