All USCIS processing times at a glance
The complete table of current USCIS processing times. Times are based on USCIS published data as of May 2026 and vary by service center and filing category.
| Form | Purpose | Standard Time | Premium | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I-485 | Green card (employment) | 8-16 months | No | Backlogged |
| I-485 | Green card (family) | 12-22 months | No | Backlogged |
| I-765 | EAD work permit | 3-12 months | Yes ($1,780) | Critical |
| I-140 | Employer immigrant petition | 6-12 months | Yes ($2,805) | Moderate |
| I-130 | Family petition (citizen) | 10-16 months | No | Backlogged |
| I-130 | Family petition (LPR) | 20-35 months | No | Severe |
| I-129 | H-1B petition | 3-6 months | Yes ($2,805) | Moderate |
| I-129 | L-1 petition | 2-5 months | Yes ($2,805) | Moderate |
| I-129 | O-1 petition | 2-4 months | Yes ($2,805) | Moderate |
| N-400 | Citizenship | 10-14 months | No | Improving |
| I-751 | Remove conditions (marriage) | 28-32 months | No | Severe |
| I-131 | Advance parole | 3-8 months | No | Moderate |
| I-539 | Change of status | 6-14 months | No | Backlogged |
| I-526E | EB-5 investor petition | 29-61 months | Yes ($2,805) | Severe |
What affects your processing time
Five factors drive your specific timeline:
- Form type: I-751 at 28-32 months versus N-400 at 10-14 months
- Service center: Nebraska, Texas, California, Vermont, or Potomac
- Filing category: EB-1 versus EB-3, citizen versus LPR sponsor
- Case complexity: RFEs, background checks, interview requirements
- Premium processing: available for I-140, I-129, some I-765
Service centers operate independently. Your filing location can shift your timeline by 4-6 months in either direction.
| Service Center | I-485 | I-140 | I-765 | I-130 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nebraska | 10 mo | 8 mo | 5 mo | 12 mo |
| Texas | 14 mo | 10 mo | 7 mo | 14 mo |
| California | 12 mo | 9 mo | 6 mo | 13 mo |
| Vermont | 11 mo | 7 mo | 4 mo | 11 mo |
| Potomac | 16 mo | — | 8 mo | 16 mo |
The EAD crisis - auto-extensions ended
October 30, 2025 marked a quiet but devastating change. USCIS ended automatic EAD extensions for renewal applicants. Before this date, your work permit remained valid while a renewal was pending. Now, when your EAD expires on the printed date, you cannot legally work until the new card arrives.
With I-765 processing taking 3-12 months and many EAD validity periods now reduced to 18 months, applicants are left with weeks-to-months gaps in work authorization. Premium processing for I-765 ($1,780) is available for some categories but not all - notably H-4 EAD applicants have no premium option.
- File renewal exactly 180 days before expiration
- Use premium processing if your category qualifies
- If you miss the 180-day window, consult an immigration attorney immediately
- Document any work authorization gap carefully
- Read the full I-765 processing time guide for category-specific timelines
How to check your case status
- Go to egov.uscis.gov/casestatus
- Enter your 13-character receipt number from the I-797C notice
- View current status and last update date
- If outside normal processing time, file an e-Request at egov.uscis.gov
- For significant delays, contact the USCIS Contact Center at 800-375-5283
- For unreasonable delays, consider a congressional inquiry or mandamus lawsuit
Common case status messages:
- "Case Was Received" = filed and waiting in queue
- "Case Is Being Actively Reviewed" = assigned to an officer
- "Request for Evidence Sent" = RFE issued, respond within 87 days
- "Case Was Approved" = approved, card being produced
- "New Card Is Being Produced" = approval confirmed, card printing in 1-2 weeks
How to speed up your case
Seven strategies, in order of effectiveness:
- Premium processing if eligible - the fastest guaranteed option
- Expedite request citing financial loss, medical emergency, or humanitarian grounds
- Congressional inquiry through your Representative or Senator
- Ombudsman inquiry for systemic delays
- Mandamus lawsuit in federal court for unreasonable delays
- File complete applications - avoid RFEs, which add 2-4 months
- Respond to RFEs immediately, never wait until the 87-day deadline
The single best way to avoid delays is filing a complete, accurate application with all required evidence on the first submission.
Processing times by immigration category
Employment-based green cards - I-140 times only. Total time = I-140 + visa bulletin wait + I-485:
- EB-1A (extraordinary ability): 6-10 months
- EB-1B (outstanding professor): 8-12 months
- EB-1C (multinational manager): 10-14 months
- EB-2 (advanced degree/NIW): 8-14 months
- EB-3 (skilled worker): 10-16 months
- EB-5 (investor): 29-61 months
Family-based green cards (total timeline including visa bulletin):
- Immediate relative (citizen spouse): 10-16 months
- F-1 (unmarried adult child of citizen): 6-23 years (visa bulletin dependent)
- F-2A (spouse of LPR): 20-35 months
- F-3 (married child of citizen): 10-24 years
- F-4 (sibling of citizen): 15-24 years
Temporary work visas (I-129): H-1B 3-6 months standard / 15 days premium; L-1A/L-1B 2-5 months / 15 days premium; O-1 2-4 months / 15 days premium; TN 2-4 months; E-1/E-2 3-6 months.
Form-specific deep dives: I-485 (green card), I-765 (EAD), I-140 (employer petition), I-130 (family), N-400 (citizenship).
Historical trends - are times getting better?
Family-based and citizenship times are improving. Employment-based is slightly worsening. I-751 (removal of marriage conditions) remains the worst performer in the system, with no signs of improvement.
Alternatives while waiting
Strategies to make USCIS waits productive:
- Use EAD to work while I-485 is pending
- Use Advance Parole (I-131) to travel internationally
- If you hold H-1B status, maintain it as a backup
- If wait is too long, consider Canada Express Entry (~6-month PR)
- If your employer is impatient, use premium I-140 with H-1B portability
- If EAD is delayed, request expedite citing financial hardship
- Run our Canada CRS calculator or Germany Opportunity Card calculator
- Read our Canada H-1B fast-track guide for parallel-track strategy
- Track the current visa bulletin for category movement
- Estimate your priority date wait with our Green Card Calculator
Glossary terms referenced in this article
Frequently asked questions
How long does USCIS take to process a green card in 2026?
Employment-based I-485 takes 8-16 months. Family-based I-485 takes 12-22 months. Total green card timeline includes the I-140 or I-130 petition plus visa bulletin waiting time.
How long does an EAD take in 2026?
I-765 processing takes 3-12 months depending on category and service center. Auto-extensions ended October 2025, so file renewals 180 days before expiration.
Is premium processing available for I-485?
No. Premium processing is not available for I-485, I-130, N-400, or I-751. It is available for I-140, I-129, some I-765, and I-526E.
Why is my USCIS case taking so long?
Common causes include high application volume at your service center, background check delays, Requests for Evidence, interview scheduling backlogs, and visa bulletin retrogression for EB categories.
How do I check my USCIS processing time?
Visit egov.uscis.gov/processing-times, select your form type, category, and service center. Compare the posted time to your receipt date to see if your case is within normal range.
Can I expedite my USCIS case?
Yes, through premium processing if eligible, an expedite request citing financial loss or emergency, a congressional inquiry, or a mandamus lawsuit in federal court as a last resort.
What is the USCIS backlog in 2026?
USCIS has approximately 12 million pending cases as of 2026. The largest backlogs are in I-751 (28-32 months), I-130 for LPR sponsors (20-35 months), and EB-5 (29-61 months).
How long does US citizenship take in 2026?
N-400 naturalization takes 10-14 months from filing to oath ceremony, including biometrics, interview with civics test, and oath scheduling. Currently at the lowest wait since 2016.
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