Florida Citizenship and Naturalization Lawyer

Becoming a United States citizen is, for many permanent residents in Florida, the final step in a long immigration journey. Naturalization gives you the right to vote, the security of a status that cannot be taken away the way a green card can, and the ability to petition for family members more quickly. At the Law Offices of Albert Goodwin, we help people throughout Florida and across the country prepare and file Form N-400, get ready for the citizenship interview and tests, and address problems that could otherwise delay or derail an application.

Our office is in Coral Gables, and because naturalization is governed by federal law, we assist clients all over Florida as well as nationwide and abroad. If you are thinking about applying, or if you have a complication in your background that worries you, we are glad to talk through your situation before you file.

Who Is Eligible to Naturalize

Most people who naturalize do so after holding a green card for a set number of years. The basic eligibility requirements are:

  • You are at least 18 years old at the time you file Form N-400.
  • You have been a lawful permanent resident for at least five years, or at least three years if you obtained your green card through marriage to a U.S. citizen and you are still married to and living with that citizen.
  • You have maintained continuous residence and met the physical presence requirements during that period.
  • You can demonstrate good moral character.
  • You can read, write, and speak basic English and pass a test on U.S. history and government, unless an exception applies.
  • You are willing to take the Oath of Allegiance to the United States.

There are special rules for certain applicants, including some spouses of U.S. citizens stationed abroad and members of the armed forces, who may qualify under different timelines. If your green card was granted through marriage, you may also want to review our pages on the marriage green card process and family-based immigration.

Continuous Residence and Physical Presence

These two requirements often cause confusion because they sound similar but measure different things.

Continuous residence means you have kept the United States as your home without a long break during the qualifying period. A trip abroad of more than six months can interrupt continuous residence, and an absence of a year or more usually breaks it entirely unless you took specific steps to preserve it. Physical presence is simpler arithmetic: you generally must have been physically inside the United States for at least half of the qualifying period, which is 30 months out of five years, or 18 months out of three years.

If you travel frequently for work or family reasons, it is worth reviewing your trips carefully before you file. We can help you count your days and decide whether to apply now or wait until you clearly meet the threshold.

Good Moral Character and the Look-Back Period

The government looks closely at your conduct during what is called the statutory period, which is usually the five or three years before you file, although officers can consider conduct before that window as well. Good moral character is not about being perfect; it is about whether your record shows the kind of conduct the law treats as disqualifying.

Issues that can affect a finding of good moral character include criminal convictions, certain immigration violations, fraud in earlier filings, failure to pay taxes you owe, and failure to pay court-ordered child support. Some criminal offenses are permanent bars; others fall within the look-back period and may delay rather than permanently prevent naturalization. Because the analysis is fact-specific, anyone with an arrest or conviction in their past should have it reviewed before filing.

The English and Civics Tests

At the interview, most applicants must show an ability to read, write, and speak basic English and must pass a civics test on U.S. history and government. The civics test is given orally, and the questions come from a published list, so it is something you can study for in advance.

Exceptions and Disability Waivers

There are well-established exceptions to the testing requirements:

  • Applicants who are 50 or older and have been permanent residents for at least 20 years, or who are 55 or older with at least 15 years as a permanent resident, may take the civics test in their own language and are excused from the English requirement.
  • Applicants who are 65 or older with at least 20 years as a permanent resident may study a shorter list of civics questions.
  • An applicant with a physical or developmental disability or a mental impairment may request a waiver of the English and civics requirements by submitting Form N-648, completed by a licensed medical professional.

The N-648 medical exception is detailed and is sometimes questioned by officers, so it helps to have the form prepared carefully and supported by the right documentation.

The N-400 Process, Interview, and Oath

The naturalization process follows a fairly predictable path, though timelines vary by location:

  1. You file Form N-400 with supporting documents and the filing fee, or a fee waiver request if you qualify.
  2. You attend a biometrics appointment so the government can take your fingerprints and run background checks.
  3. You are scheduled for an interview, where an officer reviews your application, asks about your background, and administers the English and civics tests.
  4. If approved, you attend a ceremony and take the Oath of Allegiance, which is the moment you actually become a citizen.

The interview is the part that makes people most nervous. The officer goes through your N-400 line by line, so your answers should match what you filed. Preparing in advance, and understanding which questions tend to come up, makes the day far less stressful.

Problems That Can Lead to Denial or Removal

Naturalization is not risk-free for everyone. When you file Form N-400, the government re-examines your entire immigration history, and in some cases that review can surface problems that put your green card itself at risk. It is important to identify these issues before filing, not after.

  • Certain criminal convictions can make you removable, and applying can bring them to the government's attention.
  • Fraud or misrepresentation in a prior application, such as a green card obtained through a marriage the government later questions, can undermine your status.
  • Men who lived in the United States as permanent residents between the ages of 18 and 26 are generally expected to have registered for Selective Service; a failure to register can raise good moral character questions, especially for younger applicants.
  • Unpaid taxes or an unresolved tax debt should be addressed, ideally through a payment arrangement, before you apply.

None of these issues automatically means you should not naturalize. They simply mean your case deserves a careful look first. If a problem with your underlying residence comes to light, you may want to revisit the basics of your green card before moving forward.

The Benefits of Citizenship

For many people the effort is well worth it. Citizenship offers advantages that a green card does not:

  • The right to vote in federal elections.
  • A U.S. passport and the ability to travel without worrying about reentry or abandonment of residence.
  • Protection from removal, which permanent residents do not have.
  • The ability to petition for relatives, including parents and married children, often with shorter waits.
  • Eligibility for certain government jobs and benefits.
  • The ability to pass citizenship to children, in some cases automatically.

Children Who May Already Be Citizens

Some children become citizens without ever filing a naturalization application. A child may have acquired citizenship at birth through a U.S. citizen parent, or may have derived citizenship automatically when a parent naturalized while the child was a permanent resident living in the parent's custody and under 18. If this describes your family, your child may already be a citizen and may only need a Certificate of Citizenship or a passport to prove it. We are happy to review the dates and circumstances to see whether this applies.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does naturalization take in Florida?

Processing times vary by field office and can change. From filing Form N-400 to the oath, many cases run several months to about a year. We cannot promise a specific timeline, but filing a complete and accurate application is the best way to avoid delays.

Will a past arrest stop me from becoming a citizen?

Not necessarily. The effect depends on what happened, when it happened, and how the case was resolved. Some matters fall outside the look-back period or do not affect good moral character at all, while others are more serious. This is exactly the kind of issue to review with a lawyer before filing.

Do I have to give up my other citizenship?

The United States does not require you to renounce another nationality to naturalize, though your other country may have its own rules. Many naturalized citizens hold dual nationality.

What if my English is limited?

You may still qualify. Depending on your age and years as a permanent resident, you may be able to take the civics test in your own language, and applicants with a qualifying medical condition may request a waiver using Form N-648.

If you are ready to apply for citizenship, or you simply want to know whether you are eligible, the Law Offices of Albert Goodwin can help. Call us at 786-522-1411, email email@floridaimmigrationlawoffice.com, or visit our contact page to schedule a consultation. We serve clients throughout Florida and, because naturalization is federal, nationwide and abroad.

Immigration Attorney Albert Goodwin

About the Author

Albert Goodwin, Esq. is a licensed attorney with over 18 years of legal experience who represents immigrants and their families before USCIS, the immigration courts, and U.S. consulates abroad. His knowledge of family-based petitions, employment visas, green cards, naturalization, and removal defense makes him well-qualified to write authoritative articles on a wide range of immigration topics. He can be reached at 786-522-1411 or email@floridaimmigrationlawoffice.com.

Albert Goodwin gave interviews to and appeared on the following media outlets:

ProPublica Forbes ABC CNBC CBS NBC News Discovery Wall Street Journal NPR

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