Breaking

L-1 to Green Card: EB-1C, EB-2 & All Pathways (2026 Guide)

πŸ“‹ Pathway GuideUpdated for 2026Last verified: March 2026

The L-1 visa is one of the most direct pathways to a U.S. green card available in employment-based immigration. L-1A holders (executives and managers) can transition directly to an EB-1C green card without PERM labor certification β€” making it one of the fastest and most straightforward employment-based green card pathways for qualifying professionals.

Dual Intent Advantage

Unlike TN visas, L-1 visas support dual intent β€” you can pursue a green card while in L-1 status without jeopardizing your ability to renew or re-enter the U.S.

L-1A to EB-1C: The Most Direct Pathway

What Is EB-1C?

EB-1C is the first-preference employment-based green card category for multinational executives and managers. It is closely aligned with the L-1A visa β€” both require that the beneficiary works in an executive or managerial capacity for a multinational company.

EB-1C Requirements

Key Advantage: No PERM Required

EB-1C does not require PERM labor certification. This eliminates the 12–24 month PERM process and allows the green card process to move significantly faster than EB-2 or EB-3 PERM-based cases.

L-1B to Green Card: EB-2 or EB-3 PERM

L-1B holders (specialized knowledge workers) do not have a direct EB-1C pathway since EB-1C requires executive or managerial capacity. L-1B holders typically pursue green cards through:

L-1 to Green Card Timeline

PathwayPERM Required?Typical TimelinePriority Date Wait
L-1A β†’ EB-1CNo12–24 monthsUsually current for most nationalities
L-1B β†’ EB-2 PERMYes3–6+ yearsVaries significantly by country
L-1B β†’ EB-2 NIWNoVaries by Visa BulletinVaries by country of birth
L-1B β†’ EB-3 PERMYes4–8+ yearsVaries significantly by country

New Office L-1 and the Green Card

If you are in a new office L-1 (where the U.S. company was recently established), there are additional considerations for the EB-1C pathway:

Filing Strategy: Timing the L-1 Extension and Green Card

Many L-1A holders coordinate the EB-1C I-140 filing with their L-1 extension to maximize status protection. Once an I-485 is filed, L-1 holders can obtain an EAD and Advance Parole, which provides additional flexibility. However, traveling on Advance Parole instead of an L-1 visa may affect future L-1 status, so this requires careful planning.

Key Takeaway

L-1A to EB-1C is one of the fastest employment-based green card pathways β€” no PERM, no labor market test, and often current in the Visa Bulletin for most nationalities. File the I-140 on premium processing as soon as the U.S. company has been doing business for at least 1 year. L-1B holders have more complex options and should evaluate PERM vs. NIW pathways carefully.

FAQs

Can I start the EB-1C process while in L-1A status?

Yes. L-1 supports dual intent, and filing an I-140 while on L-1A status is standard practice. There is no conflict between L-1A status and pursuing EB-1C.

What if my L-1A reaches the 7-year maximum before the green card is approved?

If your I-140 is approved and your I-485 is pending, you can request L-1 extensions beyond the 7-year cap under certain AC21 provisions, or switch to H-1B status.

Can I switch from L-1A to H-1B for the green card process?

Yes. Some L-1A holders switch to H-1B to take advantage of H-1B's flexibility for green card portability (AC21). This is particularly useful for professionals who may change employers during the green card process.

⚠️ Not Legal Advice. General information only. Consult a licensed U.S. immigration attorney for case-specific guidance.

Related Visa Guides

L-1 visa guideEB-1 green card guidePERM labor certification guideEB-2 green card guideadjustment of status guide

Related News

April 2026 Visa Bulletinpremium processing fee increaseinterview expansionEB-2/EB-3 retrogression risk

Stay Ahead of Immigration Changes

Weekly updates, real stories, and visa insights β€” no spam, no sales.

Subscribe Free β†’