The EB-1 visa is the United States’ most prestigious employment-based green card. It’s a first-preference category — meaning it has the shortest backlog, no labor certification requirement, and the lowest evidentiary bar relative to its prestige. For Indian and Chinese nationals, it’s also the only employment-based green card pathway with a manageable wait time, since EB-2 and EB-3 backlogs for those countries can exceed 20 years.
Not sure if EB-1 is the right route for you? Take our 2-minute USA Visa Match quiz to see all U.S. immigration routes you qualify for.
Overview
EB-1 has three sub-categories:
- EB-1A — Extraordinary Ability: for individuals at the top of their field. No employer or job offer required. Self-petition allowed.
- EB-1B — Outstanding Professor or Researcher: for academics with international recognition. Requires a job offer from a U.S. university or research institution. Three years of experience in the field.
- EB-1C — Multinational Manager or Executive: for senior managers transferred to a U.S. office of a multinational company. Requires one year of qualifying employment abroad with the same company.
This guide focuses primarily on EB-1A, since it’s the route most often chosen by independent applicants, and on EB-1B as the academic equivalent.
EB-1 leads directly to a green card (lawful permanent residence). After 5 years as a permanent resident, you become eligible for U.S. citizenship.
Eligibility checklist (EB-1A)
You must demonstrate extraordinary ability through evidence of a major one-time achievement (e.g., Nobel Prize, Olympic Medal, Pulitzer, Academy Award, Grammy) OR at least 3 of the following 10 criteria:
- Receipt of nationally or internationally recognised prizes or awards for excellence
- Membership in associations that require outstanding achievement (judged by recognised national/international experts)
- Published material about you in professional or major trade publications or media
- Participation as a judge of others’ work (peer review, conference panels, awards committees)
- Original scientific, scholarly, artistic, athletic, or business-related contributions of major significance
- Authorship of scholarly articles in professional journals or major media
- Display of work at artistic exhibitions or showcases
- Performance in a leading or critical role for organisations with distinguished reputation
- Commanding a high salary or remuneration relative to others in the field
- Commercial success in the performing arts (box office, record sales, etc.)
Then a final merits determination: USCIS will evaluate the totality of your evidence to determine if you have sustained national or international acclaim and your work is significant enough to merit EB-1A classification. Meeting 3+ criteria does not guarantee approval — the strength of evidence under each criterion matters more than ticking boxes.
Eligibility checklist (EB-1B)
- Job offer from a U.S. university or research institution for a permanent (tenure or tenure-track) or comparable research position
- At least 3 years of experience in the academic field
- International recognition as outstanding in your specific academic field, demonstrated by at least 2 of 6 criteria: major prizes, membership requiring outstanding achievement, published material about you, judging others’ work, original contributions of major significance, scholarly publication
How to apply, step by step
- Build your evidence package. This is the single most important step. For EB-1A, document each of the 10 criteria you can support with specific exhibits (publications, awards, citations, media coverage, recommendation letters from independent experts).
- Engage an immigration lawyer. EB-1 is technical; the success rate for self-filed petitions is materially lower. Expect $5,000–$15,000 in legal fees.
- Gather recommendation letters — typically 6–10 letters from independent experts (people you have not collaborated with or worked for). Each letter should explain your specific contribution and its impact.
- File Form I-140 (Immigrant Petition for Alien Worker). EB-1A is self-petitioned; EB-1B and EB-1C are filed by the employer.
- Premium processing is available for $2,805 — 15 calendar day USCIS adjudication.
- Wait for I-140 approval. Standard processing: 4–8 months. Premium: 15 days.
- Adjustment of Status (Form I-485) if you’re already in the U.S., OR Consular Processing if you’re abroad. Either way you become a green card holder once approved.
- Concurrent filing: if your priority date is current at I-140 filing time (which it usually is for EB-1, except backlogged countries), you can file I-485 alongside I-140 — getting a work permit (EAD) and travel document (Advance Parole) in 3–5 months.
Cost & timeline
Government fees (2026):
- I-140 filing fee: $715
- I-485 (Adjustment of Status): $1,440 (includes biometrics)
- Premium processing for I-140 (optional): $2,805
- Medical exam: $200–$500 depending on civil surgeon
- DS-260 / Consular processing fees (if applying abroad): $345 + biometrics
Legal fees (typical):
- $5,000–$10,000 for EB-1A petition + I-485
- $10,000–$15,000+ for complex cases or expedited preparation
Total realistic cost: $8,000–$20,000 per applicant (legal + government fees), more for family.
Timeline:
- Evidence prep + lawyer engagement: 2–4 months
- I-140 standard processing: 4–8 months (15 days with premium)
- I-485 / Consular: 6–12 months after I-140 approval (longer for backlogged countries)
- Total for non-backlogged country: 12–18 months from start to green card
- Total for India/China nationals: 5–8 years (but vastly faster than EB-2/EB-3 backlogs of 20–80+ years)
Common reasons for denial
- Evidence interpreted as merely “very good” rather than “extraordinary”. USCIS applies a strict standard. Five papers in mid-tier journals don’t constitute extraordinary; one paper with 1,000+ citations does.
- Letters from collaborators only. Recommendation letters carry far more weight when written by independent experts who have no collaboration history with you.
- Failure to address the “final merits” standard. Meeting 3 criteria is necessary but not sufficient. Petitions need a clear narrative tying evidence to “sustained national or international acclaim”.
- Missing documentation. Saying you spoke at a conference is not evidence; the conference website, attendance figures, and your invitation letter are.
- Wrong category fit. Outstanding research professors should file EB-1B, not EB-1A, even if EB-1A is self-petitioned. The standards are different and tailored to academic vs. general applicants.
- Beneficiary is early-career. EB-1A typically requires 5–10+ years of demonstrated impact. Recent PhDs often struggle unless they have exceptional output (top-tier publications, founding role at a notable organisation, prestigious awards).
After your green card is approved
- Live and work anywhere in the U.S. — no employer, location, or role restrictions.
- Maintain residence: don’t be outside the U.S. for more than 6 months at a time without a re-entry permit; longer than 1 year may break residency.
- File U.S. taxes worldwide as a permanent resident.
- 5-year clock to U.S. citizenship: at 4 years 9 months of green card residence (plus continuous residence and physical presence requirements), you can apply for naturalisation.
- Bring family: spouse and unmarried children under 21 are derivatives on your I-140 and can adjust/consular-process at the same time.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need a job offer for EB-1A?
No. EB-1A is the only employment-based green card category that allows self-petitioning without an employer.
Is the EB-1A standard really the same as the O-1 visa?
Similar but stricter. The O-1 (temporary work visa) and EB-1A use overlapping criteria, but EB-1A requires sustained national/international acclaim — a higher bar. Many people file O-1 first, build a stronger record, then upgrade to EB-1A.
Do citations matter?
Yes — citation count is a primary indicator under “original contributions of major significance” for academics and researchers. There’s no fixed threshold, but 200+ citations for a mid-career researcher is generally seen favourably; 1,000+ is strong.
Can entrepreneurs file EB-1A?
Yes, founders and executives of successful startups regularly qualify, especially with evidence of investor backing, revenue traction, press coverage, and judging or speaking at industry events.
Why is EB-1 important for Indian and Chinese nationals?
US employment-based green cards have per-country caps of ~7%. India and China far exceed this, creating multi-decade backlogs in EB-2 and EB-3. EB-1 has no backlog (or a very short one), making it the only practical employment route to a green card for most Indian and Chinese applicants.
Can I switch from H-1B to EB-1A?
Yes — file the I-140 while on H-1B. Once approved, file I-485 to adjust status or consular process abroad.
Related US visas
- EB-2: Advanced Degree / National Interest Waiver — for people with advanced degrees or exceptional ability who can demonstrate work in the national interest. NIW allows self-petition without employer sponsorship.
- EB-3: Skilled Workers — for professionals or skilled workers with a U.S. job offer. Requires PERM labor certification.
- EB-5: Investor Visa — invest $800,000–$1,050,000 in a U.S. business creating 10+ jobs. No job offer required.
- Diversity Visa Lottery (DV) — annual lottery for nationals of underrepresented countries. Free to enter.
Take the Visa Match quiz
EB-1 has the highest qualification bar in U.S. employment immigration but the shortest path to a green card. Our 2-minute quiz checks your nationality, qualifications, and achievements against all six U.S. routes — and tells you whether EB-1, EB-2 NIW, or another path is your best bet.
Take the USA Visa Match quiz →
Sources & further reading
- USCIS — EB-1 overview
- USCIS Policy Manual — EB-1 evidentiary standards
- Visa Bulletin (current priority dates)
Last reviewed: April 2026. USCIS adjudication trends shift over time — verify current standards before filing.
