EB-3.
For professionals, skilled workers, and unskilled workers.
- Three categories cover almost anyone with a job offer: professional, skilled, or unskilled.
- A US employer sponsors you and runs the labor certification.
- Approval rates are high once you finish the process.
- The real cost is the wait, and it runs years for some countries.
What is the EB-3 green card?
The EB-3 is an employment-based third-preference green card for skilled workers, professionals, and other (unskilled) workers. A US employer sponsors the worker through a PERM labor certification, then files Form I-140. It has the lowest eligibility bar of the employment-based categories.
Who qualifies for the EB-3?
The EB-3 has three categories: Professionals (a job requiring a US bachelor's degree), Skilled Workers (a job requiring at least two years of training or experience), and Other Workers (unskilled roles requiring less than two years). The category follows what the job genuinely requires.
What is PERM labor certification?
PERM is the Department of Labor process that tests the US labor market before an EB-3 green card. The employer sets a prevailing wage, advertises the job, and shows that no able, willing, qualified, and available US worker applied. A certified PERM is required before filing the I-140.
Does the EB-3 lead to citizenship?
Yes. The EB-3 grants a green card, so approval makes the worker a lawful permanent resident. After five years as a permanent resident - meeting continuous residence, physical presence, and good moral character - they can apply for US citizenship through naturalization.
The lowest bar,the longest wait.
The EB-3 is the most accessible employment-based green card - open to professionals, skilled workers, and even unskilled roles. A US employer sponsors you through a PERM labor certification. The trade-off for that low bar is demand: EB-3 fills its annual quota every year, so the wait can be long.
The EB-3 asks the least of you to qualify - the price is paid in waiting, not in credentials.
The big picture
EB-3 is the third tier of the employment-based green card system. It was built to cover the workers the higher categories don't: those with a bachelor's degree, those with a couple of years of training, and those in roles that need neither. Together they make EB-3 the widest on-ramp to a green card through a job.
The mechanics are straightforward. A US employer offers a permanent job, runs PERM to show no qualified US worker is available, and files the I-140 petition. What sets EB-3 apart is the low bar: the job doesn't have to require an advanced degree - a bachelor's, two years of experience, or, for other workers, less than that, is enough. The category follows the job, not how impressive you are.
The reality
The thing to understand about EB-3 isn't the qualifying - that's the easy part - it's the wait. EB-3 fills its yearly quota every year, and for high-demand countries the line stretches for years. The other-worker category, capped at just 10,000 green cards a year, waits the longest of all.
So the smart way to treat EB-3 is as a long game you start early. The PERM and petition are a disciplined process - a real job, defensible requirements, an employer that can pay. What you don't control is the queue: your priority date is your place in line, set the day PERM is filed, so filing sooner is the one lever that matters most.
The payoff is the same permanent residence everyone else gets. EB-3 isn't a lesser green card, just a lower bar to reach it. For someone with a job offer and an employer willing to sponsor, it's the most widely available route there is - as long as the wait fits the plan.
The three EB-3
categories.
EB-3 isn't one bar but three, and the job's requirements decide which one applies. What every category shares is a permanent US job and an employer to sponsor it.
The Degreed Professional
Roles that require a US bachelor's degree, or its single foreign equivalent - analysts, accountants, engineers, and the like. One qualifying degree does it.
The Skilled Worker
Jobs that need at least two years of training or experience - tradespeople, technicians, cooks, and many hands-on roles. No degree required, just a role that genuinely takes the experience.
The Other (Unskilled) Worker
Roles needing less than two years of training - caregivers, laborers, and similar. The bar is lowest here, but the category is capped at 10,000 green cards a year and waits the longest.
The Nurse or Physical Therapist
Registered nurses and physical therapists qualify under Schedule A - a pre-certified shortage list that skips the PERM recruitment step entirely, cutting months off the process. It's the biggest shortcut EB-3 offers.
These are the EB-3 categories, not separate visas - which one applies depends on what the job genuinely requires. Your spouse and unmarried children under 21 get green cards alongside you.
What the EB-3
Actually Asks For.
EB-3 has two sides: who you are - one of three tiers - and what the employer does - a real job cleared through PERM. The bar on your side is the lowest of any work green card: a bachelor's, two years of experience, or an unskilled role.
01
One of the Three EB-3 Categories
EB-3 has three ways in, and the job's requirements decide which. Professionals need a role requiring a US bachelor's degree - one single degree, or a foreign equivalent. Skilled Workers need a role requiring at least two years of training or experience. Other Workers cover roles needing less than two years - unskilled work a US worker isn't available to do.
You qualify for the category your job sits in, and you have to actually meet what that job requires: the degree, the years, or the training.
Common issues- A degree or experience that doesn't match the category the job was filed under
- A three-year foreign bachelor's, or a degree pieced together from several credentials
- Experience that isn't backed by detailed past-employer letters
Good to know- The category follows the job's real requirements, not your highest qualification
- Schedule A occupations - registered nurses and physical therapists - skip the PERM recruitment step
02
A Permanent Job and a Sponsoring Employer
EB-3 is built on a real job offer. A US employer has to offer you a permanent, full-time position - not temporary, not part-time, not self-employment - and file the petition; you can't file for yourself.
The job's stated requirements have to be the employer's genuine minimum for the role, not written around your résumé. Requirements set above what the work actually needs are the fastest way to an audit.
Common issues- Job requirements that look tailored to the foreign worker
- Requirements set above the norm for the occupation with no business reason
- Counting experience you gained on the job with the sponsoring employer
Good to know- Experience gained with the petitioning employer usually can't count, unless the earlier role was clearly different
- The role is recruited for the minimally qualified candidate, not the perfect one - so true minimums work in your favor
03
PERM Labor Certification
Before the green card petition, the employer must clear PERM - the Department of Labor's test of the US labor market. It runs in two parts: a prevailing wage determination that sets the minimum the job must pay, then a structured recruitment campaign that advertises the role through newspaper ads and other required postings.
The point is to show that no able, willing, qualified, and available US worker applied for the job. If a qualified US worker applies and can't be lawfully turned away, the PERM can't be filed.
Common issues- A qualified US worker applies during recruitment, which stops the PERM
- Recruitment steps placed outside the required windows, forcing a restart
- An audit triggered by restrictive requirements, recent layoffs, or family ties to the owner
Not there yet?- Get the prevailing wage request in early - it takes months, and recruitment waits on it
- Have the employer write the job requirements as true minimums, with a business reason for anything extra
- Save dated screenshots and a recruitment log as each ad runs, in case of an audit
- Line up your degree evaluation and past-employer experience letters before PERM, not after
04
The Employer Can Pay the Wage
At the petition stage, the employer has to prove it can pay the offered wage from your priority date until you get the green card. USCIS looks for it in the company's tax returns, audited financials, or annual report - showing net income or net current assets at least equal to the wage, or that it's already paying you that much.
This trips up small, new, or loss-making employers more than any other part of the I-140.
Common issues- A small or new employer whose tax returns don't show enough net income or assets
- A loss-making year that undercuts the ability-to-pay showing
- No clear evidence the company already pays the offered wage
Good to know- Ability to pay has to hold for every year from the priority date onward, not just the year of filing
- Already paying you the offered wage is itself strong evidence the employer can pay it
- Because EB-3 cases sit in the queue for years, the employer has to stay solvent the whole time
imigOS
Not sure which requirements you meet? Get a structured assessment before your first attorney call.
What you get,
and what you wait for.
EB-3 is the most reachable employment-based green card - the lowest bar, the widest door. The trade-offs are the parts you don't control: the employer drives it, and the wait for a number can be very long, longest of all for other workers.
- A direct green card - permanent residence, not a temporary visa
- The lowest bar of any employment-based green card
- Three ways to qualify - a degree, experience, or an unskilled role
- Spouse and children get green cards at the same time
- High approval rates once the process is done
- It's employer-sponsored - no employer, no EB-3
- The whole process is slow
- The wait for a green card number is long, and longest for other workers
- The employer controls the process - if they stop, the green card stops
- The employer has to show it can afford the salary
Upwing the strengths that ring true, downwing the limitations that hit hardest.
The full EB-3 process,
step by step.
EB-3 runs in three movements - PERM, then the petition, then the green card. The labor certification is the long pole, and afterward the wait for a green card number depends on your country and category.
Eligibility check
You start with a quick eligibility test on the platform - a few questions about your role, your experience, and your employer. Based on your answers, you connect with an expert for a first call. The goal is to confirm which EB-3 category fits and that your employer can sponsor a PERM before any work begins.
Strategy and kickoff
Once you decide to move ahead, you connect with a licensed attorney and the case begins. Together you set the strategy - confirming the right category, defining the job and its true minimum requirements, and mapping out the PERM.
Prevailing wage and job requirements
Your attorney and employer lock down the job's true minimum requirements and request a prevailing wage from the Department of Labor. This sets the wage floor the employer commits to paying once you have the green card, and it currently runs about five to seven months on its own.
Recruitment - testing the market
The employer runs a structured recruitment campaign to test whether a qualified US worker is available for the job. If US workers apply, the case can't move forward unless there's a genuine, lawful reason none of them fit the role - a real hurdle for lower-skilled roles with deep applicant pools. A mandatory quiet period follows before anything can be filed.
Filing PERM and the DOL wait
With recruitment documented, your attorney files the PERM application electronically. The Department of Labor either certifies it or opens an audit. This review is the long pole of the whole process, currently around 12 to 14 months. The filing date becomes your priority date - your place in line for a green card number.
The I-140 petition
Once PERM is certified, your attorney prepares the I-140 immigrant petition and the employer files it - proving you meet the job's requirements and that the company can pay the wage. Without premium processing it takes about three to eight months; premium processing brings a decision in 15 business days. If USCIS asks for more evidence, your attorney responds.
Waiting for a green card number
This is where EB-3 differs most. Once the I-140 is approved, you wait until a green card number is available for your priority date and category. The category fills its quota every year, so there's almost always a wait - and for India and China, and other workers especially, it can run many years. You can only file for the green card itself once your date is current.
Green card and beyond
When your number comes up, you apply for permanent residence - adjusting status inside the US or processing at a consulate abroad - and your spouse and children apply too. Approval makes you all lawful permanent residents. The green card is valid for ten years and renewable, and after five years you can apply for US citizenship if you choose.
imigOS
Every step of the file tracked in one place. You always know what has been submitted, what is under USCIS review, and what your attorney needs from you or your foreign HR contact next.
Why strong cases
still stumble.
EB-3 setbacks usually aren't about whether you qualify - the bar is low. They're about how the job was defined, whether the employer can document its finances, and how cleanly the labor-market test was run.
“USCIS and the Department of Labor aren't asking whether you're impressive - they're asking whether the job is real, the market was tested fairly, and the employer can pay.”
PERM is a genuine test of the market, and EB-3 roles - especially skilled and other-worker jobs - often draw real US applicants. If an able, willing, and qualified US worker applies and meets the job's requirements, the employer can't lawfully pass them over, and the labor certification can't move forward.
It's the least controllable part of the process - a common role with a deep US talent pool is simply a harder PERM to clear.
Even with a clean PERM, the I-140 fails if the company can't show it can pay the offered wage from your priority date onward - and because EB-3 cases sit in the queue for years, that has to hold for a long time. Small, new, or loss-making employers stumble here most.
Check the employer's ability to pay before PERM, not after - and remember it has to hold across the whole wait.
Requirements that seem written around the foreign worker, or set above the norm for the role, read as a job designed to fail the market test. For lower-skilled roles, the Department of Labor scrutinizes any unusual requirement especially closely.
Define the role by its genuine minimums, and document a business reason for anything beyond the norm for the occupation.
An EB-3 leans on parties outside your control - the employer's HR and finance teams, past employers for experience letters, the Department of Labor's clock. Cases stall in the back-and-forth: a recruitment screenshot wasn't saved, a letter sits unwritten, the financials are slow to arrive. None of it is about whether you qualify.
Gathering records early and coordinating cleanly between you, your employer, and your attorney is the part most in your control.
imigOS
A strong EB-3 case can still slip on the basics - a document that never made it in, a letter that needed one more revision, a deadline that quietly passed. On imigOS, every document is prepared, tracked, and revised in one place, with deadlines flagged before they pass. The file an officer finally opens is complete and consistent - no gaps, no stale versions.
EB-3 vs EB-2 vs EB-2 NIW vs EB-1A.
EB-3 is the lowest bar of the employment green cards. EB-2 sits one step up for advanced-degree roles, the NIW self-petitions without an employer, and EB-1A is the top tier that skips the backlog. Many cases can be filed as either EB-2 or EB-3 - the priority dates decide which is faster.
Overview only. Your eligibility depends on the specifics. This reflects general policy as of May 2026. EB-2 and EB-3 often cross over - the wrong choice can cost years in the queue, so compare carefully before filing.
Green card now,
citizenship later.
An approved EB-3 makes you a lawful permanent resident. Citizenship isn't required - but most green card holders naturalize once they're eligible, usually about five years in.
Naturalization is how a green card holder becomes a US citizen. You're eligible after five years of permanent residence, as long as you've kept continuous residence, met the physical-presence minimum, held good moral character, and can pass a basic English and civics test.
The five-year clock starts.
Permanent residence begins the countdown to citizenship. You keep the clock running by holding your green card and keeping your main home in the US - long trips abroad can break the continuous-residence requirement.
File for naturalization.
At five years, you file Form N-400, give biometrics, and pay the fee - documenting your residence, travel, taxes, and good moral character across the qualifying period.
Interview and the civics test.
An officer goes through your application and gives the English and civics test - reading, writing, and speaking, plus US history and government. The full question set and free study materials are published in advance.
Take the Oath.
After approval, you take the Oath of Allegiance at a ceremony and become a US citizen - no more green card renewals, and a US passport, the vote, and easier family sponsorship open up.
What an EB-3 costs.
The legal fee is $8,500 in total: $7,500 for the PERM and I-140 work, and $1,000 for the green card stage. You don't pay it upfront - it comes in installments tied to each stage. Government and third-party fees are separate, and shown stage by stage below.
- The PERM-based I-140 petition
- Ability-to-pay and qualification evidence
- The legal brief
- All RFE responses
imigOS
Scope and pricing agreed upfront with your attorney - no unexpected costs mid-case, including RFE response work.
Questions,
answered.
The EB-3 is a US employment-based third-preference green card for skilled workers, professionals, and other (unskilled) workers. A US employer sponsors the worker through a PERM labor certification, then files Form I-140. It has the lowest eligibility bar of the employment-based categories.
The EB-3 has three categories: Professionals (a job requiring a US bachelor's degree), Skilled Workers (a job requiring at least two years of training or experience), and Other Workers (unskilled roles requiring less than two years). A US employer has to sponsor the job and clear PERM.
EB-2 needs an advanced degree or exceptional ability; EB-3 needs only a bachelor's, two years of experience, or an unskilled role. Both use the same PERM process. EB-3's bar is lower, but its green card wait is often longer - though for some countries EB-3 actually moves ahead of EB-2.
Not always. The Professional category needs a bachelor's degree, but Skilled Workers qualify with two years of experience or training, and Other Workers with an unskilled role needing less than that. The category depends on what the job genuinely requires, not your highest qualification.
The PERM and I-140 run about two years together. After that comes the wait for a green card number, which depends on country and category. There's almost always some wait, and for India and China, and Other Workers especially, it runs many years.
The legal fee runs about $8,500 - $7,500 for the PERM and I-140 work, $1,000 for the green card stage - paid in installments. Government fees are separate: the I-140 is $715, the Asylum Program Fee adds $600, premium processing is an optional $2,965, and adjusting status adds $1,440 per person.
Often, yes. A worker who qualifies for both can file in whichever category has the better priority date, and keep the original priority date when switching. This EB-2 to EB-3 downgrade - or upgrade - is a common timing move when the Visa Bulletin shifts.
Yes. The EB-3 grants permanent residence, and after five years as a green card holder you can apply for US citizenship through naturalization. The full path is mapped out in the Citizenship section above.
INA §203(b)(3) · 8 CFR §204.5(l) · 20 CFR §656 · USCIS Policy Manual vol. 6 pt. E
This page contains general information for informational purposes only. It is not legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship between you and Imigos Inc. Immigration laws, policies, and fees change frequently, and the information here may not reflect the most current legal developments. You should not act or refrain from acting based on this information without seeking professional counsel from an attorney licensed in your jurisdiction. Imigos Inc. expressly disclaims all liability for actions taken or not taken based on any of its contents.
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