Estimador del tiempo de espera de la tarjeta verde
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The Green Card Wait Time Estimator projects how long an applicant may wait for a United States employment-based green card (permanent residency) based on their country of birth, preference category (EB-1 through EB-5), and priority date. The US employment-based immigration system allocates approximately 140,000 green cards per year across five preference categories, with a per-country cap of 7% — meaning no single country can receive more than approximately 9,800 employment-based green cards annually, regardless of demand. This per-country cap creates enormous backlogs for applicants born in high-demand countries, particularly India and China. Because demand from Indian-born applicants vastly exceeds the annual country allocation, wait times for EB-2 and EB-3 categories have stretched to decades. The Visa Bulletin, published monthly by the US Department of State, shows 'final action dates' and 'dates for filing' that indicate which priority dates are currently being processed — these dates are the primary input for estimating wait times. The green card process typically involves three stages: (1) PERM Labor Certification, where the employer demonstrates that no qualified US worker is available for the position (required for EB-2 and EB-3, but not EB-1); (2) I-140 Immigrant Petition, filed by the employer or self-petitioned for certain categories; and (3) Adjustment of Status (I-485) or Consular Processing, the final step where the applicant receives permanent residency. The priority date — the date the PERM application was filed (or I-140 for categories not requiring PERM) — determines the applicant's place in the queue. Understanding wait time estimates is critical for career planning, family decisions, and evaluating alternative immigration pathways. Many applicants facing multi-decade waits consider concurrent strategies such as filing under multiple categories, employer changes that may affect priority date portability, or exploring immigration to other countries with shorter processing times.
Estimated Wait (years) = (Priority Date - Current Final Action Date) / Historical Annual Advancement Rate
- 1Step 1 — Identify Your Employment Category: Determine which preference category your green card petition falls under. EB-1 covers priority workers (EB-1A extraordinary ability, EB-1B outstanding professors/researchers, EB-1C multinational managers). EB-2 covers professionals with advanced degrees or exceptional ability, including the National Interest Waiver (NIW) self-petition option. EB-3 covers skilled workers (minimum 2 years training), professionals (bachelor's degree required), and other workers. EB-4 covers special immigrants (religious workers, certain government employees). EB-5 covers immigrant investors ($800,000 in a Targeted Employment Area or $1,050,000 standard).
- 2Step 2 — Determine Your Country of Birth: The per-country cap applies based on your country of birth, regardless of your current citizenship, residence, or where you work. This means an Indian-born applicant living and working in Canada still falls under the India backlog if applying for a US green card. In limited cases, cross-chargeability allows using a spouse's country of birth if it has a shorter backlog. The four most backlogged countries are India, China, Mexico, and the Philippines — all other countries are classified as 'Rest of World' (ROW).
- 3Step 3 — Establish Your Priority Date: Your priority date is the most critical factor in determining wait time. For most EB-2 and EB-3 applicants, this is the date the PERM Labor Certification application was filed with the Department of Labor. For EB-1, EB-2 NIW, and other categories not requiring PERM, the priority date is the I-140 filing date. An earlier priority date means you are ahead of more people in the queue. Priority dates can sometimes be recaptured or ported when changing employers under certain conditions allowed by AC21 portability rules.
- 4Step 4 — Reference the Current Visa Bulletin: The calculator compares your priority date against the most recent Visa Bulletin published by the Department of State. The Bulletin shows two sets of dates: 'Final Action Dates' (when your case can be adjudicated and the green card issued) and 'Dates for Filing' (when you can submit your I-485 adjustment of status application). If your priority date is earlier than the final action date for your category and country, your date is 'current' and you can proceed.
- 5Step 5 — Calculate Historical Advancement Rate: The calculator analyzes how quickly the final action dates have advanced over the past 12-24 months for your specific category and country of birth. For example, if the EB-2 India final action date advanced from January 2012 to September 2012 over the past 12 months, the advancement rate is approximately 8 months of priority date movement per 12 calendar months. This rate varies significantly year to year based on demand, visa availability, and spillover from other categories.
- 6Step 6 — Project Estimated Wait Time: Using the gap between your priority date and the current final action date, divided by the historical advancement rate, the calculator projects the estimated number of years until your priority date becomes current. For EB-2 India, a priority date of January 2015 with a current final action date of September 2012 and an advancement rate of 8 months per year would project approximately 3.75 years of additional waiting. These projections are inherently uncertain and can change significantly based on legislative action, administrative decisions, and annual demand fluctuations.
- 7Step 7 — Evaluate Alternative Strategies: If the projected wait time is unacceptably long, the calculator suggests alternative strategies such as EB-1A self-petition (no employer required, potentially shorter backlog), EB-2 NIW (self-petition with no labor market test), downgrade from EB-2 to EB-3 (sometimes EB-3 India advances faster than EB-2 India due to visa number spillover patterns), or exploring immigration to other countries (Canada, Australia, UK) with significantly shorter processing times.
EB-2 India advancement rates have been highly variable, ranging from 2 months to 2 years of movement per year
The gap between the priority date (March 2015) and the current final action date (September 2012) is approximately 2.5 years. With EB-2 India historically advancing at 2-4 months of priority date per calendar month in good years, this suggests 8-12 years of additional waiting. However, EB-2 India has experienced dramatic retrogression in several years, where the final action date actually moved backward. Legislative changes such as proposed elimination of per-country caps could dramatically reduce this wait time.
Rest of World EB-3 typically has much shorter backlogs than India or China
For applicants born in countries outside the four backlogged nations (India, China, Mexico, Philippines), EB-3 wait times are generally manageable at 1-3 years from priority date to green card. The 'Rest of World' category benefits from unused visa numbers from other countries and typically has final action dates within 1-2 years of the current date. Processing times for the I-140 petition and I-485 adjustment of status add 6-18 months beyond when the priority date becomes current.
EB-1 India has shorter backlogs than EB-2/EB-3 but is no longer always current
EB-1 India was historically current (no waiting) but developed a backlog starting in 2017 as more Indian nationals qualified under the extraordinary ability and multinational manager categories. As of 2024, EB-1 India typically has a 2-4 year backlog — still dramatically shorter than the EB-2 India backlog of 10+ years. EB-1A does not require employer sponsorship or PERM labor certification, making it attractive for highly accomplished individuals in science, arts, education, business, or athletics.
EB-5 China backlog has improved since the 2022 RIA legislation created set-aside visas for rural and infrastructure projects
Chinese-born EB-5 investors historically faced backlogs of 8-15 years, but the EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act of 2022 (RIA) created set-aside visa numbers for investors in rural areas, high-unemployment areas, and infrastructure projects. These set-aside categories are currently current for all countries, meaning Chinese investors in qualifying projects can avoid the general EB-5 backlog entirely. The standard EB-5 China backlog remains significant but has been reduced by the diversion of applicants to set-aside categories.
Planning career and life decisions around projected green card timelines for H-1B visa holders considering staying in the US vs emigrating to Canada or Australia
Evaluating whether to pursue EB-1A self-petition or EB-2 NIW as faster alternatives to employer-sponsored EB-2/EB-3
Immigration attorneys advising clients on the most strategic filing category and timing based on current Visa Bulletin trends
Employers estimating green card processing timelines for retention planning and international talent recruitment
Policy researchers and advocates analyzing the impact of per-country caps on immigration fairness and economic competitiveness
| Category | India | China | Philippines | Rest of World |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EB-1 (Priority Workers) | 2-4 years | 1-3 years | Current-1 year | Current-1 year |
| EB-2 (Advanced Degree) | 10-30+ years | 3-6 years | Current-1 year | Current-1 year |
| EB-3 (Skilled Workers) | 10-50+ years | 3-5 years | 2-4 years | 1-2 years |
| EB-4 (Special Immigrants) | Current-2 years | Current | Current | Current |
| EB-5 (Investors — Standard) | 3-5 years | 4-8 years | Current | Current |
| EB-5 (Set-Aside/Rural) | Current | Current | Current | Current |
Why are green card wait times so long for India?
India faces the longest green card wait times due to a combination of high demand and the per-country cap. The US receives far more employment-based green card applications from Indian nationals than from any other country — driven by the large pipeline of H-1B visa holders from India's IT and technology workforce. However, the 7% per-country cap limits India to approximately 9,800 employment-based green cards per year (out of 140,000 total), the same allocation as a small country with minimal demand. As of 2024, the EB-2 India backlog exceeds 300,000 pending applicants, and the EB-3 India backlog is similarly large. Without legislative reform to eliminate or raise the per-country cap, wait times for new Indian applicants could exceed 50 years.
What is the difference between the Final Action Date and the Date for Filing?
The Visa Bulletin publishes two charts: Final Action Dates and Dates for Filing. The Final Action Date is when your green card can actually be issued — your priority date must be earlier than this date for USCIS to adjudicate your I-485 and issue the green card. The Date for Filing is an earlier cutoff that allows you to submit your I-485 application and receive associated benefits (Employment Authorization Document, Advance Parole travel document) while waiting for the Final Action Date to reach your priority date. USCIS announces each month whether they will accept applications based on the Date for Filing or Final Action Date chart — this varies and is not guaranteed.
Can I change employers while waiting for my green card?
Yes, under the American Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century Act (AC21), you can change employers (port your I-140) under certain conditions. If your I-140 has been approved for at least 180 days and your I-485 has been pending for at least 180 days, you can change employers as long as the new position is in the same or similar occupational classification. Your priority date is retained. If your I-140 has been approved for 180 days but your I-485 has not been filed (because your priority date is not current), your approved I-140 remains valid even if you leave the sponsoring employer, allowing a new employer to file a new PERM/I-140 while retaining your original priority date.
What is the EB-2 National Interest Waiver (NIW)?
The EB-2 National Interest Waiver is a self-petition pathway that bypasses the need for employer sponsorship and PERM labor certification. Under the NIW, the applicant argues that their proposed work is in an area of substantial merit and national importance, that they are well-positioned to advance the proposed endeavor, and that it would be beneficial to the US to waive the job offer requirement. The NIW has become increasingly popular since the 2016 Matter of Dhanasar decision established a more flexible three-prong test. It is particularly attractive for researchers, STEM professionals, entrepreneurs, and healthcare workers. NIW cases share the same EB-2 backlog, so Indian-born applicants still face long waits.
Can I downgrade from EB-2 to EB-3 to get a green card faster?
In some years, the EB-3 category for India advances faster than EB-2 due to visa number spillover patterns and demand dynamics. Downgrading from EB-2 to EB-3 involves having the employer file a new PERM and I-140 under the EB-3 category. Some employers file both EB-2 and EB-3 petitions simultaneously to take advantage of whichever category has a more favorable final action date. The priority date from an approved EB-2 I-140 can be retained and applied to the EB-3 filing (priority date portability). This strategy requires employer cooperation and additional legal costs but can potentially save years of waiting depending on how the two categories advance.
What happens if the per-country cap is eliminated?
Several bills have been introduced in Congress to eliminate or modify the per-country cap for employment-based green cards, including the EAGLE Act, the Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act, and similar legislation. If enacted, the per-country cap would be phased out over several years, allowing India and China to receive a much larger share of the annual 140,000 employment-based green cards based on demand. Modeling suggests this would reduce EB-2 India wait times from 50+ years to approximately 5-10 years within a decade of implementation. However, it would also temporarily increase wait times for Rest of World applicants who currently benefit from readily available visa numbers. As of 2024, no cap-elimination bill has passed both chambers of Congress.
How accurate are green card wait time estimates?
Green card wait time estimates are inherently uncertain and should be treated as rough projections rather than guarantees. Several factors can cause significant deviations: congressional legislation could eliminate or modify the per-country cap; annual visa number allocations can change based on demand and spillover patterns; USCIS processing speeds vary based on staffing and policy priorities; retrogression can move final action dates backward, temporarily increasing wait times; and executive branch administrative actions can create new visa number recapture programs. Historical data shows that actual advancement rates have varied from 0 to 3+ years of priority date movement in a single fiscal year. The calculator provides the best available estimate based on recent trends, but applicants should plan for significant variance.
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If you are an Indian or Chinese national facing a long EB-2/EB-3 wait, explore the EB-1A extraordinary ability category — the qualifying criteria are broader than most people assume. Published articles (even co-authored), patents, conference presentations, peer review activities, and membership in professional organizations can all count toward the 3-of-10 evidentiary criteria. Many STEM professionals, software engineers, and healthcare workers successfully self-petition under EB-1A with proper documentation, potentially reducing their wait from decades to 2-4 years.
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As of 2024, an Indian national filing a new EB-3 green card application faces an estimated 50+ year wait based on current processing rates and the size of the existing backlog. This means a newborn Indian citizen would theoretically reach middle age before their parent's employment-based green card is approved, assuming no legislative changes occur. The Cato Institute has calculated that approximately 1.8 million Indian nationals are currently in the employment-based green card queue, and at the current rate of approximately 9,800 green cards per year for India, clearing the existing backlog alone would take over 180 years.