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Expert Application Filing

USCIS N-600

Buckeye Lake Citizenship Certificate Preparation

When you prepare Form N-600 yourself, the hardest part is not the form fields — it is knowing which supporting documents USCIS actually expects to see. Working from our Buckeye Lake office, we organize the packet so the reviewing officer can verify each fact against an indexed exhibit. Local families come back to us for each new filing in the sequence — petition, adjustment, work permit, travel document, citizenship — because the case history stays in one place.

Serving Buckeye Lake, Licking County · 30 miles from our Morse Rd office (~42 min drive)

Form-Focused Guide

Form N-600 overview for Buckeye Lake

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 N-600

Government agency

USCIS

Decision made by

USCIS officer or service center

Best use of this page

N-600

Form review standard

Green card and identity records

Travel history outside the United States

Tax filing history

Marriage records for three-year applicants

Not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice.

Form N-600 for Buckeye Lake Residents

Buckeye Lake permanent residents applying for U.S. citizenship through N-600 are scheduled for their naturalization interview at the USCIS Columbus Field Office (covering Licking County and most of Central Ohio). We prepare your application packet, organize your tax transcripts and travel history, and walk you through the civics test questions ahead of your interview date.

Our office serves Buckeye Lake applicants throughout Licking 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.

Buckeye Lake · Central Ohio

Why this Form N-600 page is written for Buckeye Lake

Central Ohio 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 Licking County clients receive a complete packet review: every signature checked, every translation certified, every supporting document indexed before the envelope is sealed.

Buckeye Lake sits in Central Ohio, agricultural roots with a growing share of residents commuting into the Columbus metro for healthcare, logistics, and manufacturing jobs. Licking County, where Buckeye Lake is located, is a rural Ohio community where vital records typically come from the county seat and federal services require driving to a metro area.

rural and small-town drive routes feed into I-71 or U.S. 23 for the final approach to our Morse Rd office. From Buckeye Lake (ZIP 43008), the trip is roughly 30 miles each way.

communities where new arrivals often join families already established in central Ohio for the lower cost of living — and Buckeye Lake, with a population near 2,710, reflects that mix in its schools, workplaces, and houses of worship.

The 30-mile drive from Buckeye Lake (~42 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 Central Ohio, where many of our Buckeye Lake clients have relatives, coworkers, and shared community ties.

Practical Filing Guide

What this Form N-600 page helps you understand

Form N-400 is the application for naturalization, the process of becoming a U.S. citizen.

Permanent residents usually file after meeting the required continuous residence, physical presence, and good moral character rules.

We spend extra time on travel history and address history because those sections often create interview questions.

We also prepare clients for what to expect at the Columbus naturalization interview.

Packet focus areas

Green card and identity records

Travel history outside the United States

Tax filing history

Marriage records for three-year applicants

N-600

N-600 Document Preparation Guide for Buckeye Lake

Citizenship Certificate preparation for Buckeye Lake 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

1

Confirm the correct form and filing reason.

2

Review identity, immigration, and civil records.

3

Prepare certified translations for foreign-language documents.

4

Check signatures, dates, editions, fees, and mailing instructions.

5

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

What We Provide

Form Completion

Accurate form preparation tailored to your exact case details.

Document Review

We check every supporting document against the USCIS requirement list.

Evidence Organization

We assemble your file so the reviewing officer can easily process it.

Certified Translation

Signed, stamped translations prepared for federal agency review.

Filing Instructions

You leave knowing exactly where to send it and how to track it.

Case Status Help

Ongoing support to monitor your case progress online.

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.

Guessing travel dates

We flag this during preparation, explain what is missing or inconsistent, and help you organize the supporting document before submission.

Forgetting old citations or court records

We flag this during preparation, explain what is missing or inconsistent, and help you organize the supporting document before submission.

Applying too early

We flag this during preparation, explain what is missing or inconsistent, and help you organize the supporting document before submission.

Missing tax transcript issues

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 N-600

Form N-600 is one of those forms where the instructions alone can run 20-40 pages before you even open the form itself. Years of preparing Form N-600 packets for Buckeye Lake-area families means we know which supporting documents make the strongest case. Our experience tells us where applicants typically get stuck — and we walk through those exact fields with you before anything is signed. You get a clean, complete package — not a stack of paper that comes back with a Request for Evidence.

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Bilingual Staff

Somali, Arabic, and English spoken in our office every day

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Columbus Office

3185 Morse Rd — walk in without an appointment

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Flat-Rate Pricing

One clear fee before we start — no surprise charges

N-600 Filing Information

USCIS Filing Fee Reference

$1,170

Fee waiver available through Form I-912 if you qualify.

Processing Time

18–24 months

* USCIS fees and processing times change. Always verify the current fee and form edition at uscis.gov before filing. Asal Immigration preparation fees are separate from USCIS government fees.

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 N-600

Once your application reaches USCIS, here is what to expect and when.

1

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.

2

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.

3

Processing Period

Current USCIS processing time for Form N-600: 18–24 months.

4

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.

Documents Required for N-600

Form N-600 (completed and signed by the U.S. citizen parent for a minor child)
Child's birth certificate with certified English translation
U.S. citizen parent's naturalization certificate or U.S. passport
If parent is U.S. citizen by birth: parent's U.S. birth certificate
Evidence of parent's marriage (marriage certificate) if claiming through both parents
Evidence of legal custody if parents are divorced
Evidence that child was a lawful permanent resident before age 18 (if applicable)
Evidence of parent's physical presence in the U.S. prior to child's birth (for children born abroad)
Two passport-style photos of the child (2×2 inches)
Filing fee ($1,170)

This checklist is a general guide. Your specific case may require additional documents. Bring all original documents plus photocopies.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who is eligible to file Form N-600 for a Certificate of Citizenship?+

Form N-600 is for people who are already U.S. citizens — either born abroad to a U.S. citizen parent, or who automatically acquired citizenship through a parent's naturalization before the child's 18th birthday. N-600 does not make someone a citizen; it documents citizenship that already exists. It is commonly filed for children of naturalized citizens who were green card holders when the parent naturalized.

Did my child automatically become a U.S. citizen when I naturalized?+

Under the Child Citizenship Act of 2000, a child automatically becomes a U.S. citizen when: (1) at least one parent is a U.S. citizen by birth or naturalization; (2) the child is a lawful permanent resident; and (3) the child is under 18 and residing in the U.S. in the legal and physical custody of the citizen parent. If all three conditions were met, your child is already a citizen — N-600 just documents it.

Does my child need to take a citizenship test for N-600?+

No. Form N-600 is not a naturalization application — it is a documentation of citizenship that already exists by law. There is no interview, no civics test, and no English test. USCIS reviews the application and issues a certificate if the child meets the legal criteria.

What is the difference between N-600 and N-600K?+

N-600 is for children who are already in the United States as lawful permanent residents. N-600K is for children who live abroad and are applying for a certificate of citizenship through their U.S. citizen parent's naturalization. The eligibility rules and evidence requirements differ between the two forms.

How far is your office from Buckeye Lake?+

Our office at 3185 Morse Rd, Suite 15, Columbus is approximately 30 miles from Buckeye Lake — typically a 42-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 Buckeye Lake residents need to attend USCIS interviews in Columbus?+

Most USCIS in-person services for Buckeye Lake and Licking 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 N-600 cases, your interview notice will specify the exact location.

Getting to Our Office from Buckeye Lake

Distance

30 miles

Drive Time

~42 minutes

From

Central Ohio

From Buckeye Lake, 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 N-600 in Nearby Cities

Also serving immigrant families and applicants in these Central Ohio communities:

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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 N-600?

Contact our Buckeye Lake area office today — walk-ins welcome.

3185 Morse Rd, Ste 15, Columbus, OH 43231

Call (380) 269-7408