Citizenship & Naturalization (N-400) Services in California

Naturalization is the final step of the immigration journey — and one of the most rewarding. We prepare your N-400 application, organize your eligibility evidence, and coach you for the civics test and interview so you arrive confident.

Overview

Form N-400, Application for Naturalization, asks about every address, trip, and job over the past five years — and small inconsistencies can trigger long delays. Eligibility usually requires five years as a permanent resident (three if married to a U.S. citizen), continuous residence, physical presence, and good moral character.

We review your full history before filing, flag anything that needs explanation, and assemble a clean, complete application. Then we make sure you are ready for test day: the English reading and writing portions, the civics questions, and the interview itself.

How we help

  • Confirm you meet residence, physical presence, and good moral character requirements
  • Complete and file Form N-400 with consistent, well-organized supporting evidence
  • Identify travel or tax issues before USCIS does — and address them properly
  • Provide civics test study materials and practice sessions
  • Prepare you for the naturalization interview and accompany your case to oath day

You may qualify for naturalization if…

  • You have held a green card for 5 years (or 3 years married to a U.S. citizen)
  • You have lived in the U.S. for at least half of the qualifying period
  • You can demonstrate basic English and pass the civics test (exemptions exist for age and disability)
  • You are 18 or older with good moral character

How it works

01

Eligibility check

We review your residence, travel, and tax history against USCIS requirements.

02

N-400 preparation

Your full application completed and reviewed with you, line by line.

03

Test & interview prep

Civics practice, document review, and a mock interview before the real one.

04

Oath ceremony

We track your case through the interview, decision, and oath of allegiance.

Frequently asked questions

What if I have taken long trips outside the U.S.?

Trips over six months can break continuous residence and trips over a year almost always do. We review your travel history first and advise on the right time to file — before any problem reaches USCIS.

Do I have to take the test in English?

Most applicants do, but exemptions exist: applicants 50+ with 20 years of residence (or 55+ with 15) may test in their own language, and medical disability waivers (N-648) are available. Our interpretation team can also support you.

Will unpaid taxes affect my application?

They can — good moral character includes tax compliance. If you owe back taxes, entering a payment plan before filing usually resolves the concern. We help you organize the right evidence.

Start today

Your American story deserves a strong start.

Tell us where you are in the process — we will map the road ahead in one free, confidential conversation.