USCIS N-400 Processing Time: What to Expect in 2026

Current USCIS N-400 processing times for 2026 by field office. What happens at each stage, how to check your status, and what to do if it's taking too long.

USCIS N-400 Processing Time: What to Expect in 2026

How Long Does N-400 Processing Take in 2026?

USCIS N-400 processing times in 2026 range from approximately 8 to 24 months for most applicants, depending on the field office handling your case. That's a wide range — and the variance frustrates many applicants who want a firm timeline.

The honest answer is that USCIS processing times fluctuate constantly based on application volume, staffing levels, and policy changes. The only reliable current figure is the one posted directly on the USCIS website under "Check Case Processing Times" — that tool shows estimates by form type and specific field office, updated monthly.

This guide explains what the processing time actually covers, what happens at each stage, and what your options are if your case is taking longer than the published estimate.

The N-400 Processing Timeline: Stage by Stage

The total processing time isn't one continuous waiting period — it's made up of distinct stages with different waiting periods at each step. Here's how a typical N-400 case moves through the system:

Application Receipt

USCIS receives your N-400, processes payment, and issues a receipt notice (Form I-797) by mail. Expect 2-4 weeks after mailing. Online filers receive electronic confirmation faster.

Biometrics Appointment

You receive an appointment notice for a local Application Support Center (ASC) for fingerprinting, photos, and signature. Typically scheduled 3-8 weeks after receipt. The appointment usually takes 15-30 minutes.

Background Check Processing

FBI runs fingerprint checks; USCIS conducts immigration history and criminal background review. Most cases clear within a few weeks, but complex histories can extend this stage significantly.

Interview Scheduling

USCIS schedules your naturalization interview at the local field office. This is often the longest wait — anywhere from 6-18 months depending on office workload. You'll receive a notice 4-6 weeks before your scheduled interview.

Naturalization Interview

Officer reviews your application, tests English language proficiency, and administers the civics test (10 questions from the 100-question pool; must answer 6 of 10 correctly). Most interviews last 20-45 minutes.

Decision

USCIS approves, denies, or continues your case. Most applicants receive an approval at the interview or within days. Continued cases may require additional documentation.

Oath Ceremony

Final step. Scheduled separately from the interview — either same-day for administrative ceremonies or weeks later for larger group ceremonies. You take the Oath of Allegiance and receive your naturalization certificate.

Current Processing Times by Field Office

Processing times vary dramatically by location. Major metropolitan field offices often have significantly longer wait times than smaller offices due to higher application volumes. As of early 2026, some examples of the range:

  • Faster offices: Many smaller field offices are processing N-400s in 8-12 months
  • Average offices: 12-18 months for mid-sized field offices
  • Slower offices: Some high-volume offices (major cities) may take 18-24+ months

For your specific field office's current estimate, go directly to the USCIS processing times page at uscis.gov/tools/reports-and-studies/immigration-forms-data. Enter Form N-400 and your field office to see the current published estimate. This is the only accurate source — third-party sites often use outdated figures.

How to Check Your N-400 Case Status

USCIS provides two main ways to check your case status:

Online Case Status

Go to egov.uscis.gov and enter your receipt number (from your I-797 notice). The online system shows your current case status — though it's often delayed and may not reflect every action USCIS takes on your file.

USCIS Contact Center

Call 1-800-375-5283 to speak with a USCIS representative. You can request a status update and, in some cases, escalate if your case has been pending beyond the published processing time.

Emma Chatbot

USCIS's automated virtual assistant Emma (accessible via the USCIS website) can answer basic status questions and connect you with a representative. Useful for after-hours inquiries.

What If Your Case Is Taking Too Long?

If your case has been pending longer than the "outside normal processing time" threshold published on the USCIS website, you have options:

Submit a Case Inquiry

If your N-400 is outside normal processing time, you can submit an e-Request through my.uscis.gov asking USCIS to review your case. This doesn't guarantee action, but it creates a record of your inquiry.

Contact Your Congressional Representative

U.S. senators and representatives have casework staff specifically to help constituents with federal agency delays. A congressional inquiry to USCIS on your behalf often prompts faster review. This is a free, legitimate, and surprisingly effective option that many applicants don't know about.

Writ of Mandamus

In extreme cases where USCIS has unreasonably delayed adjudication, applicants can file a Writ of Mandamus in federal district court compelling USCIS to act. This typically requires an immigration attorney and is used as a last resort after other options are exhausted.

Factors That Can Delay Your N-400

Some delays are systemic — just the queue. But certain case-specific factors can also extend your processing time:

  • Criminal history — any arrests, charges, or convictions (even old or minor ones) trigger additional background check processes
  • Travel history — extensive international travel, especially to certain countries, may require additional security review
  • Prior immigration violations — gaps in legal status, prior removal orders, or prior denial of benefits require careful review
  • Name or identity issues — discrepancies between your immigration file, biometrics, and application documents
  • Tax compliance — USCIS reviews whether permanent residents have filed and paid taxes appropriately
  • Requests for Evidence (RFE) — if USCIS needs additional documentation, your case pauses until they receive and process your response

For help navigating the application itself and ensuring your file is complete and accurate, see the N-400 form instructions guide and the complete N-400 application overview.

What Happens After Your Interview?

Most applicants are approved at their naturalization interview. If you are:

Approved at interview: You'll receive a notice for your oath ceremony. Administrative ceremonies (private, conducted by USCIS staff) can happen the same day at many offices. Judicial ceremonies (in federal court) may be scheduled weeks later. Once you take the oath, you're a U.S. citizen. Your naturalization certificate is your proof.

Continued: USCIS needs more information. You'll receive a notice explaining what's needed. This often involves submitting additional documents or attending another interview. It extends your timeline but doesn't mean denial.

Denied: You receive a written decision explaining the reason. You can appeal to the Administrative Appeals Office or, in some cases, request a hearing with a USCIS officer.

After naturalization, you'll want to apply for a U.S. passport (DS-11 at any passport acceptance facility) and update your Social Security records. Those steps are straightforward — the N-400 processing is the hard part.

For more on the fee structure and payment options, see the N-400 filing fee guide. For step-by-step form completion instructions, the N-400 instructions guide walks through every section of the application.

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.

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