Jrada Immigration, P.C.
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Strategy walkthrough

Working in the U.S., with sponsorship

Most work-based immigration runs through a U.S. employer — either a temporary visa to work for a set period, or a green card for the long term. Here’s how the options break down, whether you’re the professional or the employer doing the sponsoring.

An illustrative roadmap to help you picture the options — not legal advice or a guarantee of any outcome.
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Temporary or permanent?

Every work-based option is one of two kinds. Knowing which you’re after points to the right category.

What are you aiming for? — tap to explore (optional)
Nonimmigrant (temporary)
A visa to work for a defined period.

A nonimmigrant visa (NIV) lets you work in the U.S. for a set time, usually tied to a specific employer and role — H-1B, L-1, O-1, TN, E-3, and more. Most are renewable within limits, and many are the natural first step before a green card.

Immigrant (green card)
Permanent residence — staying for good.

The immigrant route (IV) leads to a green card. Most work-based green cards are employer-sponsored through an EB category — often after PERM labor certification — though some categories can be self-petitioned.

Many people start on a temporary visa and later pursue a green card. We plan with both in view, so your long-term goals are accounted for at the outset.
Nonimmigrant options

Temporary work visas

The right one depends on your role, your background, and sometimes your nationality. These are the common categories — explore any that fit.

H-1B
Specialty occupation
Degree-level professional roles.

For roles that require at least a bachelor’s degree in a specific field. Employer-sponsored, and subject to an annual lottery for most new petitions.

L-1
Intracompany transfer
Move within a multinational company.

For executives, managers (L-1A), or specialized-knowledge employees (L-1B) transferring from a related company abroad to a U.S. office.

O-1
Extraordinary ability
Top of your field.

For individuals with extraordinary ability or achievement. Requires a U.S. employer or a U.S.-based agent to petition.

TNE-3E-1/E-2
By nationality
Canada & Mexico; Australia; treaty-country nationals.

TN is for Canadian and Mexican professionals under the USMCA; E-3 is for Australian nationals in specialty occupations. Employees of an E-1/E-2 treaty enterprise who share the employer’s treaty nationality can also qualify in an executive, supervisory, or essential-skills role. All are efficient where you qualify by nationality.

F-1 OPT
Students & graduates
Post-graduation work on OPT and STEM OPT.

Post-graduation work for students (F-1 OPT), with a STEM extension for qualifying degrees. We assist employers with STEM OPT applications where required, and assist with F-1 change of status or reinstatement.

Other
Other specialized visas
P-1, R-1, H-3, J-1.

Athletes and artists (P-1), religious workers (R-1), trainees (H-3), and exchange visitors (J-1) each fit specific situations.

Immigrant options

A green card through work

Employment-based green cards fall into a few lanes. Which fits depends on your role and your record.

EB-1
Priority workers
Often no PERM required.

EB-1A (extraordinary ability, self-petition), EB-1B (outstanding researchers and professors, employer-sponsored), and EB-1C (multinational managers and executives). Generally skips PERM labor certification.

EB-2EB-3
PERM-based
Employer sponsors with labor certification.

For advanced-degree professionals (EB-2) and skilled workers (EB-3). The employer first completes PERM — testing the U.S. labor market — before the immigrant petition.

NIW
National interest waiver
Skip the employer and PERM.

If your work serves the U.S. national interest, the NIW waives the job offer and labor certification — and you petition for yourself. See the self-petition walkthrough

Adjusting status in the U.S.? Evidence built for current USCIS policy
a full build-out of your positive equities for the discretionary analysis in USCIS’s adjustment-of-status guidance — Read more about Jack’s approach
If you’re the employer

Sponsoring an employee

Sponsoring talent is very doable with the right process. Here’s what it involves on your side.

Prevailing-wage and labor-condition steps
an LCA for H-1B/E-3; PERM for most green cards
The petition itself
Form I-129 for work visas; I-140 for green cards
Compliance and recordkeeping
public-access files, timelines, and audits handled correctly
Custom intake and supplemental questionnaires
we ask exactly what the category needs, so your team can focus on the work
Every piece of evidence reviewed twice over
Jack checks each item for individual merit and for how it fits the overall record, catching the inconsistencies that draw government scrutiny
A custom client portal for each employer and employee
documents, status, and next steps in one place, with employer visibility

That portal is jimmi™ — your immigration companion. A glimpse of what you and your employee see:

Intake
Evidence
Petition
4Decision
Your petition draft is in progress — nothing needed from you right now.
Next check-in with Jack
Tue · 10:30 AM
in 16 days
Support_Letter_draft.pdf
Jack Attorney
Draft’s ready for your review — I flagged two sentences for your input.
A. Client Employee
Reviewing now — will send comments by tomorrow.
Petition draft72% complete
Illustrative sample — not a real case.
Next step

Find your category

With categories that overlap in eligibility or their potential benefit to employers, employees and their families, the fastest way forward is a focused look at your situation — your role, your background, and your timeline.

Your spouse and unmarried children under 21 can generally accompany you in a dependent status; work authorization for spouses varies by category.
Book a consultation

Eligibility, lottery odds, and timelines depend on the category, the role, and your country of birth. We assess your situation individually.

An illustrative roadmap — not legal advice or a guarantee of any outcome.

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