The N-400 filing process is the formal procedure for applying for U.S. citizenship through naturalization. Filing Form N-400 with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) sets the entire naturalization process in motion โ from your initial application through biometrics, the interview, the civics test, and ultimately the oath of allegiance ceremony where you become a U.S. citizen. Understanding each stage before you begin prevents costly mistakes and unnecessary delays that can add many months to your timeline.
The N-400 is a comprehensive 20-part form covering your personal information, immigration history, residency, employment, physical and mental health, moral character, and attachment to the U.S. Constitution. Answering every question completely and accurately is essential โ USCIS verifies your responses against government records, and discrepancies or omissions can result in delays, Requests for Evidence (RFEs), or denial of your application. Many applicants find the form straightforward, but sections on moral character questions, prior immigration violations, and physical or mental health require careful reading and honest disclosure.
You have two options for filing: online through your USCIS online account, or by mail to the USCIS service center designated for your state. Online filing is slightly cheaper and allows you to track your case status in real time. Paper filing by mail is still widely used and is the only option for certain applicants who do not have an online account or who need to file with specific supporting documentation packages.
This guide walks through every stage of the N-400 filing process: confirming your eligibility, obtaining the correct form, gathering supporting documents, paying the filing fee, choosing where to file, understanding what happens after USCIS receives your application, and avoiding the mistakes that cause delays. Before starting your application, verify that you meet all eligibility requirements by reviewing the full N-400 eligibility requirements guide.
Before filing, confirm you meet every eligibility requirement. USCIS will reject or deny applications from ineligible applicants, and some eligibility issues โ such as a recent trip abroad that broke continuous residence โ can only be resolved by waiting and re-filing after the requirements are met. The main eligibility paths are:
5-Year LPR Rule: Most applicants must have been a Lawful Permanent Resident (green card holder) for at least 5 years, be at least 18 years old, have lived continuously in the U.S. for 5 years (with no single trip abroad of 6 months or more), have been physically present in the U.S. for at least 30 months of the past 5 years, have lived in the USCIS district or state where you are filing for at least 3 months, demonstrate good moral character, pass the English language test, and pass the civics test.
Absences shorter than 6 months generally do not break continuous residence, but longer absences can trigger a presumption that continuous residence was broken and require additional evidence to overcome.
3-Year LPR Rule (Spouse of U.S. Citizen): If you have been married to and living with the same U.S. citizen spouse for 3 continuous years and your spouse has been a U.S. citizen for those 3 years, you may file after only 3 years as an LPR. Physical presence requirement is 18 months in the 3-year period. Continuous residence rules are the same โ no single trip abroad of 6 months or more. If your marriage ends before naturalization is granted, you lose eligibility under the 3-year rule and must wait for the 5-year requirement.
Exceptions to English and Civics Requirements: Applicants aged 50 and over who have been LPRs for 20 or more years (50/20 rule) or aged 55 and over who have been LPRs for 15 or more years (55/15 rule) are exempt from the English test. Applicants aged 65 and over with 20 or more years as LPRs qualify for a simplified civics test covering 20 questions instead of 100. Applicants with qualifying disabilities may seek medical exemptions from one or both requirements using Form N-648.
The good moral character requirement covers the 5-year period before filing (3 years for the spouse rule). Certain criminal convictions, false claims to U.S. citizenship, and other conduct can bar naturalization permanently or for specified periods. Prior immigration violations, unpaid federal or state taxes, and failure to register for Selective Service (for eligible males) should all be reviewed carefully before filing. A complete breakdown of all eligibility requirements appears in the N-400 eligibility requirements guide.
Form N-400 is available for free from the USCIS website. Never pay a third-party website to download the form โ USCIS publishes the current version at no charge, and you should always confirm you have the most recent edition before completing it. The form edition date appears in the lower left corner of the form.
USCIS periodically revises Form N-400, and submitting an outdated version can result in rejection. Download the latest N-400 form PDF and print it on standard 8.5 x 11 paper if filing by mail. If filing online, you complete the form directly in your USCIS account and submit electronically.
Form N-400 has 20 parts covering your personal information (name, date of birth, contact details, Social Security number, A-number), physical description, home and employment addresses for the past 5 years, information about your green card, absences from the U.S. during the past 5 years, membership in organizations, continuous residence history, good moral character declarations, attachment to the Constitution, and signature. The form includes an English and civics test request section and space to declare whether you need an interpreter or have a disability accommodation request.
Read the official N-400 instructions before completing the form. USCIS instructions explain how to answer each part, what evidence is required for specific responses, and how to handle unusual situations like a legal name change or multiple marriages. Instructions also specify which applicants qualify for fee waivers or reduced fees. Common completion errors include leaving required fields blank (write N/A rather than leaving blank), providing incomplete absence records, failing to disclose all prior marriages, and incorrectly answering moral character questions. USCIS conducts background checks that verify your responses โ accuracy on every part of the form is essential.
All applicants filing under the standard 5-year rule must include: a photocopy of the front and back of your Permanent Resident Card (green card); two identical passport-style photographs (2x2 inches, white background, taken within the last 30 days) if filing by mail; your complete travel history outside the U.S. for the past 5 years (country, dates, duration, and purpose); evidence of prior marriages and their termination if applicable (divorce decrees, death certificates); any name change legal documentation; and any other evidence relevant to your moral character responses, such as court dispositions for any arrests or charges.
If applying under the 3-year rule as a spouse of a U.S. citizen, include all standard documents plus: proof of your U.S. citizen spouse's citizenship (U.S. passport, birth certificate, or naturalization certificate); proof that you have been living with your spouse continuously โ joint tax returns, lease agreements, utility bills, bank statements, or other joint records; and proof that your spouse has been a U.S. citizen for at least 3 years at the time of filing. If you and your spouse live separately for any reason, additional documentation explaining the circumstances may be required.
Applicants seeking an exemption from the English test, civics test, or oath of allegiance based on a physical or developmental disability or mental impairment must submit Form N-648 (Medical Certification for Disability Exceptions) completed by a licensed medical or osteopathic doctor or licensed clinical psychologist. The medical professional must provide a specific diagnosis and explain how the condition prevents the applicant from meeting the requirement. N-648 must be submitted with the N-400 or brought to the naturalization interview.
If you want USCIS to process a legal name change as part of naturalization, include documentation of the desired name (court order, marriage certificate, or divorce decree showing the name you want to use). For applicants with any arrests, citations, or criminal charges: certified court dispositions for every incident, regardless of outcome โ even dismissed charges or arrests without conviction must be disclosed and documented. Expunged records may still need to be disclosed; review the N-400 instructions for your specific situation.
The standard N-400 filing fee for most applicants is $760 when filing by mail, which includes the $85 biometrics fee. Applicants who file online through a USCIS account pay $710 โ a $50 reduction that USCIS offers as an incentive for online filing. These are the 2026 fee amounts; USCIS periodically adjusts fees, so verify the current amount at USCIS.gov before submitting payment. A complete breakdown of all applicable fees appears in the N-400 filing fee guide.
Fee Payment for Paper Filing: When filing by mail, payment must be submitted with your application package. Acceptable payment methods are a personal check, cashier's check, or money order made payable to U.S. Department of Homeland Security (write out the full name, not abbreviations). Do not send cash. Credit and debit card payment is available only for online filing through your USCIS account. Checks and money orders should include your name and A-number in the memo line in case they become separated from your application packet.
Fee Waivers and Reduced Fees: Applicants whose household income is at or below 150% of the Federal Poverty Guidelines may request a fee waiver by submitting Form I-912 (Request for Fee Waiver) with supporting financial documentation. Applicants whose income falls between 150% and 200% of the poverty guidelines may qualify for a reduced fee of $380.
Active-duty U.S. military members may be eligible to file without any fee. Fee waivers are not automatic โ you must request one and provide supporting documentation, and USCIS can deny the waiver request. If your waiver is denied and you cannot pay, your application will not be processed until the correct fee is received.
Filing Online: Create a free USCIS online account at USCIS.gov to file electronically. Online filing lets you complete the N-400 form directly in your browser, upload supporting documents as PDFs or images, pay by credit or debit card, and receive real-time case status updates. USCIS automatically routes your application to the correct service center based on your address. Online filing eliminates the risk of your check or money order being separated from your application packet and reduces the chances of data entry errors.
Filing by Mail: Paper applications are mailed to a USCIS lockbox facility. The correct mailing address depends on where you live and whether you are using USPS or a courier service (FedEx, UPS, DHL). Do not use the addresses for the wrong service center โ your application will be returned or delayed. The N-400 mailing address guide provides the current mailing addresses organized by state and courier type, which is the safest reference for this information since USCIS updates these addresses periodically.
Organize your paper filing package carefully before mailing. Keep a complete photocopy of your entire application package โ form, all supporting documents, and payment โ before sending anything to USCIS. Mail your package using a reliable tracking service such as USPS Priority Mail, FedEx, or UPS, and retain the tracking number for your records. Send your package by a method that provides delivery confirmation, since USCIS does not call to confirm receipt. You should receive a Receipt Notice (Form I-797) by mail within 2โ4 weeks of USCIS receiving your application, which provides your USCIS receipt number for case tracking.
After USCIS receives your N-400 application, the processing follows a defined sequence. Understanding this timeline helps you track your case accurately and recognize when something is delayed. The N-400 processing time guide provides current processing time estimates by USCIS field office.
Receipt Notice: USCIS mails Form I-797 (Notice of Action) confirming receipt of your application within approximately 2โ4 weeks. This notice includes your 13-digit case receipt number (beginning with letters such as LIN, SRC, NBC, or WAC depending on the service center). Use this number to track your case at USCIS.gov or through the USCIS Contact Center. Keep your Receipt Notice in a safe place โ you will need it for case inquiries and your biometrics appointment.
Biometrics Appointment: USCIS schedules a biometrics appointment at a USCIS Application Support Center (ASC) near your address. You will receive a separate appointment notice (Form I-797C) specifying the date, time, and location. At the ASC, staff collect your fingerprints, photograph, and signature for an FBI background check. Attend exactly as scheduled โ rescheduling is possible but delays your case. Bring your appointment notice and a valid government-issued photo ID.
Interview Notice: After background check processing, USCIS schedules your naturalization interview at a local USCIS field office. Bring all original documents referenced in your N-400 and any additional evidence relevant to your application.
At the interview, the USCIS officer reviews your application, tests your ability to read, write, and speak English (unless exempt), and administers up to 10 civics questions from the 100-question test (you must answer 6 correctly, or 12 of 20 if using the 65+ simplified test). If you pass all components and the officer approves your application, you may take the Oath of Allegiance at the same appointment or be scheduled for a separate oath ceremony.
The most frequent N-400 errors that cause rejections, Requests for Evidence, or delays share a common root: applicants who rush through the form without reading the instructions carefully. Leaving required fields blank instead of writing N/A is one of the most common rejection triggers โ USCIS interprets blank fields as incomplete applications and returns them without processing. Read each question and answer it specifically; a blank field can never be assumed to mean No.
Incomplete travel history is another common problem. You must list every trip outside the United States during the past 5 years (or 3 years for the spouse rule), including the departure date, return date, destination country, and purpose of the trip.
Omitting trips โ even short ones to Canada or Mexico โ can appear as a discrepancy when USCIS compares your application to border crossing records and passport stamps. If you do not remember exact dates, USCIS allows you to estimate, but you should note this clearly and try to document trips through passport stamps, travel records, and credit card statements.
Moral character questions require careful honest disclosure. Many applicants assume that resolved legal matters, expunged records, or old minor incidents do not need to be disclosed โ in most cases they do, and the N-400 instructions explain exactly which situations require disclosure. It is far better to disclose an issue with documentation showing the resolution than to omit it and have USCIS discover it through background check records. An immigration attorney can help evaluate which past incidents, if any, could affect your moral character finding.
Finally, do not file too early. USCIS allows filing up to 90 days before you complete the LPR residency period, but not sooner. Filing even one day before the 90-day window can result in rejection. If your 5-year anniversary date is October 1, the earliest filing date is July 3 (90 days earlier). Calculate your filing window carefully and confirm it before assembling your application package.