Posted on Nov 1, 2019
TSgt Cyber Systems Operations
3.64K
19
11
2
2
0
I was asked this question and thought I knew the answer. I spent some time searching, but may have missed it somewhere.

I know if a member of the armed services plans to marry a foreign national out of country they need to put in an application with the area commander.

What if the service member plans to marry a foreign national that is already in the United States for School? Do they need to apply with their commander/installation commander or can they just do it?
Posted in these groups: Rings MarriageRules and regulations Regulation
Avatar feed
Responses: 7
Lt Col Charlie Brown
6
6
0
Don't just do it. I would speak to my commander and also legal.
(6)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
SSG Brian G.
3
3
0
There are no regulations on it. The military does not issue wives or regulate them. You can marry whomever, whenever, where ever but the paperwork to get them a green card, sponsorship etc is a whole other beast entirely.

The spouses nationality may highly affect any kind of ongoing/pending security clearance you have though.
(3)
Comment
(0)
TSgt Cyber Systems Operations
TSgt (Join to see)
6 y
Thanks! That is what I thought, but realized I didn't actually know 100% when the Airman asked me.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Cpl Bernard Bates
Cpl Bernard Bates
6 y
I laughed when you said" The Military does not issue wives or regulate them. The Marine Corp used to say" If we wanted you to have a wife we would issue you one." My wife is Japanese, W were married on Okinawa in 1964, after my 4 year enlistment was up. I joined the Army and after 16 months and a pile of paperwork approved by every command up to 2nd Army Hdqs. I was given permission to get married. We have been married 55yrs. Semper Fi.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
MSgt Michael Smith
3
3
0
You can marry whomever you want wherever you want any time. You will never get in trouble for it. However...getting your new spouse sponsorship, green card, even a visa is an entirely different story.
(3)
Comment
(0)
TSgt Cyber Systems Operations
TSgt (Join to see)
6 y
Appreciate the answer. That is what I assumed, but assumptions tend to get you in trouble!
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
Avatar feed
What are the regulations of Marrying a non-citizen on US Soil?
CSM Darieus ZaGara
2
2
0
You should be verifying if your future spouse will qualify for a Green Card. There are many differences between a student Visa and a Green card. Simply marrying a US citizen does not guarantee acceptance. You should contact the State Department and ask what you need to know before you take the leap. I can tell you that I had two Sokdiers, very different circumstances get married to people, one on student visa, the other a work visa, both were rejected Green Cards and had to leave the country. Now that was two out of many, but it happened none-the-less. Thank you for your service.
(2)
Comment
(0)
TSgt Cyber Systems Operations
TSgt (Join to see)
6 y
CSM ZaGara, that is excellent advice! I mentioned that possibility as well, but they are willing to take the risk. Thank you for your time to answer this question and thank you for your service!
(1)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
SSG Intelligence Analyst
1
1
0
As far as Immigration goes, you just file an I-130 (Spousal) and add it to their I-485 visa. Then if they naturalize, they qualify for an N-400 Military Naturalization, but that comes later.
As for unit or branch of service requirements maybe ask the S1 if there is anything special that needs to be done but I'd imagine you won't have any problem unless the person is from someplace like North Korea or something odd.
(1)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
Kenn Evans II
0
0
0
Check with legal and immigration. They may not qualify for a resident visa or citizenship and your courtship could be very long, and unfruitful. Love may not have boundaries but can be marred with red tape. Hope you get the side that isn't sticky.
(0)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
TSgt Cyber Systems Operations
0
0
0
Thanks all for the quick responses on this. Everybody has echoed what I assumed was correct, but realized I didn't know for sure when I was asked by a fellow Airman. Thank you all for being excellent resources when initial research doesn't quite uncover the answer.
(0)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small

Join nearly 2 million former and current members of the US military, just like you.

close