USCIS I-864
Find Affidavit Of Support Near Driving Park
Avoid the frustration of remote online services by working with our dedicated team right here near Driving Park. Our office at 3185 Morse Rd is a short drive from every Columbus neighborhood. Bring your documents in today for immediate, personalized assistance in your native language.
Serving Driving Park, Franklin County · 7 miles from our Morse Rd office (~14 min drive)
Form-Focused Guide
Form I-864 overview for Driving Park
This page is organized around the government form, notice, or consular process first. We explain what the form is for, who normally uses it, what records are reviewed, and which official source should be checked before anything is submitted.
Primary form or notice
Form I-864
Government agency
USCIS
Decision made by
USCIS officer or service center
Best use of this page
I-864
Form review standard
Household size
Federal tax returns or transcripts
Current income evidence
Joint sponsor documents when needed
Not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice.
Form I-864 for Driving Park Residents
Driving Park families in Franklin County file I-864 family-based petitions through the USCIS Cleveland Field Office for biometrics and the appropriate USCIS Service Center for adjudication. We have prepared this exact form for hundreds of Columbus Metro families — including the I-864 affidavit of support, the joint sponsor letters, and the medical exam coordination that USCIS expects with the complete packet.
Our office serves Driving Park applicants throughout Franklin County. Clients often come to us after receiving a USCIS notice, preparing for a family petition, renewing documents for work, or trying to understand which records must be translated before filing.
Driving Park · Columbus Metro
Why this Form I-864 page is written for Driving Park
Driving Park sits in Columbus Metro, driven by financial services, insurance, healthcare, and the new wave of tech investment around the Intel campus and the Columbus Region Logistics Council corridor. Franklin County, where Driving Park is located, is a small Ohio city where most clients drive to the county seat for vital records and to a regional metro for federal appointments.
Columbus Metro families typically come to us with a mix of family-petition, green-card, work-permit, and naturalization paperwork — sometimes for multiple family members at once. Our Franklin County clients receive a complete packet review: every signature checked, every translation certified, every supporting document indexed before the envelope is sealed.
one of the largest Somali populations in the United States outside Minneapolis, with growing Bhutanese, Burmese, and Latino communities — and Driving Park, with a population near 6,200, reflects that mix in its schools, workplaces, and houses of worship.
easy I-71 and Route 161 access keeps drive times short from anywhere inside the outerbelt. From Driving Park (ZIP 43205), the trip is roughly 7 miles each way.
The 7-mile drive from Driving Park (~14 min) is short enough for a midweek appointment but far enough that we always plan to finish core packet work in one sitting. We also serve families across the rest of Columbus Metro, where many of our Driving Park clients have relatives, coworkers, and shared community ties.
Practical Filing Guide
What this Form I-864 page helps you understand
Form I-864 is the Affidavit of Support used to show that an immigrant has adequate financial support.
Petitioners and joint sponsors use it in many family-based green card cases.
We review the sponsor documents against the household size before the packet is assembled.
If a joint sponsor is needed, we explain the document list clearly.
Packet focus areas
Household size
Federal tax returns or transcripts
Current income evidence
Joint sponsor documents when needed
I-864
I-864 Document Preparation Guide for Driving Park
Affidavit Of Support preparation for Driving Park residents should be based on real records, not guesses. We review identity documents, civil records, USCIS notices, translations, signatures, fees, and filing instructions so the packet is organized before submission.
How we organize the filing path
Confirm the correct form and filing reason.
Review identity, immigration, and civil records.
Prepare certified translations for foreign-language documents.
Check signatures, dates, editions, fees, and mailing instructions.
Organize a copy of the packet for your records before filing.
Records we review closely
- ✓Government-issued ID
- ✓Passport and immigration records
- ✓Birth or marriage records when relevant
- ✓Prior USCIS notices
- ✓Certified translations
- ✓Filing fee or fee waiver documents
Related help for this case
What We Provide
Walk-In Hours
Immediate assistance for urgent immigration matters.
In-Person Document Review
Bring your originals — we review everything in the office, on the spot.
Bilingual Staff Daily
Our local team reflects the diversity of the community we serve.
Same-Day Consultations
Leave our office with a solid strategy for your filing.
Central Location
3185 Morse Rd — easy to reach from all over the metro area.
Extended Hours
We accommodate your work schedule to make filing easy.
Common problems we check before filing
Most avoidable delays come from small paperwork issues: a missing signature, a document that was not translated, a fee that changed, or a name that appears differently across records. Before your packet leaves our office, we review these details with you.
Counting household size incorrectly
We flag this during preparation, explain what is missing or inconsistent, and help you organize the supporting document before submission.
Sending pay stubs without tax documents
We flag this during preparation, explain what is missing or inconsistent, and help you organize the supporting document before submission.
Missing joint sponsor proof of status
We flag this during preparation, explain what is missing or inconsistent, and help you organize the supporting document before submission.
Using inconsistent income numbers
We flag this during preparation, explain what is missing or inconsistent, and help you organize the supporting document before submission.
Why Columbus Families Choose Asal for Form I-864
Online portals cannot replace sitting across the desk from an experienced professional. Questions come up that no FAQ covers. You bring a document and are not sure if it is the right version. That is why face-to-face document review matters before submission. Stop by our office today and let us take the stress out of your immigration paperwork.
Bilingual Staff
Somali, Arabic, and English spoken in our office every day
Columbus Office
3185 Morse Rd — walk in without an appointment
Flat-Rate Pricing
One clear fee before we start — no surprise charges
Official USCIS resources to verify before you file
We prepare documents using the information you provide and publicly available government instructions. Before any application is mailed or submitted online, the current USCIS form edition, fee, filing address, and instructions should be checked directly with USCIS.
What Happens After You File Form I-864
Once your application reaches USCIS, here is what to expect and when.
USCIS Receipt Notice
Within 2-4 weeks of mailing your application, USCIS sends back a receipt notice (I-797C) with your unique case number. Keep this because it is your proof that the case is in the system.
Biometrics Appointment (if required)
Some filings require a biometrics appointment at a USCIS Application Support Center near Columbus. You will receive a separate notice with your appointment date, time, and location.
Processing Period
Processing times vary by form type and service center caseload. We will give you a realistic timeline when you come in.
Decision or Follow-Up Request
USCIS mails an approval notice or, in some cases, a Request for Evidence asking for additional documentation. We remain available to help you respond completely and on time.
What to Bring to Your Appointment
Frequently Asked Questions
How far is your office from Driving Park?+
Our office at 3185 Morse Rd, Suite 15, Columbus is approximately 7 miles from Driving Park — typically a 14-minute drive. We're located on the north side of Columbus, between Cleveland Ave and I-71, with free parking. Walk in any day Monday through Saturday 10am–6pm, or Sunday 10am–4pm. No appointment needed.
Do Driving Park residents need to attend USCIS interviews in Columbus?+
Most USCIS in-person services for Driving Park and Franklin County residents are handled at the USCIS Columbus Field Office at 50 W Town St, Columbus. This includes naturalization interviews, biometrics appointments at the nearby Application Support Center, and any in-person follow-ups USCIS requests. For I-864 cases, your interview notice will specify the exact location.
Getting to Our Office from Driving Park
Distance
7 miles
Drive Time
~14 minutes
From
Columbus Metro
From Driving Park, head toward Columbus and exit onto Morse Rd. Our office is at 3185 Morse Rd, Suite 15 — between Cleveland Ave and I-71, on the north side of Columbus. Free on-site parking, walk-ins welcome every day Mon–Sat 10am–6pm, Sun 10am–4pm.
Get turn-by-turn directions on Google Maps →Form I-864 in Nearby Cities
Also serving immigrant families and applicants in these Columbus Metro communities:
View all immigration services →Asal Immigration Services is a document preparation service operated by Asal Multi-Services LLC. We are not attorneys and are not authorized to practice law. We do not provide legal advice, explanations, opinions, or recommendations about legal rights, remedies, defenses, options, or strategies. We assist with the preparation of immigration forms based on information you provide. For legal advice, consult a licensed immigration attorney.
Ready to Start Your Form I-864?
Contact our Driving Park area office today — walk-ins welcome.
3185 Morse Rd, Ste 15, Columbus, OH 43231