The RegistryPractice Area · Statewide

Immigration Attorneys in California

Counsel for status, relief, and the road to citizenship. This is the statewide record for immigration in California — every attorney on the State Bar of California's official roll whose practice reaches this shelf, scored in the open by the published Growth Score.

Californians search this field under many names — immigration lawyer, immigration attorney, green card attorney, green card lawyer, visa lawyer — and the registry answers all of them from the same source. Below: the governing deadline with its citation, what to weigh as you read the roster, the questions Californians ask with the code sections that answer them, and the record city by city, from the North Coast to the border.

The clock & the craft

Statute of limitations

30 days to appeal an immigration judge's decision to the Board of Immigration Appeals.

8 C.F.R. § 1003.38

Immigration law is federal. Other hard deadlines include the one-year asylum filing rule (8 U.S.C. § 1158(a)(2)(B)) and strict motion-to-reopen windows (8 C.F.R. § 1003.23).

Reading the roster

Immigration is federal practice, but local matters: attorneys near you will know the practices of the San Francisco and Los Angeles immigration courts, the local USCIS field offices, and the region's consular processing patterns. Verify any representative is a licensed attorney or DOJ-accredited representative — immigration is a field with documented notario fraud. Ask about flat fees per filing, realistic timelines, and contingency plans if a priority date retrogresses.

Immigration · statewide roster

Registry indexing underway

195,000+ California attorneys are being verified against official State Bar of California records. Verified listings for Immigration · California will appear here as indexing completes.

Official State Bar data · Scored in the open · Updated daily

Immigration questions, cited

How long do I have to apply for asylum in the United States?

Generally one year from your last arrival, under 8 U.S.C. § 1158(a)(2)(B). Exceptions exist for changed circumstances affecting eligibility or extraordinary circumstances that delayed filing. Asylum applicants may apply for work authorization after the application has been pending the statutory waiting period (8 C.F.R. § 208.7).

What is the difference between a green card and citizenship?

A green card confers lawful permanent residence — the right to live and work in the U.S. indefinitely — but it can be lost through abandonment or certain convictions. Naturalized citizenship under 8 U.S.C. § 1427 (INA § 316) generally requires five years as a permanent resident (three if married to a U.S. citizen, INA § 319), plus physical presence, good moral character, and passing the civics and English tests.

Can I appeal if an immigration judge orders me removed?

Yes. An appeal to the Board of Immigration Appeals must be received within 30 calendar days of the immigration judge's decision (8 C.F.R. § 1003.38). An adverse BIA decision can then be challenged by petition for review in the federal court of appeals within 30 days (8 U.S.C. § 1252). Deadlines in this sequence are strictly enforced.

Does a criminal conviction affect my immigration status in California?

It can, severely — certain convictions trigger removability or inadmissibility under 8 U.S.C. § 1227 and § 1182, including "aggravated felonies" and crimes involving moral turpitude. California law requires courts to advise non-citizen defendants of immigration consequences before a plea (Cal. Penal Code § 1016.5), and Penal Code § 1473.7 allows some to vacate pleas taken without understanding those consequences.

How does family-based immigration work?

U.S. citizens may petition for spouses, children, parents, and siblings; permanent residents for spouses and unmarried children (8 U.S.C. § 1153). "Immediate relatives" of citizens have visas always available, while preference categories wait for a priority date to become current on the State Department's monthly Visa Bulletin — waits vary from months to decades depending on category and country.

Legal information, not legal advice.

From the answer files

Immigration by city

Immigration in Los AngelesLos Angeles County · Los AngelesImmigration in Long BeachLos Angeles County · Los AngelesImmigration in PasadenaLos Angeles County · Los AngelesImmigration in Santa MonicaLos Angeles County · Los AngelesImmigration in San DiegoSan Diego County · San DiegoImmigration in Chula VistaSan Diego County · San DiegoImmigration in San FranciscoSan Francisco County · Bay AreaImmigration in OaklandAlameda County · Bay AreaImmigration in San JoseSanta Clara County · Bay AreaImmigration in Santa RosaSonoma County · North CoastImmigration in EurekaHumboldt County · North CoastImmigration in ReddingShasta County · Shasta CascadeImmigration in SacramentoSacramento County · Sacramento ValleyImmigration in DavisYolo County · Sacramento ValleyImmigration in FolsomSacramento County · Sacramento ValleyImmigration in SalinasMonterey County · Central CoastImmigration in Santa BarbaraSanta Barbara County · Central CoastImmigration in FresnoFresno County · San Joaquin ValleyImmigration in BakersfieldKern County · San Joaquin ValleyImmigration in South Lake TahoeEl Dorado County · SierraImmigration in RiversideRiverside County · Inland EmpireImmigration in San BernardinoSan Bernardino County · Inland EmpireImmigration in IrvineOrange County · Orange CountyImmigration in AnaheimOrange County · Orange CountyImmigration in Santa AnaOrange County · Orange CountyImmigration in Palm SpringsRiverside County · DesertImmigration in StocktonSan Joaquin County · San Joaquin ValleyImmigration in ModestoStanislaus County · San Joaquin ValleyImmigration in OxnardVentura County · Central CoastImmigration in FremontAlameda County · Bay AreaImmigration in VisaliaTulare County · San Joaquin ValleyImmigration in San Luis ObispoSan Luis Obispo County · Central Coast

Adjacent shelves of the law

Read the record. Then decide.

Describe your matter once, weigh the published scores, and place the call — the choice is always yours.

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195,000+ attorneys · 58 counties · Scored in the open