H-1B Visa
H1-B1 Visa
H-2A Visa
H-2B Visa
H-3 Visa
L-1 Visa
O-1 Visa
O-2 Visa
P-1 Visa
P-2 Visa
P-3 Visa
R-1 Visa
TN Visa
The H-1B Visa has become a somewhat mythical visa category over the years. It’s the visa everybody wants and thus it is the visa that receives the most attention. The H-1B Visa allows foreign workers in “specialty occupations” to enter the U.S. and work in a variety of fields, including Architecture, Engineering, Modeling, Medicine, and Health. This visa is sometimes used to hire workers for the Department of Defense. The H-1B Visa offers a wide range of employment possibilities and is often the first step toward permanent immigration. In order to qualify for H-1B classification, the applicant must have theoretical and practical application of specialized knowledge and must have at least a U.S. bachelor’s degree or its equivalent AND the job sought must require at least a bachelor’s degree or its equivalent. Because this is not a self-petitioning category, the applicant must have a sponsoring employer in the U.S. The spouse and unmarried children below the age of 21 of an H-1B worker are allowed to accompany this individual as H-4 dependents. However, they cannot work unless they qualify for a work visa. H-4 dependents, however, can enroll and attend schools in the U.S. without obtaining a student visa.
This visa is issued in up to three-year increments, for a maximum of six years. In limited circumstances it can be extended in one year increments past the six year limit.
Applicants must have a U.S. Bachelor’s Degree in their specialty or a license in fields that require licensing, such as teaching or pharmacy. A degree from a foreign university may be acceptable if it can be shown to be the equivalent of a U.S. Bachelor degree. The same goes for work experience. The visa requires a petition filed by the employer. The maximum stay in the H-1B status is six years, after which you are required to leave the U.S. for at least one year before being eligible again.
Your spouse and unmarried children under the age of 21 may join you in the U.S. under H-4 status. However, they are not permitted to work unless they personally qualify for a work visa.
The H-1B1 visa is similar to the H-1B and is for persons in “specialty occupations.” This new category was created by the U.S.-Chile Free Trade Agreement and the U.S.-Singapore Free Trade Agreement. It is limited to foreign nationals from certain countries.
In order to qualify for H-1B1 classification, the applicant must have theoretical and practical application of specialized knowledge and must have at least a U.S. bachelor’s degree or its equivalent AND the job sought must require at least a bachelor’s degree or its equivalent. Because this is not a self-petitioning category, the applicant must have a sponsoring employer in the U.S.
The spouse and unmarried children below the age of 21 of an H-1B1 worker are allowed to accompany this individual as H-4 dependents. However, they cannot work unless they qualify for a work visa. H-4 dependents, however, can enroll and attend schools in the U.S. without obtaining a student visa.
Because the H-1B1 visa requires a U.S. sponsor, the applicant must obtain a written offer of employment from a U.S. employer. Unlike the H-1B visa, there is no need for the employer to file an I-129 Petition with the USCIS in the U.S. However, like the H-1B, a prevailing wage needs to be obtained and a Labor Condition Attestation (LCA) needs to be filed.
Both the applicant and the employer are required to submit documents evidencing eligibility. The applicant is required to submit the following documents when applying abroad:
The employer needs to provide the following:
The H-2A Visa is the most functional of all visa categories. It fills a specific seasonal need for both the U.S. and for foreign nationals. This visa allows foreign workers entry into the U.S. to work in agriculture.
The H-2A visa is not self-petitioned. Employers must prove that there are no U.S. workers available to perform the work to be completed. Although this is a temporary visa, it can be extended for up to three years.
Workers’ spouses and unmarried children under the age of 21 are allowed to join them in the U.S. under the H-4 status. Dependents are not permitted to work unless they personally qualify for a work visa.
While a limited amount of H-2B Visas are issued each year, the visa is nonetheless useful. The H-2B visa enables U.S. businesses, such as hotels, construction companies, and landscapers, to fill temporary needs for non-immigrant workers. This visa is also occasionally used to hire professional athletes. Many individuals who are unable to obtain an O or P Visa decide to apply for this visa instead. The visa requires a petition by the employer.
Your spouse and unmarried children under the age of 21 may join you in the U.S. under the H-4 status. Dependents are not permitted to work unless they personally qualify for a work visa.
The H-3 Visa is specifically designed to enable workers in “any field of endeavor” to train in the U.S. (USCIS). Although this loose classification includes agriculture, technology, communications, and governmental leadership, it does not apply to people seeking graduate medical training.
This visa can also be used by people entering the U.S. to receive training in special education “of children with physical, mental, or emotional disabilities.”
Your spouse and unmarried children under the age of 21 may join you in the U.S. under the H-4 status; however, these dependents are not permitted to work.
Along with the requisite application documents, the H-3 Visa requires your employer to provide the following:
Businesses that function both in the U.S. and in their home country benefit from the ability to shift executives, managers, or employers with specialized knowledge from one country to the other. The L-1 visa is open to international organizations with offices in the U.S. who temporarily transfer employees to their U.S. office. This visa is also known as an “intra-company transferee” visa.
To obtain an L-1 visa, you must be able to prove that you have worked for the non-U.S. company for at least one full year within the last three years as an executive, manager, or employee with specialized knowledge.
The L-1 visa enables the transfer of managers, executives, and specialized knowledge personnel to a U.S. office, subsidiary or affiliated company. This visa comes in the following categories:
L-1A workers may work for up to seven years. L-1B visa holders may work for five years.
Your spouse and unmarried children under the age of 21 may join you in the U.S. through L-2 status. L-2 status spouses are allowed to work.
The O-1 Visa is for people with extraordinary ability in a wide spectrum of fields including the sciences, arts, education, business, athletics, motion picture or television industry to enter the U.S. for temporary periods of time.
The O-1 Visa must be petitioned by a U.S. employer, U.S. agent or foreign employer through a U.S. agent. Your spouse and unmarried children under the age of 21 may join you in the U.S. under O-3 status, but they may not work.
To be considered an outstanding individual, you should be highly regarded in your field. The applicant may be required to provide documentation of a portion of the following:
Support personnel of O-1 Visa holders in the fields of athletics, entertainment, motion picture and television production are eligible for O-2 visas. This status is not applicable to personnel in the sciences, business, or education.
A U.S. employer, U.S. agent or foreign employer through a U.S. agent must petition for the A-2. Your spouse and unmarried children under the age of 21 are permitted to accompany you to the U.S. under O-3 status. They may not, however, work on the basis of their O-3 status.
Artists and athletes are essential to healthy cultural exchange. The global community benefits greatly from the work of each country's greatest thinkers and performers. P-1 visas are issued to entertainers, circus artists, and athletes who wish to work/compete in the U.S.
Outstanding athletes may apply for this visa in order to compete in the U.S., either as individuals or as members of an internationally recognized athletic team.
Entertainment groups with an outstanding international reputation can obtain P-1 classification as a unit; however, individual entertainers within these groups cannot apply for separate visas.
The employer of a P-1 athlete visa applicant may be asked to provide the following:
The employer of an entertainer P-1 visa applicant may be asked to provide the following:
Artists and athletes are essential to healthy cultural exchange. The global community benefits greatly from the work of each country’s greatest thinkers and performers. P-2 Visas are issued to troupes or bands entering the U.S. as part of an exchange program.
The U.S. labor group that negotiated the exchange agreement, the sponsoring organization or the U.S. employer must file the petition. P-2 applicants may be asked to provide the following:
The P-3 visa allows “culturally unique” artists and entertainers to travel to the U.S. for temporary positions as performers, teachers or coaches.
Either the sponsoring organization or the U.S. employer must file the P-3 visa application. P-3 applicants may be asked to provide the following:
The R-1 Visa enables religious workers to temporarily enter the U.S. for employment in their religious vocation. A religious vocation is defined as a calling to religious life, demonstrated by a lifelong commitment such as taking vows. Nuns, monks, and teachers in schools affiliated with a particular religion are examples of religious workers.
This classification includes liturgical workers, religious instructors or cantors, catechists, workers in religious hospitals, missionaries, religious translators, and religious broadcasters. However, this classification does not include janitors, maintenance workers, clerks, fundraisers, or solicitors of donations.
The R-1 applicant must demonstrate that he or she has belonged to a nonprofit religious organization in the U.S. for at least the two years. The U.S. petitioning organization must be a tax-exempt nonprofit religious organization that is able to afford to pay the religious worker’s salary and, if applicable, provide room and board for the religious worker. Religious workers who live outside the U.S. should apply for the R-1 visa with their consulate. Religious workers who are already in the U.S. may ask their employer “to petition for a change of status, extension of stay, or change of employment.”
R-1 visa holders may remain in the U.S. for up to five years.
Spouses and/or unmarried children under 21 years of age may accompany the religious worker to the U.S. under R-2 status. R-2 visa holders are not authorized to work while in the U.S., but may attend school.
The petitioning organization will normally be asked to provide the following:
Under the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), certain citizens of Canada and Mexico are eligible to enter the U.S. to work temporarily under non-immigrant TN status.
The following are the requirements to be eligible for the TN Visa:
Canadian Citizens may apply for the TN-1 Visa, and Mexican citizens may apply for the TN-2 Visa. Please note that the process for obtaining a TN-2 Visa is much more complicated than that of the TN-1.
Spouses and/or unmarried children under the age of 21 are eligible to enter the U.S. under the derivative TD-1 and TD-2 visas. Family members may study in the U.S., but they are not allowed to work.
Canadian citizens applying for the TN-1 Visa must provide the following information:
Canadian citizens need not file a petition for employment; a TN visa holder is authorized to work pursuant to status.
Mexican citizens are eligible to apply for the TN-2 Visa. Unlike Canadian citizens, Mexican applicants must apply at a U.S. consulate in their home country. Interested applicants must meet the following requirements:
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