Immigration lawyers in Florida
Immigration in Florida
Florida is one of the great gateways for immigration to the Americas. Miami is the commercial and cultural capital of the Caribbean and Latin America, and the state's mix of Cuban, Haitian, Venezuelan, Colombian, and Nicaraguan communities shapes a caseload found nowhere else. Major population centers include Miami, Orlando, Tampa and Jacksonville.
Practices here are heavy on humanitarian and country-specific relief (including Cuban Adjustment Act and TPS questions), asylum, family immigration, and the EB-5 and E-2 investor programs tied to international trade, tourism, and real estate. The Miami and Orlando immigration courts are among the busiest in the country.
Immigration services in Florida
Serving Florida's many immigrant communities, attorneys here handle the complete range of immigration matters:
- Family-based green cards — petitions for spouses, parents, children, and siblings, plus fiancé(e) visas and adjustment of status.
- Naturalization & citizenship — N-400 applications, civics-test preparation, and citizenship for children.
- Deportation & removal defense — bond hearings, cancellation of removal, waivers, and appeals to the Board of Immigration Appeals.
- Asylum & humanitarian relief — affirmative and defensive asylum, U and T visas, VAWA self-petitions, DACA, and TPS.
- Employment & work visas — H-1B, L-1, O-1, TN, and PERM-based EB-2 and EB-3 green cards.
- Skilled-worker & extraordinary-ability visas — H-1B, O-1, L-1, and EB-1/EB-2 NIW green cards for engineers, researchers, and founders.
- Investor & business visas — E-2 treaty investor, EB-5 immigrant investor, and L-1 intracompany transfers.
- Seasonal & agricultural labor — H-2A and H-2B petitions and employer compliance.
- Students & visitors — F-1, M-1, J-1, and B-1/B-2 visas, plus change- and extension-of-status filings.
Communities served across Florida
Beyond Miami's Cuban and Venezuelan communities, Florida has large Haitian (around Miami and Orlando), Colombian, Brazilian, and Puerto Rican populations. A good immigration lawyer understands not just the law but the specific documents, languages, and consular realities these communities face. Every profile on Immigrantio shows the lawyer's practice areas, the languages they speak, their years of experience, and verified client reviews — so you can match with someone who genuinely fits your case in Florida.
How to choose — and book — a Florida immigration lawyer
Immigration law is federal, so an attorney who focuses on Florida can represent you whether you already live there or are applying from another state or abroad. A lawyer who regularly practices in Florida also brings real advantages: familiarity with the USCIS offices and immigration courts that handle Florida cases. Before you hire, compare a few attorneys, ask each to explain the likely timeline, total cost, and risks of your case up front, and read what past clients say. When you're ready, browse verified immigration lawyers serving Florida and book a free or paid consultation directly through Immigrantio — getting trustworthy advice early is the surest way to protect your case and your future in the United States.





