Leaving your Job on your H-1B or E-3 Visa

Despite contrary opinion you can leave your job when you are on a H-1B visa or E-3 visa, it is however a difficult route especially if you are not aware of the immigration rules that govern leaving and changing employers.

As it stands now the rules are very strict when leaving an employer and remaining on the same visa. Specifically that you can be no longer than 10 days without an employer. This can be a little bit of a grey area as sometimes in the case of either being laid off as a foreigner or naturally leaving your job, the last portion of your official time at a company may actually be PTO (paid time off or vacation) or some form of long term official sanctioned leave that may be paid or unpaid. So in any of these cases it should still be the case that the 10 day countdown only begins once your employed connection with the company ceases. This differs from so called severance pay which may be paid in lump sum or increments but would at or after your final official date of employment and thus doesn’t impact the 10 day countdown.

The four most common reasons for leaving your US employer while on a non-immigrant visa is;

1. To return to your home country or other non US destination
2. To change employers within the US
3. A forced change to leave US employer either via lay-off, termination/firing or leaving due to bad circumstances
4. Change to another visa like the F-1 visa for studying or being eligible for a Green Card allowing flexibility of employment

Leaving the US
If you are leaving your job and planning to leave the US the biggest things to note are ensuring you continue to file a tax return with the IRS the following year and any other year you are earning US income. Additionally ensuring you don’t have any other outstanding debt owing is also ideal especially if you plan to return to the US or in the future want to achieve a status like Permanent Residency and US Citizenship.

Changing Employers
We have written extensively on the issues, process and timing of changing employers on either your H-1B visa or E-3 visa and the differences between the two statuses. The biggest thing to note is the concept of Portability and the fact that it explicitly is stated and applies in the case of the H-1B visa and allows someone to commence employment at a new employer even if the new petition is not approved and is just being processed. In the case of the E-3 visa, some people have received advice that the same process applies for the E-3 visa, however it is not a written statute so many people leave the country to get a new E-3 visa as a quicker route than the approval process of changing employers within the US.

Forced Departure From Employer
If you are laid off from your employer, there is no special rules that the US employer must follow for you as a foreigner so other than paying you severance at their discretion, extending your official final date and/or helping you in your job search, the 10 day rule still applies from your final date. However if they do lay you off, they are obligated to pay for your return trip to your home country and do it for a trip that does not violate your visa status rules. If you are terminated with or without cause it becomes a grey area as to whether they are obligated to pay this return fare, however they really should. Ultimately if you are terminated without cause or have been forced to leave b/c of unlawful work conditions, the US workplace rules still apply to you as a foreigner and you can report your employer company and specific people to the Department of Labor and USCIS. However unless it is a criminal case this won’t in and of itself help your ongoing visa status.

Changing Visa or US Status
If you are changing to a status whereby you are studying in the US or achieving a Green Card either via the Diversity Visa Lottery, the employer sponsored EB-1, EB-2 or EB-3 permanent visas or by marrying a US Citizen or Permanent Resident, then you are bound by the new terms of that status as you have that approval. Therefore you can’t operate under the new terms of that visa or permanent residency  until you receive approval to do so. There are various change of status forms and process and tasks that apply in each case including things like the I-129 form, I-485 form, medical visits, etc. depending on what you are changing too.

The proposed US Immigration Reform of 2013 proposes to change a lot of these things at least for the H-1B visa by increasing the time to change to 60 days and increasing the number of available Green Cards and pathway to them. However ultimately regardless of the passage of that bill which is still tenuous as of this writing, it is important for all foreigners working in the US to understand the implications of leaving your employer.

Cj

6 thoughts on “Leaving your Job on your H-1B or E-3 Visa

  1. I am planning to leave my job in May next year. However I want to come back to the US ASAP to travel around the country.
    I just renewed my E3 visa in August for another 2 years. If I leave my job in May is it possible to leave the country for a month and then return on the visa waiver so I can remain in the US for another 3 months?

  2. Hi,

    I’m expecting a termination of my employment any day or week from now and I do not wish to look for another job here and am ready to move back home if terminated.
    Since moving here to the US, I’ve accrued more than a few house hold things in my apartment which I wish to ship home. My main concern is seeing that I have to leave the country within 10 days, I won’t have enough time to organize all shipping and moving in that time. I’ve never had to worry about this before, so I was wondering if you had any advice on how I can buy time to organise moving back home or am I allowed to leave the country (go back to Aus) and return to the US a week or so later on an ESTA visa so we have 90 days to organise all moving. What would you recommend I do?

    Thanks in advance. You and your website are very helpful.

    Eljay

  3. You don’t get 10 days – in theory you have not time at all. The 10 day rule applies to H1-B visas. But you don’t have to go to Australia. Spend a weekend in Canada and return under the visa waiver program. Note, the ESTA is not a visa.

  4. Again Craig the 10-day rule does apply to the E-3 visa as per this; http://1.usa.gov/1LbawbZ. If you continue to spread misinformation will have to delete comments as we don’t want users to be further confused than the system already causes them to be. Additionally the CBP officers have discretion to not let you re-enter if you try and “reset” time in Canada as per http://1.usa.gov/1N2A68e. While it is a little less risky being on a visa and then coming back on ESTA, the CBP officer could equally deem you are trying to flaunt the rules by staying permanently and a fair number of people in other forums have reported this happening to them which of course is a major inconvenience and also causes future hassle for ever trying to re-enter. Also undergoing extra screening and interrogation at the airport is also not a fun experience.
    Cj

  5. Hi there

    I have left my position in the US and my employer will not have notified USCIS or anyone.

    I would like to do this for them, so that I won’t have any problem re-entering the US next year to visit for a week on an ESTA.

    Are you able to point me in the right direction re: how I notify them? Trying to cover all my bases!!

    Thanks!

  6. Good Day. My name is Abigail Johnson and I am a Jamaican. As of December 2019, I will have a Bachelors in Tourism Management. What advice do you have for me regarding Visa sponsorship from a company. Thank you. I would really really appreciate a response email. Thank you so much in advance.

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