Kissimmee, Florida
Immigration Attorneys Serving Kissimmee, Osceola County
Family-based green cards, naturalization, and visa petitions for Florida residents, handled in English or Spanish from our Lutz office. For Kissimmee families, immigration work usually means family-sponsored green cards, naturalization, or fiancé(e) visas. The filings are federal, so where a client lives in Florida rarely changes the paperwork, but it changes which USCIS field office handles the interview.
How we approach immigration matters in Kissimmee
Kissimmee is about ninety minutes northeast of our Lutz office on I-4. Both Kissimmee and Osceola County are shaped heavily by the short-term rental and vacation-home market around Walt Disney World, so a share of the real estate work involves investment property and vacation-rental transactions. David is Board Certified in Real Estate Law through The Florida Bar. Gwen drafts Florida estate plans for Kissimmee families under the same Florida statutes that apply in every county.
Osceola County courts and local practice notes
Osceola cases go through USCIS Orlando. Family-sponsored petitions and naturalization for Kissimmee-area clients run remotely from our office.
Directions from Kissimmee: From Kissimmee, the drive to our Lutz office runs about ninety minutes west on I-4. Most Kissimmee engagements are handled without that drive. Phone and Zoom consultations open the matter. Closings coordinate remotely with the Kissimmee title company. E-signing, secure portal, and video strategy calls handle the rest.
About our immigration practice
U.S. immigration law is dense, constantly changing, and unforgiving of mistakes. One missed deadline, one wrong form, or one incomplete filing can set a case back years, or permanently separate a family. Between the two partners, DHW Law brings decades of combined Florida legal experience to immigration matters.
Family-based immigration
Most of the immigration work in a general practice is family-based. The spouse, parent, or child of a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident is seeking to join the family lawfully. We handle:
- Marriage-based petitions. From I-130 through adjustment of status or consular processing.
- Petitions for children and parents of U.S. citizens.
- Preference categories. Siblings, married children, and adult children.
- Removal of conditions on two-year green cards (Form I-751).
- K-1 fiancé visas and K-3 spousal visas.
Every step in the process involves paperwork that has to be right the first time. We review every supporting document, draft cover letters that anticipate examiner questions, and build the record so an interview is a formality rather than a risk.
Naturalization
Eligibility for U.S. citizenship generally requires 5 years of lawful permanent residence (3 for spouses of U.S. citizens), good moral character, physical presence, and passing the English and civics tests. We prepare clients for the interview, review the application for every potential issue, and accompany applicants to the USCIS interview.
Why experience matters in immigration
Immigration law changes constantly. Forms are revised. Filing fees increase. Waiver standards shift with every administration. What does not change is the need for a lawyer who has walked clients through every version of the process. David and Gwen both take immigration matters.
Common questions
Frequently asked about immigration in Kissimmee
Are Kissimmee immigration cases handled locally or federally?
Immigration is federal, so the Kissimmee case file lives with USCIS rather than a local court. We run it from filing through interview, and appeal it if that becomes necessary.
What is the difference between adjustment of status and consular processing?
Adjustment of status is the process of applying for a green card from within the United States. Consular processing is applying from outside the country at a U.S. embassy or consulate. Which one is right depends on how you entered, your current status, and sometimes your travel needs.
How long does a family-sponsored green card take?
It depends on the category. Immediate relatives of U.S. citizens (spouse, parents, unmarried children under 21) have no visa quota wait. Processing time is typically 12–18 months. Preference categories (siblings, married children, adult children) can wait years or decades depending on country of origin.
Do I need to show up to a USCIS interview with a lawyer?
You are not required to bring a lawyer, but representation meaningfully improves outcomes in interviews, especially for marriage-based petitions where officers look carefully for inconsistencies. We prepare clients thoroughly and accompany them to every interview.
I have a criminal record. Can I still apply for a green card or citizenship?
Sometimes, with the right waiver or rehabilitation showing. Many criminal issues are waivable. Some are not. Do not file anything before having the record reviewed.
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