los angeles immigration offices
USCIS Los Angeles Field Office
Address, hours, jurisdiction map, and directions for the USCIS Los Angeles Field Office serving 1 counties in California.

USCIS Los Angeles Field Office — 300 North Los Angeles Street
Office Location
300 North Los Angeles Street
Los Angeles, CA 90012
Phone
1-800-375-5283 (National USCIS Customer Service)
Office Hours
Monday–Friday, 7:00 AM – 3:00 PM
147 Google reviews
service area
Counties Served by This Office
The Los Angeles Field Office serves 1 counties in California. If your zip code falls within this area, this is where your interview or oath ceremony will be scheduled.
by the numbers
Approval Rates — Official USCIS Data
How often this office approves N-400 and I-485 applications, based on USCIS quarterly reports.
FY2025 Q4 · July–September 2025
90%
approval rate
Average↓ 0.7% below national average (90.7%)
Approved
4,261
Denied
474
Pending *
8,936
Based on 4,735adjudicated cases · Pending = cases still in queue, not denials
from the community
What Real Applicants Report
Community-sourced data about the Los Angeles Field Office — processing speed, visitor experiences, and more. None of this is official USCIS data.
Post-Interview Processing Time
How long it takes this office to issue a decision after your interview. Does not include the wait from filing to interview.
18
median days from interview to approval
TypicalInterview to approval
Cases reported
47
Faster than
26% of offices
Most recent case
May 2025
Reddit Discussions
What r/USCIS users are saying about this office.
Visitor Experiences — 3.7/5 on Google
Recent experiences at this office, sourced from Google. Showing 5 of 147 reviews.
I fell asleep on the chair in the lobby, waiting for my parents to be done with their interview in 2018
I had today my interview for my citizenship,. The officer Esquivel was so nice , she was patient and polite. She gave me my time to answer the questions, she even helped me with some stuff, that I didn't have in order .. im really so thankful to her , she made feel comfortable. I passed the test ✔️
I went to the Citizenship Interview to translate for both of my grandparents, and my experience was great. Officer Meek is one of the kindest officers with a positive attitude. He was patient and kind to all of us. I am grateful for his help.
Visited the USCIS office on December 23rd in the afternoon for an Emergency Advance Parole appointment. What I witnessed in less than 30 minutes was deeply disturbing and frankly inhumane. The only officer who works today rejected every single emergency parole case that afternoon — an elderly woman, two young women in tears, and one man — all denied in rapid succession with the same dismissive attitude. This was my third time applying for advance parole, and I came more prepared than ever, with medical records,evidence of relationship, and evidence of urgency. The medical documents explicitly stated that the situation was “extremely risky.” The officer coldly responded that “extremely risky does not mean urgent,” and that “being in the ICU does not mean the patient needs family presence.” He implied that unless a doctor in another country uses exact wording he personally wants, the case is not acceptable. This is not due process — this is arbitrary gatekeeping. Emergency Advance Parole exists for situations exactly like this. Instead, it felt like the officer’s goal was simply to deny everyone, regardless of circumstances, evidence, or basic humanity. As a result, I am now forced to remain in the U.S. during Xmas and new year along, while my close family member is critically ill and may pass away tonight. That is a consequence no bureaucrat should impose so casually. That said, my previous experiences with LA field USCIS officers have mostly been positive, and I understand it can be difficult to work on the day before Christmas. However, leaving people separated from their families during medical emergencies — with potentially irreversible consequences — does not make sense and should never happen.
If i could i would rate it 0 stars. Employees at the entrance don’t give a single thing if you are here to get citizenship or to re parol. Everyone has to be in the same line. Absolutely disrespectful to military. Serving this country to get humiliated by a security who is nothing in this life. Hope you all will stand for 2 hours in the line under hot sun with health problems. 👏
need help with your case?
Occam Immigration Serves Clients in the Los Angeles Jurisdiction
No matter which USCIS field office handles your case, our attorneys can represent you. We handle cases at offices across the country — including the Los Angeles Field Office.
visiting this office
What to Expect at Your Appointment
USCIS field offices handle in-person appointments including green card interviews, naturalization interviews and oath ceremonies, and requests for evidence. Here's what to know: