For most Indian H-1B workers, the green card is not a finish line a few years away — it is a multi-decade journey shaped by a single rule: no more than 7% of employment-based green cards can go to nationals of any one country per year. Because India sends far more H-1B workers than any other country, this cap creates a backlog that is unlike anything workers from other countries face.

This guide explains the three-step process, where the dates actually stand in 2026, what your life looks like while waiting, and the one faster path that a significant number of Indian professionals can legitimately use.

The 3-step process: PERM → I-140 → I-485

Every employer-sponsored green card follows the same sequence regardless of category. Here is what each stage involves and how long it takes.

  • 1
    PERM Labor Certification — 6 to 18 months

    Your employer files with the Department of Labor to prove no qualified US worker is available for your role. This involves posting the job, conducting a good-faith recruitment campaign, and documenting the results. If no audit is triggered, DOL currently takes 6–12 months to certify. Audits — which DOL triggers randomly or when the application looks unusual — add another 6–12 months on top. PERM is entirely your employer's filing; you have no direct role but should make sure your employer starts early.

  • 2
    I-140 Immigrant Petition — 6 to 9 months (or 15 business days with premium)

    After PERM is approved, your employer files Form I-140 with USCIS to establish your immigrant visa category and "priority date" — the date USCIS receives your petition. Standard processing currently runs 6–9 months. Premium processing ($2,805 fee as of 2026) guarantees a decision within 15 business days. Critically, once the I-140 is approved, you own your priority date even if you change employers later. Many attorneys recommend filing I-140 as early as possible, and paying for premium, so the date is locked in.

  • 3
    I-485 Adjustment of Status — wait for your priority date to become "current"

    You can file Form I-485 (the actual green card application) only when the State Department's monthly Visa Bulletin shows your priority date is current for India in your category. For EB-2 and EB-3 India, that wait is measured in decades. For EB-1, it is currently much shorter (see below). Once you file I-485, you receive work authorization (EAD) and travel permission (Advance Parole) while USCIS processes the application — typically another 12–24 months after filing.

Current India priority dates (approximate, May 2026)

The Visa Bulletin is published monthly and moves unpredictably. The dates below are representative of where things stood in early-to-mid 2026. Always verify the current bulletin at travel.state.gov.

Category Approx. priority date (India) Est. remaining wait (new filers)
EB-1A (Extraordinary ability) Fastest Current or near-current 1–3 years total
EB-1B (Outstanding researcher/professor) Faster Current or near-current 1–3 years total
EB-2 (Advanced degree / NIW) ~Jan 2013 25–35 years
EB-3 (Skilled workers) ~Jan 2013 25–35 years
EB-2 NIW (self-petition) ~Jan 2013 25–35 years

Priority dates move forward (and occasionally backward) each month. A "final action date" of January 2013 means only people with a priority date on or before that date can file I-485 right now. Source: DOS Visa Bulletin. Verify at travel.state.gov before making any decisions.

Realistic end-to-end timeline

Stage EB-1A/EB-1B path EB-2/EB-3 path (India)
PERM (if required) Not required for EB-1A; required for EB-1B in most cases: 6–18 mo 6–18 months
I-140 approved 15 days (premium) to 9 months 15 days (premium) to 9 months
Wait for priority date Near-current: 0–2 years Approx. 25–50 years for new filers
I-485 processing after filing 12–24 months 12–24 months
Total (realistic) 2–4 years 30–50+ years

What happens while you wait

H-1B extensions beyond 6 years

Normally, H-1B status is capped at 6 years (initial 3 + one 3-year extension). However, under AC21 Section 104(c), you can get H-1B extensions in 1-year or 3-year increments beyond 6 years if your I-140 has been approved and your priority date is not current. This means most Indian EB-2/EB-3 workers continue on H-1B indefinitely while waiting. There is no hard cap on the number of extensions as long as the green card process is actively pending.

H-4 EAD for spouses

If your spouse holds H-4 status and you have an approved I-140 (even if your priority date is not yet current), your spouse can apply for an H-4 Employment Authorization Document (EAD). This allows them to work for any employer in the US without restriction. The H-4 EAD has faced political and legal challenges over the years, so verify current status with an attorney before making career decisions based on it.

Job portability under AC21

Once your I-485 has been pending for 180 days or more, you can change employers — or even job titles — without restarting the green card process, provided the new role is in the "same or similar occupational classification." This is called AC21 portability. Your original I-140 and priority date are preserved. In practice, this gives long-waiting Indian workers significant freedom to change jobs, negotiate better compensation, or move to startups without sacrificing years of green card progress.

Travel on Advance Parole

Once you have filed I-485, you receive Advance Parole (AP) which allows international travel without using your H-1B stamp. However, if you travel on AP while having a pending I-485, your H-1B status may be affected. Most immigration attorneys recommend maintaining valid H-1B status and continuing to travel on your H-1B visa stamp to preserve maximum flexibility.

The faster path: EB-1A and EB-1B

The EB-1 category — specifically EB-1A (Extraordinary Ability) and EB-1B (Outstanding Researcher or Professor) — does not face the same India backlog as EB-2/EB-3. As of 2026, India's EB-1 dates are either current or only slightly retrogressed, meaning the total timeline from filing to green card can be as short as 2–3 years.

EB-1A: Extraordinary Ability

This is a self-petition (no employer sponsorship needed) for individuals with extraordinary ability in science, arts, education, business, or athletics. USCIS uses a 10-criterion test; you need to satisfy at least 3. Common evidence includes prizes and awards, published articles, high salary relative to peers, judging others' work, and original contributions to the field. Senior engineers, researchers with published papers, and professionals with significant industry recognition often qualify. An immigration attorney can assess your profile for as little as a consultation fee.

EB-1B: Outstanding Researcher or Professor

Requires employer sponsorship from a university, research institution, or private company with a qualifying research department. You need at least 3 years of research experience and evidence of international recognition — typically two peer-reviewed publications and documented impact. Unlike EB-1A, PERM labor certification is not required, which removes 6–18 months from the timeline.

Important caveat EB-1 priority dates for India have retrogressed in the past (gone backward) when usage spikes. If you are planning around EB-1 dates, consult an attorney and do not rely on current dates being available by the time your petition is approved.

Frequently asked questions

  • Can I switch employers while my green card is pending?

    Yes, with caveats. Before I-485 is filed, changing employers typically requires the new employer to file a new I-140 (your old priority date can be "ported" to the new petition). After I-485 has been pending for 180 days, AC21 portability allows you to move to any same-or-similar role without restarting the process. Always get attorney advice before making the switch.

  • What happens to my H-1B if my employer does a layoff?

    If you are laid off, you have a 60-day grace period to find a new H-1B sponsor, transfer to another nonimmigrant status, or depart the US. Your approved I-140 is not automatically revoked on layoff — but if the employer withdraws it, you may lose it unless it has been approved for 180+ days (in which case you can often keep the priority date). Act quickly and consult an attorney immediately if you are laid off.

  • Does having an I-140 approved help me at all if I can't file I-485 yet?

    Yes — significantly. An approved I-140 locks in your priority date, enables H-1B extensions beyond 6 years, and (after 180 days pending) enables AC21 job portability. It also enables your spouse's H-4 EAD. Many attorneys recommend getting the I-140 approved as early as possible even if the priority date is decades away.

  • Is there a way to get a green card faster without qualifying for EB-1?

    The most commonly discussed options are EB-2 National Interest Waiver (NIW, self-petition for those whose work benefits the US broadly), O-1 visa as a bridge strategy, or in rare cases an EB-4 or EB-5 path. None of these provide a dramatically faster route for most workers. The honest answer for most Indian H-1B professionals is: the EB-1 path is the only realistic fast lane.


Disclaimer This article is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice, immigration advice, or a substitute for consultation with a qualified immigration attorney. US immigration law is complex and changes frequently. Priority dates, processing times, and policy interpretations shift regularly. NRI Outpost makes no representations about the accuracy or completeness of this information. Always consult a licensed immigration attorney before making any decisions about your visa or immigration status.