Tag Archives: eb1

Green Card Sponsorship, Visa Numbers & Preferences

Immediate relative petition

An immediate relative petition is for U.S. citizens who are interested in sponsoring one of their immediate relatives to come and live in the U.S. Immediate relatives include:

• Spouses;
• Parents; or
• Children who are under 21 years of age and unmarried.

When you file an immediate relative petition your relative will not have to wait for a visa number. If he or she is outside the U.S. they will be given a visa number immediately. If your relative is already inside the U.S. he or she will be allowed to apply to adjust his or her temporary status to “permanent resident” as soon as the petition is approved.

Preference petition

A preference petition can be filed by:

• A U.S. citizen on behalf of an unmarried adult child (21 years of age or older);
• A legal permanent resident for a spouse, unmarried child (under 21 years old), or unmarried adult child (21 years old or older); or
• An employer on behalf of an employee.

Unlike an immediate relative petition, the person for which the petition is being made must wait until a visa number is available. As there are a limited number of people who are entitled to enter the U.S. each year through the preference petition program, the application may take some time to process. Processing times will vary according to the applicant’s preference category.

Preference is given in the following order:

• First Preference: Unmarried, adult (over 21 years old) children of U.S. citizens;
• Second Preference: Spouses of lawful permanent residents and unmarried children (regardless of age) of lawful permanent residents and their children;
• Third Preference: Married sons and daughters of U.S. citizens, their spouses and their minor children;
• Fourth Preference: Brothers and sisters of adult U.S. citizens, their spouses and their minor children.

Preferences based on employment are issued in the following order:

• First Preference: Priority Workers including aliens with extraordinary abilities, outstanding professors and researchers, and certain multinational executives and managers;
• Second Preference: Members of Professions Holding Advanced Degrees or Persons of Exceptional Ability;
• Third Preference: Skilled Workers, professionals and other qualified workers;
• Fourth: Certain special immigrants including those in religious vocations;
• Fifth: Employment Creation Immigrants.


Guest Post Author

USA Immigration Support

Visa Retrogression & How Does It Apply to EB2 Visa Green Card Applicants

The U.S. government makes only a certain number of immigrant visas (green cards) available each year and these are allocated among the various immigrant visa categories and countries from which applicants seek to immigrate. For the past few years, the number of immigrants approved for employment-based immigrant visas has been lower than the number of visas available, resulting in no backlog in visa numbers. Recently, the DOS has seen far more immigrants approved for employment-based immigrant visas and has run out of visa numbers in certain categories, causing a temporary backlog or “retrogression” of visa numbers.

When worldwide demand for employment based visas exceeds worldwide availability, immigrant visa numbers are further apportioned among the various countries from which applicants seek to emigrate. Each country has a limit and each approved applicant is “charged” against his or her country’s limit. Most countries have fewer applicants than available visa numbers. However, certain high-immigration countries often meet or exceed their chargeability limit. These countries include China, India, Mexico, and the Philippines.

Please note that for chargeability purposes, a person’s country of birth controls. A person cannot claim country of citizenship for retrogression purposes. For instance if applicant A is born in India, but possesses Canadian citizenship, applicant A will be unable to adjust status (based on EB1 or EB2) until visa numbers for India become current.

In addition, please note that a spouse can take on their spouse’s country of birth for retrogression purposes. For example, applicant A is a national of Bangladesh and applicant A’s spouse is a national of India. Applicant A’s spouse WILL be able to adjust status even though he or she was born in India because he or she can take on applicant A’s country of birth for retrogression purposes.

Immigrant visa numbers are given out according to a “first come, first serve” policy. The date an applicant first begins the green card process (often a Labor Certification Application filed with the U.S. Department of Labor or an I-140 or I-130 Petition filed with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services) becomes that person’s priority date, which will determine the order in which that person will receive a visa number and thus be further processed for an immigrant visa or adjusted to immigrant status. When a retrogression occurs in visa numbers, applicants will have to “wait in line” until their priority date becomes current before they can be adjusted or receive an immigrant visa.

A visa number retrogression means that EB1, EB2 or EB3 applicants from certain high-immigration countries will not be able to apply for an immigrant visa (by filing an I-485 or through Consular processing) until a visa number becomes available for their priority date.

Supply and Demand for Visas

Visa number availability is determined by using a simple formula of supply and demand.
Each fiscal year (October 1-September 30), DOS reviews the demand for the above referenced classifications and per-country limits. If DOS finds that the demand for any of the above classifications is too high and that they do not have enough supply, they pull back the ‘priority dates’ of the visas in order to ride the wave of demand and ensure that supply is not exceeded. By pulling back the priority dates, DOS is able to regulate the flow of these visas. If the demand for a certain preference classification is too high, the visa will retrogress and will not become available until the priority date for that classification has been reached.

For instance, according to the immigrant visa bulletin that was just released for February 2008, the visa numbers for nationals of India in the EB2 category have become completely unavailable. This means that a person who filed an I-140 immigrant visa petition in the classification of EB2 category, after cannot file an adjustment of status (or consular process) until their priority date becomes current.

It is important to note however, that these priority dates are subject to change during the fiscal year. It is entirely possible that visa numbers in the EB2 category for Indian nationals could suddenly become current a few months from now or that the priority date could be reestablished. The reason for this is that the DOS is making an assessment based on what they believe will be the demand for these types of visas. It is their way of ‘testing the waters’ of demand. If a month from now, DOS reviews the demand for these visas and finds that it is not what they believed it would be, they will establish a priority date.

Consequently, if the demand is as high as first believed, they will keep the category ‘unavailable’. Right now, DOS is taking a very conservative approach to meet the their perception of demand and they will reassess their position on a monthly basis as the year moves forward. This is simply a regulatory mechanism where by DOS can control the number of visas issued in any given year to ensure that the demand does not exceed the supply.


Guest Author
Stephen Jeffries