Yes, L-1B workers can pursue permanent residency through employer or family sponsorship, as long as they keep lawful status and file the right forms.
An L-1B visa lets you work in the U.S. for a multinational employer in a specialized-knowledge role. A green card is a separate track. The good news is you can start that track while you keep working on L-1B, as long as you stay in status and follow the filing rules.
Below you’ll see the real-world routes L-1B holders use, how the steps usually line up, and the spots that create delays. The tables are there so you can compare options at a glance, then read the details you need.
Can L-1B Visa Holder Apply for Green Card? What changes after filing
Yes. An L-1B holder can apply for a green card if they qualify under an immigrant category and file the required petitions and applications. Filing doesn’t cancel your L-1B. It starts a parallel case that aims for permanent residence.
L visas are often described as “dual intent.” In plain terms, you can keep a temporary work status while also having a long-term plan. Still, a pending green card case won’t rescue you from a status lapse. If your L-1B ends and you can’t lawfully stay by some other basis, you can lose your footing fast.
L-1B visa holder green card routes through a job offer
Most L-1B holders pursue permanent residency through their employer. The usual fit is EB-2 or EB-3. In many cases, the employer must complete a Department of Labor labor certification case (often called PERM) before filing the immigrant petition.
At a high level, a typical employer route looks like this:
- The company defines the sponsored role: title, duties, worksite, and pay
- The company completes labor certification when required
- The company files the immigrant petition (often Form I-140)
- You file the green card stage when a visa number is available (often Form I-485 inside the U.S.)
USCIS summarizes employment-based categories and the basic filing flow on Green Card for Employment-Based Immigrants. It’s a solid reference when you want to match your case to the right category name and see the official sequence.
EB-2 vs EB-3 in plain language
EB-2 often fits roles that require an advanced degree, or a bachelor’s degree plus progressive experience. EB-3 often fits roles with lower formal degree requirements, or skilled roles that meet EB-3 standards. Which category your employer chooses depends on the job requirements they can document and defend, not just what you personally hold.
The day-to-day difference most workers feel is timing. Category and country backlogs vary, and the visa bulletin can move in small steps. That’s why some employers file in a category that matches the role cleanly first, then refile later if a better timing window opens.
When labor certification is in play
PERM is a structured recruitment and filing step designed to show there aren’t enough qualified U.S. workers for the role under the set terms. It can take months, and it’s sensitive to changes. A move to a new worksite, a major shift in duties, or a redesigned role can force rework.
If your employer is starting PERM, ask what changes are safe during that period. You can still grow in your job, yet it helps to avoid changes that rewrite the role on paper.
Self-petition routes some L-1B holders use
Two self-petition options come up often in L-1B conversations:
- EB-2 National Interest Waiver (NIW): may let you skip labor certification and file on your own if your work meets the legal standard.
- EB-1A extraordinary ability: a high bar that focuses on sustained acclaim and strong evidence across the listed criteria.
These are not L-1B perks. They’re separate immigration categories. If your employer route is slow, these options can be worth a careful evidence review with a licensed immigration attorney.
Promotion to a managerial role and the EB-1C idea
Some L-1B workers later move into a qualifying managerial or executive role and switch to L-1A. If that happens, the employer may file EB-1C (multinational manager or executive). EB-1C can skip labor certification, but it has strict role rules and company-relationship proof requirements.
Family-based routes that can work while you hold L-1B
Employment sponsorship isn’t the only path. If you have a qualifying family relationship, a family-based case can be cleaner, even if you keep your L-1B job the whole time.
Marriage to a U.S. citizen
Marriage to a U.S. citizen can place you in an “immediate relative” category. These cases are not limited by the same preference-category visa caps that drive many employment waits. You still need a complete, consistent filing package, and you should be ready for an interview.
Marriage to a lawful permanent resident and other categories
If your spouse is a lawful permanent resident, you may be in a family preference category with a priority date wait. Other family categories can apply in narrower situations. Step one is identifying the exact category label, then checking whether a visa number is available.
Visa numbers, priority dates, and why the bulletin matters
For many people, the slow part isn’t forms. It’s visa availability. In employment and most family preference categories, you can’t file the final stage until your priority date is current under the rules in effect that month.
The official monthly source is the Department of State’s Visa Bulletin. You’ll look up your category and country, then compare your priority date to the cut-off date shown in the chart your case uses. For filings inside the U.S., USCIS also states which chart applies for that month, so check that too.
Table 1: Common green card paths L-1B holders use
| Route | Who files | What usually controls timing |
|---|---|---|
| EB-2 with labor certification | Employer | PERM plus visa bulletin wait |
| EB-3 with labor certification | Employer | PERM plus visa bulletin wait |
| EB-2 National Interest Waiver | Worker (self-petition) | Evidence strength plus visa bulletin wait |
| EB-1A extraordinary ability | Worker (self-petition) | Evidence depth; bulletin often faster |
| EB-1C after move to L-1A role | Employer | Proof of managerial/executive duties |
| Marriage to U.S. citizen | Spouse and worker | Case review and interview timing |
| Marriage to lawful permanent resident | Spouse and worker | Priority date movement in family chart |
| Diversity Visa (if selected) | Worker | Selection plus annual deadlines |
| Other family preference categories | Qualifying relative | Backlogs and category rules |
Filing inside the U.S. vs. filing through a consulate
When your immigrant petition is approved and a visa number is available, you usually finish in one of two ways:
- Adjustment of status (AOS): you file the final application while staying in the U.S.
- Consular processing: you complete the immigrant visa stage abroad, then enter the U.S. as a permanent resident
AOS is common for L-1B holders already living and working in the U.S. Consular processing can be the better fit when AOS is not available, or when travel plans make it easier to finish abroad.
Do you need to keep L-1B status after you file AOS?
Many workers keep L-1B status as long as they can. It’s a clear work authorization basis tied to your employer. After you file AOS, you may also apply for interim work authorization and travel documents, yet it’s still smart to plan for a denial scenario. If AOS is denied and your L-1B has already expired, you may have no clean way to stay.
Travel during a pending case
International travel can be smooth or stressful, depending on your document set. Some people travel using valid L status and visa stamping. Others rely on advance parole once approved. Before booking flights, confirm what you’ll use to re-enter and whether leaving could be treated as abandoning an application.
Table 2: A practical filing timeline for a typical employer case
| Stage | What happens | What to watch |
|---|---|---|
| Role fit | Employer confirms EB-2 vs EB-3 | Job duties, degree requirement, worksite |
| PERM step | Recruitment, then labor certification filing | Role changes can trigger rework |
| I-140 filing | Employer files immigrant petition | Ability to pay and evidence package |
| Visa wait | Wait for the priority date to become current | Bulletin movement by category/country |
| I-485 filing | Worker files AOS when allowed | Medical exam timing and form versions |
| Biometrics and interim docs | Fingerprints, then EAD/AP decisions | Work and travel planning while waiting |
| Decision | Approval or interview request | Address updates and consistent records |
Common slip-ups that slow cases
Status gaps and late extensions
If your L-1B is close to expiring, start the extension conversation early. Late filings and payroll gaps can create problems that take time to untangle.
Job changes during PERM
During labor certification, the employer is tying recruitment to a specific role. Big shifts in duties, location, or requirements can force a restart. If you’re mid-PERM, ask what changes are safe before you accept a new role.
Changing employers midstream
Changing jobs after an I-140 is approved can be possible, but timing rules and evidence rules still apply. Map any move carefully with a licensed immigration attorney before you resign or accept a start date.
How to plan your case with your employer
A clean case starts with alignment. Ask what job title and duties the employer will sponsor, what category they plan to use, and who owns the internal timeline. Then build your own document file so you can respond fast if USCIS requests more evidence.
Documents to keep handy
- Passport biographic page, visa stamps, and prior passports
- Most recent I-94 record and approval notices
- Pay stubs and W-2s
- Degrees, transcripts, and experience letters
- Prior immigration filings and receipt notices
A simple checklist you can use this week
- Confirm your L-1B end date and extension runway
- Ask your employer which green card category they plan to use
- Ask whether labor certification is required
- Organize degree and experience proof in one folder
- Track your priority date once it’s assigned
- Decide how you’ll handle travel after AOS filing
- Check the visa bulletin each month
With the right category and steady status, an L-1B to green card plan is realistic. The slow parts are usually predictable, and planning early helps you avoid last-minute surprises.
References & Sources
- U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS).“Green Card for Employment-Based Immigrants.”Overview of employment-based green card categories and the basic filing path.
- U.S. Department of State.“The Visa Bulletin.”Official monthly publication for immigrant visa availability and priority date cutoffs.
