The world's largest employment-based immigration market — built around employer sponsorship and family ties.
Annual green cards
~1,000,000
H-1B annual cap
85,000
F-1 students enrolled
1.1 million+
EB-5 minimum investment
USD 800,000 (TEA)
Overview
The United States issues roughly 1 million new permanent residencies (green cards) per year, but with strict per-country caps and decade-long backlogs for some nationalities. Non-immigrant visas dominate everyday mobility: H-1B for specialty workers, F-1 for students, L-1 for intra-company transferees, and the B-1/B-2 for visitors. Most permanent residency pathways still require employer sponsorship or a qualifying family relationship.
How the immigration system works
U.S. immigration is administered by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), with consular processing handled by the Department of State and border admission by Customs and Border Protection (CBP). Permanent residency works through employment-based (EB-1 through EB-5), family-based (immediate relatives and preference categories), and the Diversity Visa lottery. Non-immigrant visas are role-specific and almost all require a U.S. petitioner or sponsor.
Best for
Highly skilled workers sponsored by a U.S. employer (H-1B, O-1, L-1)
Researchers, professors and 'extraordinary ability' applicants (EB-1, O-1)
International students pursuing degrees with OPT/STEM-OPT work options
Immediate family of U.S. citizens (spouse, parents, unmarried children)
Investors with USD 800,000 – 1,050,000 to deploy under EB-5
First-preference green card for individuals with extraordinary ability (EB-1A), outstanding professors/researchers (EB-1B), and multinational managers/executives (EB-1C).
Who it's for: Applicants who can document sustained national or international acclaim and recognition.
Timeline
I-140: 6–12 months (15 days with premium); adjustment: 8–14 months
Cost
USD 700 – 4,000 in government fees (excluding attorney fees)
Documents
3 items
Requirements
Meet at least 3 of 10 EB-1A criteria, OR qualify under EB-1B/EB-1C
Demonstrate continued work in the field of expertise
Process
1File I-140 (employer or self-petition for EB-1A)
2Wait for priority date (typically current for most countries)
3File I-485 adjustment of status or consular process via DS-260
Documents
• Awards, citations, publications, press coverage
• Recommendation letters from independent experts
• Evidence of high salary or commercial success
Common mistakes
• Treating EB-1A like a checklist rather than a final-merits showing
Work visa for individuals with extraordinary ability in sciences, arts, education, business, athletics (O-1A) or extraordinary achievement in film/TV (O-1B).
Who it's for: Top-tier professionals able to evidence sustained national or international acclaim.
Timeline
I-129: 2–4 months (15 calendar days with premium)
Cost
USD 1,500 – 5,000+ filing + legal
Documents
4 items
Requirements
Major one-time award OR 3+ of 8 USCIS criteria (awards, press, judging, original contributions, publications, high salary, critical role, exhibitions)
Second-preference employment-based green card for advanced-degree professionals or those of exceptional ability; National Interest Waiver removes the job-offer/PERM requirement.
Who it's for: Master's-or-equivalent professionals, or applicants whose work has substantial merit and national importance to the U.S.
Timeline
PERM: 8–18 months; I-140: 3–9 months; final action highly nationality-dependent
Cost
USD 5,000 – 15,000 legal + USD 700+ filing
Documents
4 items
Requirements
Advanced degree or exceptional ability evidence
PERM labour certification (standard EB-2) OR NIW criteria (Dhanasar)
Green card via U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident sponsor — Immediate Relatives (no cap) or Family Preference categories (F1–F4, capped, with waits).
Who it's for: Spouses, parents, unmarried children under 21 (IR), and other qualifying family of U.S. citizens / LPRs.
Timeline
IR spouse: 12–18 months; F-preference: 1.5–20+ years depending on category and country
Cost
USD 1,200 – 3,000 government fees
Documents
3 items
Requirements
Qualifying relationship
Sponsor I-864 Affidavit of Support meeting 125% of poverty guidelines
Admissibility of beneficiary
Process
1Sponsor files I-130
2When approved (and priority date current for F categories), file DS-260 (consular) or I-485 (AOS)
H-1B itself is non-immigrant. For EB-2/EB-3 green cards, Indian-born applicants currently face decade-plus waits due to the 7% per-country cap; EB-1 is shorter but still backlogged.
What is the difference between consular processing and adjustment of status?
Adjustment of status (I-485) is filed inside the U.S. when in valid non-immigrant status. Consular processing (DS-260) is done at a U.S. embassy abroad. Outcome is the same — a green card.
Can I work on an F-1 visa?
Yes — on-campus up to 20 hours/week during the academic year, CPT during studies if curriculum requires it, and OPT for up to 12 months post-graduation (36 months for STEM).
Does the Diversity Visa lottery still exist?
Yes. 55,000 green cards are issued annually to applicants from low-admission countries. Registration is free and runs each autumn.
Can a tourist visa convert to a work visa?
Not directly. You generally need to leave the U.S. and apply for the new visa class at a consulate, or have a status change petition (I-129) approved.
How long until I can apply for U.S. citizenship?
5 years as a permanent resident (3 if married to a U.S. citizen), with continuous residence and physical presence requirements.
What is the H-1B lottery process?
Employers register candidates online in March. USCIS randomly selects enough registrations to fill the 65,000 + 20,000 master's cap. Selected registrations then file the full petition.
Do I need a lawyer for U.S. immigration?
Not legally, but the system's complexity and high refusal stakes mean most successful petitions involve qualified immigration counsel — especially for employment-based green cards and EB-5.