EB-2 National Interest Waiver (NIW)
The EB-2 National Interest Waiver is an employment-based immigrant visa (green card) category that allows highly skilled professionals to self-petition for permanent residency without an employer sponsor or labor certification, provided their work is in the national interest of the United States.
Who qualifies
The EB-2 category requires either:
- Advanced degree: A U.S. master's degree or higher, or a foreign equivalent, or a bachelor's degree plus 5 years of progressive post-baccalaureate work experience in the specialty.
- Exceptional ability: A degree of expertise in science, art, or business significantly above what is ordinarily encountered, demonstrated by at least 3 of the USCIS criteria (e.g., degree, professional membership, high salary, contributions, publications, critical role).
To obtain the National Interest Waiver, you must satisfy the three-prong test from Matter of Dhanasar (2016):
- Substantial merit and national importance: Your proposed work has significant potential benefit in a field of substantial intrinsic merit (science, technology, arts, business, education, healthcare, etc.) and the impact extends beyond your immediate employer or locality.
- Well positioned to advance the endeavor: Your education, skills, record of success, and future plans indicate you are well positioned to advance the proposed work.
- On balance, beneficial to waive the job offer and labor certification requirements: Granting the waiver must benefit the United States, either because the work is especially important and you are uniquely able to do it, or because requiring a job offer would be impractical.
Key advantages
- No employer sponsor required: you self-petition using Form I-140 (Immigrant Petition for Alien Workers).
- No PERM labor certification: the waiver skips the Department of Labor advertising process that typically takes 12–18 months.
- Portability: once I-140 is approved (and priority date is current), you can change employers with limited risk under AC21 portability rules.
The filing process
- File Form I-140 with USCIS, including evidence of advanced degree or exceptional ability and the Dhanasar three-prong argument.
- Wait for visa availability: EB-2 is subject to per-country annual limits. Applicants from most countries (including Israel) generally have current or near-current priority dates; applicants from India and China face significant backlogs.
- File Form I-485 (Adjustment of Status, if already in the U.S.) or complete consular processing abroad once a visa number is available.
Timeline and costs
- I-140 USCIS processing time: 4–8 months standard; 15 business days with premium processing (Form I-907, ~$2,805 fee as of 2024).
- I-485 Adjustment of Status: 8–24 months from filing, depending on USCIS workload.
- Government fees: I-140 ($715) + I-485 ($1,440 for applicants 14–78 years old) + biometrics ($85). Check uscis.gov/feecalculator for current fees.
Family members
Your spouse and unmarried children under 21 can be included as derivatives on your I-485 filing or on a separate consular immigrant visa application.
Official sources
- USCIS EB-2 overview: uscis.gov/eb-2
- USCIS Policy Manual, Dhanasar framework: uscis.gov/policy-manual/volume-6-part-f-chapter-5
- Visa availability and priority dates: uscis.gov/visa-availability
Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. NIW petitions are complex and highly evidence-dependent. Consult a licensed immigration attorney before filing.
This content is for informational purposes only.