N-400 Interview Scheduled: What to Expect and How to Prep

N-400 interview scheduled — what happens at the naturalization interview, what to bring, how the civics test works, and how to prepare effectively.

Your N-400 Interview Is Scheduled — What Happens Next?

Getting your naturalization interview notice is an exciting milestone. After months of waiting since you filed your N-400, you're finally close to the finish line. The interview is the last major step before the Oath of Allegiance ceremony — and with the right preparation, it's one you can walk into with confidence.

This guide covers exactly what happens at the N-400 naturalization interview, what you need to bring, how the civics and English tests work, and how to prepare in the weeks leading up to your appointment.

What the N-400 Interview Notice Tells You

Your interview notice arrives by mail (and through your USCIS online account if you filed online). It contains:

  • Your appointment date, time, and location (the USCIS field office where you'll be interviewed)
  • Instructions for what to bring
  • A reminder to bring the notice itself

Read the notice carefully and follow all instructions. USCIS offices have specific requirements — some require you to bring original documents that were submitted as copies; others only need the documents listed on the notice. Don't bring a box of every document you've ever had — bring specifically what's requested, plus your green card and government-issued photo ID.

If you need to reschedule, do it as early as possible through your USCIS online account or by calling USCIS. Missing a scheduled interview without rescheduling can result in your case being administratively closed.

What to Bring to Your N-400 Interview

The interview notice specifies required documents, but here's a general checklist:

  • Your appointment notice — required
  • Government-issued photo ID — passport (foreign or U.S. if you have a reentry permit), state driver's license, or state ID
  • Permanent Resident Card (green card) — both sides
  • Passport or travel document — pages showing all travel outside the U.S. in the last 5 years
  • Any documents USCIS requested via RFE or the interview notice
  • Original documents supporting your N-400 answers — for example, if you noted a name change, bring the court order

If you answered "yes" to any questions in Parts 12–15 of your N-400 (the good moral character sections), bring supporting documentation — court records, certified dispositions, or explanation letters as applicable. USCIS may have seen these before, but having originals available demonstrates good faith and helps the officer verify information efficiently.

What Happens at the Interview

Naturalization interviews are typically 20–45 minutes long. Here's how most interviews flow:

Oath and Introductions

The officer begins by swearing you in — you affirm that everything you say is true under penalty of perjury. This isn't dramatic, but it's legally significant. Everything that follows is on the record.

Review of Your N-400

The officer goes through your N-400 answers with you. They'll ask you to confirm key information: your name, address, marital status, employment history, travel history, and your answers to the good moral character questions. Answer clearly and honestly. If an answer on your form needs clarification, now is the time to provide it — don't wait for the officer to ask.

The officer may ask follow-up questions about travel, arrests (if any), or other areas flagged during background check processing. Stay calm and answer directly. Nervousness is normal; the officer understands this isn't a comfortable situation for most applicants.

English Test

Unless you qualify for an exemption (age 50+ with 20 years of permanent residency, or age 55+ with 15 years), you must demonstrate you can read, write, and speak basic English.

Speaking: Most of the interview itself tests your spoken English — you're already demonstrating your ability to understand and respond to questions throughout the appointment.

Reading: The officer will ask you to read one sentence aloud from a selection of sentences. You have up to three attempts (across two sets if needed).

Writing: The officer dictates one sentence for you to write. Again, you have up to three attempts.

The sentences are simple — USCIS publishes the vocabulary list for reading and writing sentences on their website. Practice these before your interview. "Columbus Day is in October." "Abraham Lincoln was the 16th President." These are the level of sentences you'll encounter. If you've been living and working in the U.S. and speaking English regularly, this isn't a barrier.

Civics Test

This is the part many applicants are most nervous about. The officer will ask you up to 10 civics questions from the official list of 100 USCIS civics questions. You need to answer at least 6 correctly to pass on the first attempt.

Questions are asked verbally — the officer asks, you answer out loud. Once you answer 6 correctly, the officer stops. You don't need to answer all 10; as soon as you've passed, the test is over.

If you fail the civics test or the English test on your first attempt, you'll be scheduled for a second interview (typically 60–90 days later) to retest. Most applicants who prepare adequately pass on their first attempt.

How to Prepare for the Civics Test

The 100 official civics questions and their acceptable answers are publicly available on the USCIS website at no cost. You should study from the official list — some unofficial resources use outdated or slightly inaccurate answers that could lead you to give a technically incorrect response.

Here's how to prepare effectively in the weeks before your interview:

Use Active Recall, Not Passive Reading

Reading the civics questions and answers is not enough. Your brain needs to practice retrieving the answers, not just recognizing them when they're in front of you. Use flashcards (physical or digital), practice with someone quizzing you verbally, or use practice tests that simulate the real interview format. Active recall is dramatically more effective for this type of memorization than passive review.

Focus on Likely Questions

Some civics questions are asked more frequently than others. Questions about the Constitution, the branches of government, the Bill of Rights, the number of senators and representatives, the president, and U.S. history are among the most common. Make sure you know these cold.

Also know questions with variable answers — "Who is your U.S. Representative?" and "What is the capital of your state?" change depending on where you live. Look these up and confirm they're current before your interview.

Practice Speaking Your Answers Aloud

The civics test is oral. Some applicants know the answers perfectly when writing them down but freeze when asked to say them out loud to an unfamiliar official. Practice answering verbally — say the answers out loud, ideally with someone playing the role of the interviewing officer. This builds confidence and reduces interview anxiety.

Start Early

The most common mistake? Waiting until you receive the interview notice to start studying. By then, you may have only 3–4 weeks — manageable, but stressful. If you haven't started yet, begin today. The civics test is learnable, but it requires genuine preparation over multiple weeks for the material to stick under pressure.

Common Interview Concerns — Addressed

A few situations applicants frequently worry about:

What if I don't understand a question? It's okay to politely ask the officer to repeat or clarify a question. They're not trying to trick you — they want accurate information. Saying "Could you please repeat that?" is perfectly acceptable.

What if I answer a civics question incorrectly? The officer will typically move to the next question. If you haven't passed (reached 6 correct answers) by question 10, you've failed the civics test for this interview. You'll be scheduled for a second interview to retake it. This is not the end of your naturalization process — it's a setback, not a denial.

What if my name changed since I filed? If you've legally changed your name and want your certificate to reflect your new name, bring the court order showing the legal name change. Otherwise, your certificate will be issued in the name on your N-400.

What if the officer asks about something on my N-400 that I'm unsure about? Never guess or make up an answer. It's better to say "I'm not certain of that specific date" than to provide incorrect information under oath. If you realized before your interview that something on your N-400 is inaccurate, bring documentation and be prepared to explain the correction.

What Happens After the Interview

After your interview, the officer will either:

  • Grant your application on the spot — This is the best outcome. The officer signs off at the end of the interview, and you'll receive scheduling information for your Oath ceremony.
  • Continue your case — The officer needs additional time to review your case or awaits results from your background check. This is not a denial; it means a decision is pending. You may receive a request for additional documents.
  • Deny your application — Uncommon at the interview stage if your application was complete, but possible if you didn't pass the English or civics test (you'll get a second chance), or if there are significant good moral character concerns.

If approved, you'll receive an Oath ceremony notice (either given to you at the interview or mailed later). The Oath ceremony is typically scheduled within a few weeks to a few months after the interview, depending on your field office's scheduling capacity.

The Oath Ceremony

The Oath ceremony is where you officially become a U.S. citizen. You recite the Oath of Allegiance — renouncing allegiance to other nations, affirming loyalty to the U.S., and committing to support the Constitution. After the Oath, you receive your Certificate of Naturalization.

Bring your green card to the ceremony — you'll surrender it at the door. You no longer need it once you're a citizen. You can apply for a U.S. passport immediately after the ceremony using your Certificate of Naturalization.

The Final Push: Preparing in the Weeks Before Your Interview

You've come this far in the naturalization process — don't let preparation for the final step slip. The civics test is genuinely learnable, and the interview itself is a straightforward conversation with a USCIS officer, not an adversarial examination.

Use the time you have. Practice the 100 civics questions daily using active recall. Review your N-400 answers so you can confirm them confidently. Prepare the documents the notice asks you to bring. And on the day of your interview, arrive early, stay calm, and answer every question honestly and clearly.

The Oath ceremony is waiting. The preparation you put in now is what gets you there with confidence.

About the Author

James R. HargroveJD, LLM

Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist

Yale Law School

James R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.

Join the Discussion

Connect with other students preparing for this exam. Share tips, ask questions, and get advice from people who have been there.

View discussion (1 reply)