Priority Dates: An In-Depth Explanation

Priority Dates and Preference Categories

Waiting for Your Chance to Immigrate

U.S. immigration laws limit the supply of U.S. visas, but worldwide demand for them is great. As a result, the United States Department of State, the agency that issues visas, has established a system designed to treat those requesting visas fairly.

It provides visa numbers according to your preference category and priority date. Your preference category depends upon your relationship to a U.S. citizen or U.S. lawful permanent resident. The priority date is the date on which you can apply for a U.S. visa. It determines your place in the line to get a visa.

Preference Categories

Preference categories are as follows:

First preference: Unmarried, adult sons and daughters of U.S. citizens (adult means 21 years of age or older)

Second preference: Spouses of lawful permanent residents, their unmarried children (under 21), and the unmarried sons and daughters of lawful permanent residents

Third preference: Married sons and daughters of U.S. citizens

Fourth preference: Brothers and sisters of adult U.S. citizens

Priority Dates

If you have filed a petition for a visa, your priority date can be found on Form I-797, Notice of Action. Priority dates depend on:

The supply and demand for the visa you want

The number of visas available to citizens of your country

The number of visas allocated to your particular preference category

For family-sponsored immigration, your priority date is the date you filed your visa application with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS) with the required fees, signatures, and supporting documentation.

For employment-based immigration, your priority date is either the date the petition was filed with USCIS or the date the labor certification application was accepted by the Department of Labor.

Employer-sponsored visas consist of five categories of workers (and their spouses and children):

EB-1 Priority Workers

EB-1 applicants must hold an approved Immigrant Petition for Foreign Worker, Form I-140, filed with USCIS. Labor certification is not required for any of the Priority Worker subgroups:

Persons with extraordinary ability in the sciences, arts, education, business, or athletics

Outstanding professors and researchers with at least three years of experience in teaching or research who are recognized internationally

Multinational managers or executives who have been employed for at least one of the three preceding years by the overseas affiliate, parent, subsidiary, or branch of the U.S. employer

EB-2 professionals with advanced degrees or aliens of exceptional ability

EB-2 applicants must have a labor certification approved by the Department of Labor, a U.S. job offer, and the U.S. employer must file an Immigrant Petition for Alien Worker, Form I-140, on behalf of the applicant. Applicants may apply for National Interest Waiver exemption from the job offer and labor certification, The subcategories for the EB-2 are:

Professionals holding an advanced degree beyond the baccalaureate degree, or a baccalaureate degree and at least five years’ progressive experience in the profession

Persons with exceptional ability in the sciences, arts, or business

EB-3 professionals, skilled workers, and needed unskilled workers

EB-3 applicants must have an approved Immigrant Petition for Alien Worker, Form I-140, filed by the prospective employer on behalf of the applicant and labor certification approved by the Department of Labor. The three subcategories of the EB-3 are:

Skilled workers whose jobs require a minimum of two years of training or work experience that are not temporary or seasonal

Professionals whose jobs require at least a baccalaureate degree from a U.S. university or college or its foreign equivalent degree

Unskilled workers who are capable of filling positions that require less than two years of training or experience that are not seasonal or temporary.

EB-4 special immigrants

EB-4 applicants must have an approved Petition for Amerasian, Widow(er) or Special Immigrant, Form I-360, and labor certification is not required. There are many subcategories for the EB-4 including, but not limited to, ministers and employees of the U.S. government abroad.

An Explanation of Visa Bulletin Categories

Deciphering the Visa Bulletin Categories

The Visa Bulletin is published each month by the U.S. Department of State. It tells prospective immigrants whether visas are available to people from their country of origin and in their specific immigration and preference category. If visas are not currently available to all who seek them, the Visa Bulletin gives applicants an idea of the extent of the backlog.

Determining what the categories and codes in the chart mean can be confusing. The following information should help you determine what the information in the Visa Bulletin means to you if you are seeking a family-based or employment-based immigrant visa.

“C” Means Visas Are Currently Available

If visa numbers are available in your preference category for people from your country of birth (called the country of visa chargeability) there will be a “C,” for current, in the Visa Bulletin chart. The “C” means visas are available to qualified applicants overseas and to qualified foreign nationals from that country who are living in the U.S. and are seeking an adjustment of status.

A Date Means Visas Are Only Available to Certain Applicants

Visas may not be available in a particular preference category or to citizens of a specific foreign state. This is called being “oversubscribed.” When a category is close to being oversubscribed, a cutoff date will appear in the Visa Bulletin chart. Only qualified overseas and adjustment of status applicants, whose priority dates are earlier than the cutoff date, can obtain a visa.

For example, if the Visa Bulletin chart shows 22May01 for people from India in the “Employment-Based 3rd” preference category, visas are currently available to individuals with a priority date of May 21, 2001, or earlier.

“U” Means Unavailable

When a “U” appears in the Visa Bulletin chart, it means visas are unavailable to anyone, no matter their priority date.

Visa Retrogression

If a visa is available (current) one month, but unavailable the next, it means that more people applied for visas in that category than were available for that month. Called visa retrogression, this happens most often when the demand for visas has exceeded the annual supply in a particular category for a specific country. Once the annual limit is reached, no more visas will be granted until a new supply becomes available. The new visa allotment for each year becomes available on October 1. The new supply of visa numbers usually, but not always, brings the cutoff date back to where it was before the retrogression.

Cross-Chargeability

If an employment-based visa is unavailable due to retrogression, there may be a chance to obtain a visa from a different country of chargeability in certain limited circumstances. For example, if the principal applicant is from India and his wife is an Indian citizen who was born in England, both visas can be charged to England, rather than India, if they are available. It is important to speak to an immigration lawyer about issues such as cross-chargeability and other complex immigration issues.

To discuss the specifics of your case, please contact an immigration lawyer at May Law Group. We offer a free initial consultation. We represent clients from throughout the U.S. and around the world.