social security card with Citizenship application

Citizenship Day, Third Gender Option, & Social Security Cards

Paying Immigrants to Leave

Social Security Cards

Third Gender Option

Citizenship Day

Paying Immigrants

Sweden is paying immigrants to leave their country. They had been offering up to 10,000 kronor per adult and 5,000 kronor per child since 1984 but it was hardly ever used. Only one person applied for the cash last year according to mynews. Apparently a few European countries have laws to bribe immigrants to leave their country. Denmark pays more than US$15,000 per person, compared to around US$1,400 in Norway, US$2,800 in France and US$2,000 in Germany.

SOCIAL SECURITY CARDS

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services today announced that, starting April 1, applicants filing Form N-400, Application for Naturalization, will have the option to request an original or replacement Social Security number (SSN) or card and update their immigration status with the Social Security Administration (SSA) without having to visit an SSA office.

Noncitizens applying for naturalization using the new edition of Form N-400 (edition date 04/01/24) will be able to request an SSN or replacement card when submitting Form N-400. New citizens may no longer need to visit an SSA field office to apply for an SSN or replacement card or to provide documentation as evidence of their new U.S. citizenship status. Note that SSA may request additional information, if needed.

Applicants who use the 09/17/19 edition of Form N-400 will not have this option as the SSA questions are only included in the 04/01/24 edition. The 04/01/24 edition of the Form N-400 will be available for online filing on April 1. To file Form N-400 online, applicants must first create a USCIS online account, which provides a convenient and secure method to submit forms, pay fees, and track the status of any pending USCIS immigration request throughout the adjudication process. There is no cost to set up a USCIS online account, which offers a variety of features, including the ability to communicate with USCIS through a secure inbox and respond to Requests for Evidence online.

USCIS previously announced our intention to expand the Enumeration beyond Entry program to include applicants who apply for U.S. citizenship in the Interagency Strategy for Promoting Naturalization: First Anniversary Accomplishment Highlights (PDF, 1.79 MB).

Third Gender Option

We have revised Form N-400, Application for Naturalization, to provide a third gender option, “X,” defined as “Another Gender Identity.” We are also updating guidance in the USCIS Policy Manual accordingly to account for this form revision and other forthcoming form revisions that will add a third gender option; see the Policy Alert.

The 04/01/24 edition of Form N-400 will be the first USCIS form to include the X gender option. Applicants filing this edition of Form N-400 on or after April 1, 2024, will have X immediately available as a gender option on their form.

Applicants who have a pending Form N-400 using the edition in effect before April 1, 2024, may request to update their gender on or after April 1, 2024, as well. For all other forms, individuals must wait until USCIS revises those forms to include the X gender option.

Consult the chart below to determine if the X gender option is available to you.

If you want your gender to be reflected as X and…Then…
You filed your Form N-400 before April 1, 2024, and your N-400 is still pendingIf you received a Request for Evidence (RFE) or interview notice: Provide a letter explaining that you request to change your gender to X in response to the RFE or at the interview.If you have an online account:
Upload a letter explaining that you request to change your gender to X. Upload the letter as new evidence to the pending application.If you do not have an online account:
Email USCIS-updategenderinfo@uscis.dhs.gov and request to change your gender to X.If you have a pending or approved VAWA, T, or U-related case:
Refer to the Contact Us webpage (Inquiries for VAWA, T, and U Filings section).
You already received your naturalization certificateYou must wait until USCIS revises Form N-565 Application for Replacement Naturalization/Citizenship Document to add the X gender option. You must continue to submit the Form N-565 in accordance with form instructions until updated. Once USCIS revises Form N-565, the revised form will allow for a third gender option when applying for a replacement certificate.

Form N-400 is the only USCIS form that offers the X gender option at this time. Therefore, until we complete additional form revisions that add the X gender option, naturalization certificates are the only USCIS-issued secure identity documents that can reflect the gender X. The X gender option is not yet available on the Form N-565.

If you have other benefit requests pending with USCIS and would like to choose X as your gender, or if you would like to change your existing USCIS-issued secure identity documents to reflect X as your gender, you must wait until we update the relevant forms before you may do so. Once USCIS updates additional forms to offer the X gender option, benefit requestors may follow the instructions on the Updating or Correcting Your Documents webpage to select the X gender option. 

Supporting Documentation Not Needed

You do not need to provide supporting documentation to select X as your gender initially or to change your gender selection for Form N-400. The gender you select does not need to match the gender listed on your other immigration documents or on supporting identity documents, such as your birth certificate, passport, or state identification.

Social Security Card

Note that if you select the X gender option on the new Form N-400, you may need to visit a Social Security office for a Social Security card or to update your citizenship status. The Social Security Administration is still developing systems to accept the X gender option.

Background

Historically, USCIS forms and associated documents have only offered two gender options: “Male (M)” and “Female (F).” This has created significant barriers for requestors who do not identify with either of those options. Limiting benefit requestors to two gender options also creates administrative challenges for USCIS when we receive birth certificates or other official government-issued documents with a gender other than M or F. Adding a third gender option helps ensure that secure identity documents and biographical data are accurate and helps both external stakeholders and individuals requesting immigration benefits. It is also consistent with federal and state agencies that have adopted a third gender option, such as the U.S. Department of State’s expanded passport services to offer gender X in their application.

In March 2023, USCIS updated the Policy Manual to allow for the self-selection of gender on USCIS forms. (PDF, 333.48 KB) This policy update allows benefit requestors to select their gender on all USCIS forms without providing supporting documentation (except for Form N-565, which requires a formal form revision to implement this policy). Benefit requestors may also change a prior selection without the need to provide specific supporting documentation, or to match prior documentation provided. This revision is consistent with efforts to break down barriers in the immigration system and reduce undue burdens in accessing immigration benefits, while still maintaining identity verification and fraud prevention procedures.

USCIS Celebrates Constitution Day and Citizenship Day

On Sept. 17, the nation observes Constitution Day and Citizenship Day as part of Constitution Week. The commemoration honors both the signing of the U.S. Constitution on Sept. 17, 1787, and an observance that began in 1940 as “I Am an American Day.” Citizenship Day began in 1952, signed into law by President Harry Truman and, in 1955, President Dwight Eisenhower proclaimed the first Constitution Week.

This year, USCIS will celebrate by welcoming more than 17,000 new citizens in over 400 naturalization ceremonies across the nation between Sept. 14 and Sept. 23. USCIS reaffirms its commitment to promoting citizenship and making the naturalization process accessible to all who are eligible in this country. We have decreased the naturalization backlog by 60 percent and returned to processing times under 6 months. Since the beginning of the Biden-Harris administration, we have taken a number of steps to support implementation of Executive Order 14012: Restoring Faith in Our Legal Immigration Systems and Strengthening Integration and Inclusion Efforts for New Americans. These include:

  • Issuing a new edition of the jbGljayIsInVybCI6Imh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnVzY2lzLmdvdi9uLTQwMCIsImJ1bGxldGluX2lkIjoiMjAyNDA5MTMuMzc3ODExIn0.YcVGiR3VQnJA07W5feewRlS_UzRSpAsxULOEbCCmclA/s/3131063420/br/249090487394-l” target=”_blank” rel=”noreferrer noopener”>Form N-400, Application for Naturalization, with new features:
    • Enabling new citizens to seamlessly request Social Security updates; andVwZGF0ZXMiLCJidWxsZXRpbl9pZCI6IjIwMjQwOTEzLjM3NzgxMSJ9.-lZG4zGyHo4g9HNtWOUpU9Tt1W8z7MKm104nvAnBcfw/s/3131063420/br/249090487394-l” target=”_blank” rel=”noreferrer noopener”>Enabling new citizens to seamlessly request Social Security updates; and
    • Providing a third gender option on Form N-400.XMtdGhpcmQtZ2VuZGVyLW9wdGlvbi1vbi1mb3JtLW4tNDAwIiwiYnVsbGV0aW5faWQiOiIyMDI0MDkxMy4zNzc4MTEifQ.OGS9BLgYe4Eghkf-RH2iyWY531Eq2LYOZEPdqxGWPw8/s/3131063420/br/249090487394-l” target=”_blank” rel=”noreferrer noopener”>Providing a third gender option on Form N-400.

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