H-1B to Green Card Roadmap
See the employment-based path from H-1B to permanent resident as eight clear stages. Choose your category and country to tailor the timeline and the Visa Bulletin wait.
Build your roadmap
Pick your green card category and country of birth. Self-petition categories skip PERM, and the waiting stage reflects the current Visa Bulletin. Tap any stage to read what happens there.
This roadmap is a simplified, general overview for educational purposes only and is not legal advice. Real cases vary, steps can overlap or repeat, and immigration law changes often. Visa Bulletin movement is unpredictable and can retrogress. Always confirm against official sources and consult a licensed immigration attorney before filing.
Wait status from: Visa Bulletin Final Action Dates, May 2026 Source: travel.state.gov Visa Bulletin
How to read your result
The roadmap lays out the employment-based path as eight stages, but two choices reshape it: which category you qualify for and your country of birth. Category decides whether you need an employer and a PERM labor certification; country decides how long you wait in line, because the law caps how many green cards each country can receive per year. The procedural steps — broadly PERM (where required), the I-140 immigrant petition, and the I-485 adjustment of status — are similar for everyone, so most of the difference between two people comes from the waiting stage, not the paperwork.
Read the timeline as a structural map, not a personal schedule. For applicants born in most countries, an EB-1A or EB-2 NIW can move without a backlog; for those born in India or China in EB-2 and EB-3, the waiting stage can stretch for years even though the forms are identical. The wait portion reflects the current Visa Bulletin, which moves unpredictably, so treat it as a snapshot that will change rather than a fixed duration.
Common mistakes & misconceptions
The most common misconception is that an H-1B "turns into" a green card. It does not — the H-1B is a temporary work status, and the green card is a separate process you pursue alongside it through one of the employment-based categories. A related error is collapsing the three distinct stages into one: PERM (a Department of Labor process testing the U.S. labor market), the I-140 (the employer's or self-petitioner's immigrant petition), and the I-485 (your application to become a permanent resident) are different filings with different agencies, and each can succeed or stall on its own.
Another mistake is conflating the procedural wait with the visa-availability wait. Even after the I-140 is approved, you cannot file or finish the I-485 until your priority date is current under the Visa Bulletin — and for backlogged countries that gap, not the form processing, dominates the timeline. Applicants also sometimes assume an approved I-140 locks in their category or date permanently; in reality, the picture can shift if they change employers, change categories, or the bulletin retrogresses.
Edge cases
The six-year H-1B maximum is a frequent pinch point. Under the American Competitiveness in the 21st Century Act (AC21), you can usually extend H-1B beyond six years once you have an approved I-140, or once a PERM or I-140 has been pending long enough — a lifeline for people stuck in the EB-2 and EB-3 backlogs. Separately, EB-1A and EB-2 NIW are self-petition categories: they skip PERM and let you file the I-140 directly, which both shortens the front of the process and frees you from depending on an employer.
Whether you can file the I-485 at the same time as the I-140 — concurrent filing — depends on your priority date being current when you file, so it is available to some applicants and not others. Priority date retention is another wrinkle: an earlier date can often carry forward to a later petition, so your place in line is not always tied to your most recent filing. Job changes can also interact with AC21 portability rules. Each of these is fact-specific and best confirmed with an attorney rather than assumed from the timeline.
What to do next
Start by pinning down where you actually stand in the line: check whether your priority date is current with the Priority Date Calculator, follow monthly movement with the Visa Bulletin Tracker, and get a rough sense of the remaining wait with the Green Card Wait Time Estimator. Because the waiting stage usually dominates, these tell you more about your real timeline than the form-processing steps do.
To understand the mechanics behind the wait, read our guide on how to check your priority date. If you are still choosing a category, the self-petition options are worth a closer look — see whether you might qualify with the EB-1A Eligibility Checker. Immigration law changes often and individual cases vary widely, so for decisions about category strategy, AC21 extensions, or concurrent filing, consult a licensed immigration attorney or accredited representative.
Frequently asked questions
It depends mostly on your category and country of birth. The procedural steps take months each, but the waiting-in-line stage ranges from essentially none (e.g. EB-1A from most countries) to many years for EB-2/EB-3 applicants born in India or China, because of per-country limits in the Visa Bulletin.
No. Both are self-petition categories, so they skip PERM labor certification and file the I-140 directly. EB-2 and EB-3 generally require an employer-sponsored PERM first.
Yes. The process runs alongside your H-1B. Under AC21 you can extend H-1B past the six-year maximum once you have an approved I-140 or a long-pending PERM/I-140 — common for backlogged categories.
Only if your priority date is current when you file. This concurrent filing is available to some applicants and not others, depending on category and country. When a date is not current, the I-485 has to wait until the Visa Bulletin allows it. Confirm your status before assuming you can file together.
No. It is a general educational overview of the typical employment-based path and not legal advice. Your situation may differ. Consult a licensed immigration attorney before making decisions or filing.
Sources
- USCIS — Permanent Workers — official overview of the employment-based categories, PERM, and the I-140 process.
- U.S. Department of State — Visa Bulletin — the official monthly source that governs the waiting stage and priority dates.
- USCIS Policy Manual — official guidance on adjustment of status, AC21 extensions, and priority date retention.