Employment-Based Immigration Services
Our firm provides over 40 years of experience in employment-based immigration.
Employment-Based Visa Categories
Immigrant visa categories (Green Cards):
- EB-1: Persons of extraordinary ability; outstanding professors and researchers; multinational executives/managers
- EB-2: Professionals with advanced degrees or exceptional ability; includes National Interest Waivers
- EB-3: Skilled and unskilled workers with defined levels of experience
- EB-4: Physicians or religious workers
- EB-5: Immigrant investors
Other Employment-Based Immigration Services
Also offered are a variety of non-immigrant and related services such as:
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E-1 treaty trader visas
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E-2 treaty investor visas
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H-1B specialty occupation visas
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J-1 exchange program visas
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L-1A intra-company transferee visas
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O visas for extraordinary ability in arts, sciences, education, business, athletics, or entertainment
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P visas for artists, athletes, and entertainment groups
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R-1 religious worker visas
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Change of Non-Immigrant Status
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Employment Transfers
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Dependent status filings for spouses and minor children
Summary
Chicago Immigration Advocates Law Offices—a highly experienced law firm in Chicago—offers comprehensive guidance and representation across nearly all employment-based immigration pathways, both immigrant (Green Card) and non-immigrant. If you’re pursuing an employment-based visa or Green Card, they invite you to schedule a consultation for expert support.
With Our Attorneys Now
Frequent Questions
To learn more about our professional immigration services, contact our law office and set up a time to meet with us in a consultation.
No—only for new H-1B petitions filed after September 21, 2025, by employers with 50+ employees where over half are H-1B or L-1 holders. Existing approvals and renewals are exempt; pay via check with Form I-129.
Generally no—USCIS guidance confirms it targets new entries and petitions, not current status holders. Extensions or changes remain unaffected, but monitor for employer compliance if outsourcing increases.
The FY 2025 EB-2 limit is reached; no new filings until October 1, 2025. Check the Visa Bulletin monthly for retrogression; file I-140 anytime, but hold I-485 until dates advance.
Varies by category: EB-1 I-140 averages 6-12 months; EB-2/3 with PERM, 18-24 months total. Premium processing (15 days) available for I-140; track via USCIS case status for your receipt.
Yes, via H-1B portability—file new I-129 with new employer after starting work. For green card, if I-140 approved, keep it valid; AC21 allows job changes after 180 days of I-485 pending without restarting.
Related Topics
Federal Immigration Litigation
If you filed an application or petition with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services and it has been unreasonably delayed, it is appropriate to file suit against USCIS.
Family-Based Immigration
Our family-based immigration attorneys can help you with petitioning for your family members so they can immigrate as quickly as possible.