The EB-1 Green Card is the highest-priority employment-based immigration category in the United States, designed for individuals who have demonstrated extraordinary achievement, academic excellence, or executive-level leadership at an international level. In 2026, EB-1 remains one of the fastest and most direct paths to U.S. permanent residency.
Key Advantage
EB-1 is processed ahead of EB-2 and EB-3 categories, requires no labor certification (PERM), and β for EB-1A β requires no employer sponsorship.
EB-1 Subcategories Explained
EB-1A: Individuals with Extraordinary Ability
Designed for individuals who have reached the very top of their field in science, technology, medicine, business, arts, education, or athletics. Applicants must show sustained acclaim and recognition β not future potential. No job offer or employer sponsorship is required.
Applicants must demonstrate either a one-time major internationally recognized award, or evidence meeting at least 3 of 10 regulatory criteria: national or international awards, membership in selective associations, published media about the applicant, judging the work of others, original contributions of major significance, scholarly authorship, artistic exhibitions, leading or critical organizational roles, high salary compared to peers, and commercial success in the performing arts.
EB-1B: Outstanding Professors or Researchers
For academics internationally recognized for their scholarly work. Applicants must have at least 3 years of teaching or research experience, be offered a permanent position by a U.S. employer, and meet at least 2 of 6 criteria (major academic awards, distinguished association membership, published material about their work, original scholarly contributions, authorship of academic publications, or peer reviewer/judge participation). Employer sponsorship is required.
EB-1C: Multinational Executives or Managers
Supports multinational companies transferring senior leadership to the United States. Applicants must have worked abroad in an executive or managerial role for at least one year within the last three years, be transferring to a U.S. parent, affiliate, subsidiary, or branch, and continue in an executive or managerial capacity in the U.S. Employer sponsorship is required.
EB-1 Application Process
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 1 | Identify the correct EB-1 subcategory |
| 2 | Prepare supporting evidence (awards, media, citations, leadership proof) |
| 3 | File Form I-140 with USCIS |
| 4 | Monitor the Visa Bulletin for priority date availability |
| 5 | Apply for Adjustment of Status (I-485) or pursue Consular Processing |
EB-1 Government Filing Fees (Updated for 2026)
- Form I-140 (Immigrant Petition): $715
- Asylum Program Fee: $300
- Premium Processing (optional): $2,805
- Adjustment of Status (I-485): $1,440 (most adult applicants)
Always verify current fees directly with USCIS before filing, as fees change periodically.
Common Challenges in EB-1 Applications
- Weak or generic evidence β quality matters more than quantity
- Overreliance on quantity instead of quality
- Poor narrative organization in the petition cover letter
- Inconsistent documentation across forms and exhibits
- Failure to demonstrate sustained recognition (not isolated achievements)
Key Takeaways
EB-1 is the fastest employment-based green card category. EB-1A does not require employer sponsorship or labor certification. Evidence quality is critical β officers evaluate the totality of evidence. Approval leads directly to permanent residency.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a job offer required for EB-1?
Only EB-1A does not require a job offer. EB-1B and EB-1C require employer sponsorship.
Does EB-1 require labor certification (PERM)?
No. All EB-1 categories are exempt from PERM labor certification.
How long does EB-1 processing take?
Processing times vary. Premium processing can reduce I-140 wait times to 15 business days.
Can EB-1 be denied?
Yes. Denials usually result from insufficient or poorly documented evidence.
Can family members be included?
Yes. Spouses and unmarried children under 21 may apply as derivative beneficiaries.