USA
Work Visa

H-1B Visa.

For professionals in specialty roles that require a degree.

Key takeaways
  • A specialty occupation needs a degree in a specific field.
  • The cap selection is now weighted toward higher salaries - no longer a flat random lottery.
  • H-1B is portable - you can change employers without re-entering the lottery.
  • Dual intent is built in, so pursuing a green card won't put your status at risk.
Written by Furkan Dogan·Updated May 2026

What is the H-1B visa?

The H-1B is a US work visa for specialty occupations - professional roles that require at least a bachelor's degree in a specific field. It is employer-sponsored, allows dual intent (a green card can be pursued in parallel), and is granted in three-year increments up to a 6-year maximum.

Who qualifies for the H-1B?

The H-1B requires a US job offer in a specialty occupation and a bachelor's degree (or equivalent experience) in that field. The employer files the petition, not the worker, and most private-sector roles must first be selected in the annual lottery.

How does the H-1B lottery work?

For cap-subject roles, the employer submits an electronic registration each March, and USCIS selects who may file against the 85,000 cap. Since a 2026 rule the selection is no longer purely random - it is weighted by wage level, so higher-paid offers get more entries and better odds. Only selected registrations proceed to a full petition.

Does the H-1B lead to a green card?

Yes. The H-1B allows dual intent, so a green card can be pursued while in status. The usual route runs through PERM labor certification - where the employer proves no US worker is available - then an EB-2 or EB-3 immigrant petition.

Policy alertJune 8, 2026A federal court has struck down Trump's $100,000 H-1B visa fee.Read the ruling explainer
The H-1B, explained

Highly qualified,randomly chosen.

The H-1B is the workhorse of US professional immigration - the visa most companies reach for when they want to hire skilled talent from abroad. It's open to any specialty occupation, but it comes with a catch most other work visas don't: an annual cap and a lottery.

Key idea

H-1B rewards a clean fit between your degree and the job - plus a bit of luck in the lottery.

The big picture

Congress created the H-1B in 1990 to fix a specific problem: US companies, especially in fast-moving technical fields, needed skilled professionals they couldn't reliably find at home. Decades on, it has become the backbone of skilled hiring in the US - the largest tech companies are among its biggest sponsors - and demand now far outstrips the slots available each year.

To keep that fair to US workers, the visa attaches conditions: the role has to be genuinely professional - needing a university degree in a specific field like software engineering, accounting, or medicine - and the employer has to pay the market wage for it. It's built around the job, not how impressive you are, and the company applies for you, not the other way around.

The reality

Here's the reality the eligibility rules don't spell out: most people don't lose the H-1B because they fall short - they lose it at selection. There are far more applicants than there are visas, so before you can even file, you have to be picked.

So think of it as two stages: first getting selected, then proving the case. Selection comes down to the luck of the draw - once your employer enters you, that part is mostly out of your hands. The case is the part you do control: it has to show the job genuinely needs your degree. The smartest play is a strong, well-documented offer plus a backup plan, rather than betting everything on one year's draw.

And the reward for clearing the lottery is real: the H-1B is one of the most flexible work visas there is - portable between employers, open to pursuing a green card, and extendable past its six-year limit while that case is pending.

Annual cap
85,000
65,000 + 20,000 US master's
Max stay
6 years
Extendable while a green card is pending
Flexibility
Dual intent
Pursue a green card while in status
Portable
Yes
Change employers, no new lottery
Who qualifies

Four common
H-1B profiles.

H-1B covers any specialty occupation, so the profiles are broad. What they share is a professional role that genuinely requires a specific degree.

Tech

Engineer or Developer

Software engineers, data scientists, hardware and systems engineers. The classic H-1B profile - a computer-science or engineering degree mapped cleanly to a technical role makes the specialty occupation case straightforward.

Business

Finance, Data, or Analytics

Financial analysts, accountants, market researchers, management consultants. These qualify when the degree clearly matches the role. A generic business degree on its own can draw extra scrutiny.

Sciences

Healthcare or Research

Physicians, pharmacists, scientists, and researchers. Many sit at universities or nonprofit research institutions - which are cap-exempt, so they skip the lottery and can file year-round.

Cap-exempt

University or Nonprofit Hire

If your employer is a university, an affiliated nonprofit, or a government or nonprofit research organization, your H-1B is cap-exempt. No lottery, no cap, no fixed filing season - the single biggest shortcut in the H-1B world.

These are common H-1B profiles, not the only ones. Any role that genuinely requires a specific bachelor's degree can qualify. Your spouse and unmarried kids under 21 can join on H-4 - though H-4 spouses can only work once you have an approved I-140.

Requirements

What the H-1B Visa
Actually Asks For.

H-1B has fewer requirements than most work visas, but each one is strict. The specialty occupation standard and the degree match are where petitions are won or lost - and for capped roles, none of it matters until you're selected in the lottery.

Getting a slot
  • 01

    The Cap, the Lottery, and Cap-Exempt Status

    Most H-1Bs are subject to an annual cap of 85,000 - 65,000 for bachelor's holders plus 20,000 reserved for people with a US master…

    Most H-1Bs are subject to an annual cap of 85,000 - 65,000 for bachelor's holders plus 20,000 reserved for people with a US master's or higher. Because demand is far higher, your employer first enters you in an electronic registration in March, and a selection decides who can file. Only if you're picked can a full petition be filed, for an October 1 start.

    A 2026 rule changed how that selection works. It is no longer a flat random draw - it is now weighted by wage level: a registration at the highest pay tier (Level IV) gets four entries in the pool, Level III three, Level II two, and Level I one. Higher-paid offers now have meaningfully better odds, and entry-level roles the worst.

    Some employers are cap-exempt - universities, their affiliated nonprofits, and nonprofit or government research organizations. Their H-1Bs skip the cap and the selection entirely and can be filed any time of year. Once you've been counted against the cap once, later employers can petition for you without re-entering.

    Common issues
    • Treating the lottery as a sure thing - selection rates are well below demand
    • A Level I (entry-level) wage now draws the worst odds under the 2026 wage-weighted selection
    • Missing the March registration window for cap-subject roles
    • Duplicate or coordinated registrations for the same person (now barred)
    • Assuming a nonprofit is cap-exempt without confirming it qualifies
    Not there yet?
    • Wage level is now the biggest lever on your odds - a Level III or IV offer (more senior, better paid) is selected far more often than an entry-level Level I one
    • Not selected? Cap-exempt employers - universities, affiliated nonprofits, and nonprofit or government research labs - skip the lottery and hire year-round
    • A US master's or higher still gives a second entry, in the 20,000-slot advanced-degree pool
    • Once you have been counted against the cap, future employers can petition without re-entering - and you can re-register each March
The role and the degree
  • 02

    A Genuine Specialty Occupation

    The job has to be a specialty occupation - one that requires the theoretical and practical application of a highly specialized bod…

    The job has to be a specialty occupation - one that requires the theoretical and practical application of a highly specialized body of knowledge, along with at least a bachelor's degree in a specific field as the minimum to enter (8 CFR §214.2(h)(4)(iii)).

    A 2024 final rule tightened this: a position isn't a specialty occupation just because some bachelor's degree is normally required. The degree has to be in a directly related specific field. A role that accepts any degree - or a generic 'business' or 'liberal arts' degree - usually fails. A role open to a range of related degrees can still qualify, as long as each one is directly related to the duties.

    Common issues
    • Job open to "any bachelor's degree" rather than a specific field
    • Generalist titles (manager, analyst) with no degree-specific duties
    • Duties that read as routine rather than professional and specialized
    • Entry-level roles that the market does not actually require a degree for
    Good to know
    • USCIS often checks the Department of Labor Occupational Outlook Handbook to see what degree an occupation normally needs - it helps when the OOH entry lists your field
    • If the job needs a state license (nursing, law, medicine), you generally need it in hand; physicians also have extra exam and English-test steps
  • 03

    A Bachelor's Degree in the Specific Field

    You need at least a US bachelor's degree (or its equivalent) in the specific field the job requires.

    You need at least a US bachelor's degree (or its equivalent) in the specific field the job requires. The degree has to match the occupation - a finance role needs a finance or related degree, not an unrelated one.

    Foreign degrees count, but they're assessed for US equivalency, and a credential evaluation is usually needed. Work experience can also substitute: as a rule of thumb, three years of progressive specialty experience equals one year of college, so twelve years of relevant experience can stand in for a bachelor's.

    Common issues
    • Degree in a field unrelated to the offered role
    • Foreign degree without a proper US-equivalency evaluation
    • Experience-for-degree claims without detailed, documented work history
    Not there yet?
    • If your degree is foreign, get a credential evaluation that maps it to a US bachelor's degree in the specific field
    • No degree, or one in the wrong field? Document progressive specialty experience - three years of it counts as one year of college, so twelve years can stand in for the degree
The employer's obligations
  • 04

    The Required Wage

    The employer has to commit to paying at least the required wage - the higher of the prevailing wage for the role and location (set…

    The employer has to commit to paying at least the required wage - the higher of the prevailing wage for the role and location (set by the Department of Labor) or the actual wage it pays its other similar workers. It locks this in through a Labor Condition Application that has to be certified before the petition is filed.

    The wage isn't a formality. If the offered pay sits below the prevailing wage for the occupation and area, the filing can't be certified and the case can't move forward.

    Common issues
    • Offered wage below the prevailing wage for the area and occupation
    • Wrong wage level chosen for the role's seniority and duties
    • Not all worksite locations covered by the filing
    Good to know
    • The wage filing is usually certified within about 7 business days, and once certified it holds for up to 3 years
    • Wage levels run I (entry) to IV (senior); the level has to match the duties, or it invites questions
  • 05

    A Genuine Employer-Employee Relationship

    A US employer files the petition with Form I-129, so as a rule you don't apply for yourself.

    A US employer files the petition with Form I-129, so as a rule you don't apply for yourself. Founders are the exception: a company you own can sponsor you (a 2024 rule confirmed this), as long as the role is a genuine specialty occupation and the company - not you alone - controls the job. Either way, the petitioner has to show a real right to control the work: hiring, paying, supervising, and the ability to assign or end it.

    Common issues
    • Staffing or consulting setups where the client controls the work
    • No specific assignment or itinerary for the requested period
    • Owner-beneficiary cases without a clear corporate structure
    • Speculative employment with no real project lined up
    Good to know
    • Since 2020 USCIS applies the plain regulatory test - the company can hire, pay, fire, supervise, or otherwise control the work - not the old multi-factor Neufeld checklist
    • Founders can self-sponsor (2024 rule): with a controlling interest and a board that can fire you, the first approval is 18 months, then another 18, then standard 3-year extensions
    • Self-employed or project-based workers can be petitioned through a US agent rather than a single employer

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Strengths and Limitations

The honest
tradeoffs.

The H-1B is the most flexible professional work visa once you're in. The hard part is getting in - the lottery turns away most qualified candidates each year.

Strengths
  • Open to any specialty occupation - the broadest US professional work visa
  • You can pursue a green card while on the visa
  • You can change employers without re-entering the lottery
  • Works part-time or for more than one employer at once
  • No foreign company or prior employer needed
  • Universities and nonprofits skip the cap and lottery
Limitations
  • Most applicants must be selected in the annual lottery just to apply
  • The cap selection now favors higher salaries - entry-level roles face the worst odds
  • Needs a bachelor's degree in the specific field
  • Spouses don't get a work permit automatically - only once your green card case advances
  • The employer must pay the required wage
  • USCIS can make unannounced site visits to check the job is real

Upwing the strengths that ring true, downwing the limitations that hit hardest.

How it works

The full H-1B process,
step by step.

For cap-subject roles, H-1B runs on an annual calendar: register in March, find out within days, file if selected, and start October 1. Cap-exempt cases skip the lottery and can file any time.

01

Eligibility check

You start with a quick eligibility test on the platform - a few structured questions about the role, your degree, and the employer. Based on your answers, you connect with an expert for a first call. The goal is to confirm the job reads as a real specialty occupation and that your degree fits it, before the registration window opens.

1-7 days
02

Lottery registration

If the role is cap-subject, your employer registers you in the electronic lottery during the March window, pays the small registration fee, and submits your passport details. This is just an entry - no full petition yet. Cap-exempt employers skip this step entirely and go straight to filing.

March window
03

Selection results

USCIS runs the selection against the cap and posts results within days. If you're selected, you get a filing window - at least 90 days - to submit the full petition.

Late March
04

Wage filing and document collection

Your attorney files the wage attestation with the Department of Labor and the employer posts the required notice at the worksite. Alongside that, the paperwork comes together from both sides - your degree records and credential evaluation, plus the company's details and a full description of the role. The wage filing is usually certified within about a week, so the pace here depends on how quickly everyone gathers their documents.

1-2 weeks
05

Case preparation

With the wage filing certified and the documents in hand, your attorney builds the full petition - the employer's support letter explaining why the role is a specialty occupation, your degree evidence, the government forms, and the evidence package. The specialty occupation argument is the heart of the case. You review the petition before it's filed.

1-3 weeks
06

USCIS review

USCIS reviews the petition and decides one of three things: approve, deny, or ask for more evidence. Regular review takes two to six months; premium processing speeds it to 15 business days. If you get a request for evidence, your attorney responds with more documentation.

2-6 months · 15 business days with premium
07

Visa stamp or change of status

If you're already in the US on another valid status (like an F-1 student), you change to H-1B through the petition itself - no consulate trip. If you're abroad, you take the approval to a US consulate for the visa stamp. For cap-subject cases, H-1B employment can't begin before October 1.

Cap cases start Oct 1

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Common denial reasons

Why strong cases
still get denied.

Setting the lottery aside, most H-1B trouble comes down to a handful of patterns - and many surface as Requests for Evidence that are recoverable when the case was built carefully.

USCIS asks whether the job truly requires a specific degree - not whether you happen to have one.

01
The job isn't a real specialty occupation

The most common H-1B denial: the role doesn't clearly require a specific degree. A few patterns push a case toward this finding - a job description that reads like a generic management or analyst posting, a role that accepts any degree at all, or an entry-level position the field doesn't genuinely need a degree to fill. A 2024 rule tightened this standard, so the duties have to point clearly at one specific field of study.

The petition has to tie the duties to a specific field of study, not just assert that a degree is preferred.

02
The degree doesn't match the role

Even with a strong job, the case fails if your degree isn't in the field the role requires. A marketing role filled by someone with an unrelated degree, or a foreign degree treated as equivalent without a proper evaluation, leaves USCIS unable to connect your background to the specialty occupation.

The degree, the duties, and any experience-for-degree substitution all have to point at the same specific field.

03
The documents come together too late

H-1B runs on a tight clock - once you're selected, the filing window is short, and the petition needs your degree evidence, a credential evaluation if your degree is foreign, the employer's signed support letter, and the certified wage filing all at once. Cases stall in the back-and-forth: the evaluation takes weeks, the support letter sits unsigned, the right HR contact is slow to respond. None of this is about whether you qualify.

Gathering the evidence early and coordinating cleanly between you, the employer, and the attorney is the part most under your control - and what keeps a selected case from slipping.

imigOS

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H-1B Visa vs Other Work Visas

H-1B vs O-1A vs L-1B vs TN.

Each visa is built for a different situation. If the lottery is the obstacle, the right alternative can save you a year or more of waiting.

H-1B
Based on
Specialty occupation
Annual cap
85,000 (lottery)
Lottery
Yes
Degree required
Yes
Foreign company tie
Not required
Max duration
6 years
Dual intent
Yes
Green card path
PERM required (EB-2/EB-3)
Who can apply
Any nationality
Based on
Extraordinary ability
Annual cap
None
Lottery
No
Degree required
No
Foreign company tie
Not required
Max duration
No time limit
Dual intent
Limited yes
Green card path
Possible via EB-1A
Who can apply
Any nationality
Based on
Specialized knowledge
Annual cap
None
Lottery
No
Degree required
No
Foreign company tie
Required
Max duration
5 years
Dual intent
Yes
Green card path
PERM required (EB-2/EB-3)
Who can apply
Any nationality
TN
Based on
USMCA profession
Annual cap
None
Lottery
No
Degree required
Usually
Foreign company tie
Not required
Max duration
No max (3-yr renewals)
Dual intent
No
Green card path
No direct path
Who can apply
Canada & Mexico

Overview only. Your eligibility depends on the specifics. This reflects general policy as of May 2026. The wrong visa strategy can cost months of prep, so compare your options carefully before filing.

From H-1B to a green card

H-1B to green card.
The usual route.

H-1B is the default road to an employment green card. It allows dual intent, so you can pursue permanent residence openly while you keep working.

What is the EB-2 or EB-3 green card?

For most H-1B holders the green card runs through the EB-2 or EB-3 category - EB-2 for roles that need an advanced degree, EB-3 for skilled workers and professionals with a bachelor's. Both start with PERM, the labor test where your employer shows no qualified US worker is available, before the immigrant petition can be filed. After that comes the wait for a green card number - short for most countries, long for India and China.

Stage 01

Get a PERM labor certification.

Your employer files with the Department of Labor to confirm no qualified US worker is available for your role. This step alone usually takes 12 to 24 months. You keep working in H-1B status throughout.

Stage 02

File the I-140 immigrant petition.

Once PERM is approved, your employer files the immigrant petition under EB-2 (advanced degree or its equivalent in experience) or EB-3 (skilled worker). An approved I-140 also lets you keep extending your H-1B past the 6-year cap while you wait.

Stage 03

Wait for a number.

For most countries the wait is short. India and China face long backlogs - which is exactly when those extensions matter, keeping your H-1B alive until your priority date is current.

Stage 04

Adjust status, become a permanent resident.

When your turn comes, you file Form I-485 from inside the US, or apply at a consulate if abroad. Approval makes you a lawful permanent resident.

Stage 05

Citizenship, eventually.

After five years as a green card holder, you become eligible to apply for US citizenship through naturalization - showing continuous residence and physical presence, good moral character, and passing the English and civics tests at the interview. Citizenship ends green card renewals for good and lets you sponsor close family for their own green cards.

The EB-2 or EB-3 route, with its PERM labor test, is the common one - but it's not the only path. Stronger profiles can skip PERM through EB-1 or an EB-2 national interest waiver - faster routes worth checking before committing to labor certification.

Cost and fees

What you'll actually spend.

H-1B costs split into attorney fees and government fees, and the employer pays them - by law it can't pass the main ones to you.

Attorney fee$5,000Fixed for H-1B.
Estimated totalfrom $7,225Government fees on top.
Included in the attorney fee
  • Eligibility review and case strategy
  • Specialty occupation support letter
  • Wage attestation (LCA) filing
  • All RFE and NOID responses
  • Courier and shipping

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Questions,
answered.

The H-1B is a US work visa for specialty occupations - professional roles that require at least a bachelor's degree in a specific field. It's employer-sponsored, allows dual intent, and runs in three-year increments up to a 6-year maximum.

For cap-subject roles, the employer submits an electronic registration each March, and USCIS selects who can file against the 85,000 cap. Since a 2026 rule, that selection is weighted by wage level - the top tier (Level IV) gets four entries, down to one for entry-level - so higher-paid offers have better odds. Only selected registrations can file a full petition.

A role that requires the theoretical and practical application of highly specialized knowledge, plus a bachelor's degree in a specific field as the minimum to enter. A 2024 rule made this stricter: a job open to any degree, or a generic business or liberal-arts degree, generally doesn't qualify.

Maybe - it comes down to where you are. A 2025 proclamation added a one-time $100,000 fee, but only on new petitions for workers who are outside the US (consular cases). If you're already in the US - say, a student changing status from F-1 - the fee does not apply. It's a 12-month measure currently being challenged in court.

Yes. H-1B is portable - a new employer files a fresh petition, and under AC21 you can usually start working for them as soon as it's filed, without waiting for approval. You don't re-enter the lottery, since you've already been counted against the cap.

Six years total, granted in three-year increments. You can extend beyond six years if your green card case is far enough along - one year at a time once PERM or the I-140 has been pending 365+ days, or three years at a time with an approved I-140 stuck in a backlog.

Only in limited circumstances. Your spouse and children under 21 can join you on H-4, but an H-4 spouse can apply for a work permit only once you have an approved I-140 (or an H-1B extended past six years under AC21). H-4 children can study but can't work.

Some employers are exempt from the cap and the lottery: universities, their affiliated nonprofits, and nonprofit or government research organizations. Their H-1Bs can be filed any time of year with no random selection - the single biggest shortcut around the lottery.

Not directly - the H-1B is a temporary visa. But it allows dual intent, so you can pursue a green card while in status, usually through PERM and then EB-2 or EB-3. The full path is mapped out in the Green Card section above.

Sources

INA §101(a)(15)(H) · 8 CFR §214.2(h) · 20 CFR Part 655 (LCA) · USCIS Policy Manual

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