Can a U.S. Citizen Uncle or Aunt Sponsor You for a Green Card?
Last Updated on March 7, 2026 by JR
Can Your U.S. Citizen Uncle (or Aunt) Sponsor You for a Green Card?
This is a common question found online and the answer is usually, no. A U.S. citizen generally cannot file a family-based green card petition directly for a niece or nephew.
In the family-based system, the qualifying categories are limited. For U.S. citizens, the main categories include
spouses, parents, children, and siblings. That means your uncle may be able to sponsor his brother or sister,
but not you directly.
If you are already in the United States on a non-immigrant visa such as in H-1B status,
that does not change the basic rule about who can file a family petition for you. It does, however, mean you may have
other long-term options worth evaluating, including employment-based green card strategies,
and in some situations marriage-based adjustment of status.
An uncle (or aunt) cannot usually petition directly for a niece or nephew
Family-based green card sponsorship is limited to certain relationships. A U.S. citizen can file Form I-130 for certain immediate relatives
and certain preference-category relatives, but nieces and nephews are not direct I-130 categories.
So, even if your relative is a U.S. citizen, even if you share the same last name, and even if you are already in lawful non-immigrant status,
that relationship alone does not create a direct family-based green card path for you.
What family categories actually exist?
Immediate relatives of U.S. citizens
These usually include a U.S. citizen’s spouse, parent, and unmarried child under 21. These categories are important because they are not treated the same way
as numerically limited preference categories. For a plain-English overview, see our
family-based visas hub.
Family preference categories
The family preference system includes categories such as unmarried adult sons and daughters of U.S. citizens,
spouses and certain children of green card holders, married sons and daughters of U.S. citizens, and
brothers and sisters of adult U.S. citizens. That last category is the F4 category.
You can read more in our
guide to family preference categories.
Where people get confused
A U.S. citizen uncle may be able to file for his own sibling if that sibling is your parent. But that is a petition for the parent, not a direct petition for you.
Whether you could benefit indirectly depends on timing, age, marital status, derivative-beneficiary rules, and when a visa number becomes available.
Those cases can get complicated quickly.
Does having the same last name help?
Not by itself. Sharing a last name does not create an immigration category. At most, it may make it easier to document a family relationship,
but the real question is whether the law recognizes that relationship as a qualifying petition category.
In other words, paperwork can prove a relationship, but it cannot create a sponsorship category that does not exist.
If you are on a non-immigrant visa, such as an H-1B, what options may make more sense?
1. Employment-based sponsorship
For many non-immigrant workers, the more realistic long-term route is an
employment-based green card.
Depending on the case, that may involve PERM labor certification, an I-140 petition, and later
adjustment of status if eligible.
We also have a separate guide to
PERM labor certification.
2. Marriage-based immigration
If you later marry a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident, that may create a direct family-based path.
See our
marriage green card guide and, if relevant,
our page on
H-1B to marriage green card.
3. A broader family strategy review
Sometimes the right question is not whether an uncle or aunt can petition for you directly, but whether there is some other
qualifying petitioner, some existing priority date, or another lawful path that fits your facts better.
That requires a category-by-category review rather than a simple yes-or-no answer.
A petition for your parent is not automatically a green card for you
This is where many families lose time. If your relative files for your father or mother as a sibling case, that does not automatically mean you can file your own green card application right away.
Derivative rules, age-out issues, marital status, visa bulletin waiting times, and your own immigration history can all matter.
Before making plans based on a family relationship alone, it is worth reviewing the
preference category rules,
the
adjustment of status rules,
and whether the case would instead require
consular processing.
Most likely, your uncle (or aunt) cannot directly sponsor you
In most cases, a U.S. citizen relative cannot directly file a family-based green card petition for a niece or nephew.
If you are on H-1B, the better long-term options are often employment-based sponsorship, a qualifying marriage-based case, or a careful review of whether some other family relationship creates a recognized category.
If you want help mapping the best green card path based on your current status, work history, and family relationships,
you can start with our
family-based visas hub,
our
employment-based green card guide,
or
contact us for a consultation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a U.S. citizen sponsor a niece or nephew for a green card?
Does sharing the same last name help with a green card case?
Can my uncle (or aunt) sponsor my parent instead?
I am on H-1B. What green card options are usually stronger?
Where can I check the official family categories and visa wait rules?
DisclaimerThis content is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. No attorney-client relationship is formed by viewing this page. Immigration outcomes depend on individual facts and current law.
