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EB-1 Visa processing Time

Processing time for EB-1 visa is much shorter than other green card applications as your petitioning employer does not need to go through the process to obtain a labor certification.

Every month the US Department of State publishes the visa bulletin to show which family-based and employment-based green cards applications can move forward to apply for the visa. Every fiscal year (1st of October – 30th of September), approximately 140,000 employment-based visas are available to qualified applicants and each country is limited to receive 7% of green card (which is 9,800). As a result, applicants from countries with high number of applications such as China and India may need to wait awhile to submit their application.

When reading the visa bulletin, the most important word you need to become familiar with is “priority date”. Since labor certification is not necessary, the date you or the employer filed the Form I-140 petition with USCIS will become your priority date. If you see a “Current (C)” in the box where your column meets your row, that means there is no quota backlog and you can now file your Form I-485.

If in case there is a date, that is the “cut-off date”. To check when you can file your application, you will need to compare this date with your priority date. If your priority date is on or before the cut-off date, this means that you can file your application now but if your priority date is after the cut-off date you will need to keep waiting.

Another important word that you must be aware of is the “final action date”. This date is a cut-off date that controls visa number available for this month. If it shows “Current (C)” on the chart, then your pending application is eligible for approval. If your priority date is before the final action, this means your pending application is ready for approval.

This chart shows which of the priority dates are now at the front of line for approval

 WorldChinaEl Salvador, Guatemala, HondurasIndiaMexicoPhilippinesVietnam
1stCurrent01 Mar 18Current01 Mar 18CurrentCurrentCurrent
2ndCurrent15 Jan 16Current08 Jul 09CurrentCurrentCurrent
3rd01 Apr 1915 Feb 1701 Apr 1901 Oct 0901 Apr 1901 Apr 1901 Apr 19
Other Workers01 Apr 1901 Aug 0801 Apr 1901 Oct 0901 Apr 1901 Apr 1901 Apr 19
4thCurrentCurrent01 Apr 17Current15 Jun 18CurrentCurrent
Certain Religious WorkersCurrentCurrent01 Apr 17Current15 Jun 18CurrentCurrent
5th Non-Regional Center (C5 and T5)Current15 Aug 15CurrentCurrentCurrentCurrent01 Aug 17
5th Regional Center (I5 and R5)Current15 Aug 15CurrentCurrentCurrentCurrent01 Aug 17

This chart is primarily directed for applicants who will be applying for the visa application from outside of the US, it shows whether or not you can submit the visa application

 

 WorldChinaEl Salvador, Guatemala, HondurasIndiaMexicoPhilippines
1stCurrent01 Jul 18Current01 Jul 18CurrentCurrent
2ndCurrent01 Aug 16Current15 Aug 09CurrentCurrent
3rd01 Apr 2001 May 1701 Apr 2001 Feb 1001 Apr 2001 Apr 20
Other Workers01 Apr 2001 Oct 0801 Apr 2001 Feb 1001 Apr 2001 Apr 20
4thCurrentCurrent01 Oct 17CurrentCurrentCurrent
Certain Religious WorkersCurrentCurrent01 Oct 17CurrentCurrentCurrent
5th Non-Regional Center (C5 and T5)Current15 Dec 15CurrentCurrentCurrentCurrent
5th Regional Center (I5 and R5)Current15 Dec 15CurrentCurrentCurrentCurrent

Note: For applicants filing the Form I-485, every month USCIS also publishes a page called “Adjustment of Status Filing Charts from the Visa Bulletin” to indicate which chart they will use to accept the applications. For September 2020, USCIS announced to use the Chart A – Final Action Dates.

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