LandedUSA

International Student Arrival

Student priorities differ from other newcomers: school check-in and activating your status come first, and you can't even get an SSN without a job. This checklist follows the real F-1 order.

Progress0/10 done
  1. Check your I-94 after entry

    Within 24 hours of arrival, download your I-94 from the CBP site and confirm the status says F-1 and Admit Until Date says D/S. Errors here break every later status step โ€” contact your International Student Office (ISO) immediately if something's wrong.

    โฑ Right after entry๐Ÿ”— Official I-94 download

  2. Check in with the International Student Office (SEVIS activation)

    Complete check-in as instructed by your school's emails so the ISO activates your SEVIS record. Not activated = your status hasn't started. This is the single most important pre-semester task.

    โฑ Before classes start

  3. Get a phone number

    Students usually pick budget carriers (Mint, Visible) or split a family plan. Be careful with two-year contracts at campus booths โ€” don't sign casually.

    ๐Ÿ’ฒ $15โ€“25/mo

  4. Open a bank account

    Pick a bank on or near campus. Bring your passport, I-20, and proof of address. Most big banks waive monthly fees for student accounts. F-1 students can open accounts without an SSN.

    ๐Ÿ’ฒ Free

  5. Inspect before renting off-campus

    Before signing, read the lease term, deposit-return terms, and sublease policy โ€” sublease terms matter a lot when semesters don't line up. See the renting checklist for details.

    ๐Ÿ”— Renting checklist

  6. Get the school-required health insurance

    Nearly all schools require insurance, and the default plan is pricey. Some schools accept qualifying outside student plans via a waiver โ€” watch the waiver deadline before classes start.

    ๐Ÿ’ฒ $1,000โ€“3,000/yr

  7. SSN: only with work authorization

    F-1 students need an on-campus job offer (or CPT/OPT) to apply for an SSN. Once you have a job, get letters from your employer and ISO, then visit a Social Security office. Before you have an SSN, taxes use an ITIN.

    ๐Ÿ’ฒ Free

  8. Start building credit (once you have an SSN)

    Start with a student or secured credit card, keep spending small, and always pay in full on time. Jobs and apartments after graduation check your credit โ€” senior year is too late to start.

  9. Figure out local transportation

    Many college towns are unlivable without a car. Before buying, price the insurance (young + new license = high premiums). Consider passing the written test early so the license is ready when you need it.

    ๐Ÿ”— PassPrep free DMV practice tests

  10. Two tax facts to remember

    โ‘  F-1 students are usually nonresident aliens (NRA) for their first 5 calendar years and can't use TurboTax's default flow; โ‘ก your home country may have a tax treaty benefit for students. You must file by April 15 every year (Form 8843 even with no income).

    ๐Ÿ”— Check your tax residency first

This checklist is general information. Requirements vary by state and agency โ€” confirm with the official website before you go.