Velasco Law Firm
Citizenship & Naturalization · Updated 2026-06-12

Continuous Residence and Physical Presence

Why travel history and residence history matter for citizenship.

Easy summaryStep-by-step guideOfficial references

Easy-to-understand summary

Naturalization cases require careful review of permanent residence history, travel, residence, taxes, good moral character, criminal history, and interview readiness.

Continuous Residence and Physical Presence should be reviewed in context. The legal path may depend on eligibility, deadlines, documents, prior immigration history, and current agency processing posture.

What this means

Why travel history and residence history matter for citizenship. Start with the facts that matter for this issue, then use the checklist and official links below before intake.

What to do next

Gather notices, write a short timeline, identify any deadline, and submit intake if you want attorney review of your exact situation.

Full detailed guide

Continuous Residence and Physical Presence should be reviewed with the full history, not just one fact. Immigration agencies often look at dates, prior applications, eligibility category, government notices, interviews, travel, family records, court records, and whether the person responded on time.

Use this guide to prepare. It is not a substitute for legal advice, but it can help you understand what to look for and what to include when you ask for help.

Who this page is for

This page is for someone researching continuous residence and physical presence, someone helping a family member, or someone with a notice or deadline connected to this topic.

Step-by-step process

  1. Confirm lawful permanent resident status and the date permanent residence began.
  2. Review travel history, addresses, employment, taxes, and family information.
  3. Identify any criminal, citation, immigration, child support, tax, or selective service issues.
  4. Prepare for the interview, English/civics questions, and document review.
  5. Submit intake if any issue could affect eligibility or good moral character.

How attorney review helps

Attorney review can help connect the facts to the correct process, spot deadlines, identify missing evidence, and avoid steps that may create risk. A short intake with clear documents is more useful than a long message without dates or notices.

Document checklist

Core documents
  • Green card front and back
  • Passports and travel history
  • Tax records or IRS transcripts where relevant
  • Marriage/divorce records and child support records where relevant
  • Court dispositions for any arrests, citations, or criminal matters
Topic-specific documents
  • Any official notice connected to the issue
  • Identity documents and immigration history
  • Prior applications, approvals, denials, and deadlines

Do not send original documents unless the attorney or agency specifically instructs you. Keep copies of everything.

Common mistakes and red flags

Red flag: prior denials, missed court, criminal history, old removal orders, false information, or travel after immigration problems can change the analysis. Include these facts in the intake even if they feel uncomfortable.

Common questions

What information matters most for this topic?

The answer depends on the facts, the agency involved, the deadline, and the documents. Use this guide to organize the issue, check official references, and submit intake if you want attorney review.

How do I know if this is urgent?

This can become urgent when there is an ICE notice, detention, a court date, a filing deadline, an RFE/NOID deadline, a denial appeal window, an expiring status/work permit, or planned travel that could create immigration risk.

What should I gather before intake?

Start with government notices, receipt numbers, passports, IDs, immigration cards, prior filings, approvals, denials, and any documents tied to the specific issue. Add a short timeline of what happened and include every important date you can find.

Where can I verify official information?

Use official agency sources such as USCIS, EOIR/Department of Justice, ICE, the Department of State, USA.gov, or the Federal Register. Links to the most relevant official sources are listed at the bottom of this page.

Can this page replace legal advice?

No. This page is general information only. Immigration outcomes depend on personal facts, documents, timing, and agency records. Use this page to prepare, then submit intake if you need attorney review of your specific situation.

What should I put in the intake form?

Include your full name, phone number, email if available, preferred language, the immigration topic, any deadlines, receipt numbers, notice names, and a short timeline. If there is court, ICE, detention, a denial, or a deadline, say that clearly at the beginning.

Ask for attorney review

Submit your name and contact information first. Direct phone contact is kept behind the intake path so the firm can see your topic, urgency, and contact details before follow-up.

References / official sources

These sources are provided for general information only. They are official or authoritative sources and are not a substitute for legal advice.

This page is general information only and is not legal advice. Reading this page or submitting an intake does not create an attorney-client relationship. Representation begins only after the firm accepts the matter and a written agreement is signed.

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