US Immigration Guide

Green Card Priority Date Explained (With Examples)

Last updated March 27, 2026

If you're in the U.S. employment-based or family-based green card queue, you've heard the term 'priority date' and you've probably checked the Visa Bulletin. But what does your priority date actually mean, why does it matter so much, and how do you know when you can move forward? This guide explains everything with plain-language examples.

What Is a Priority Date?

A priority date is essentially your place in line for a green card visa number. The U.S. government only issues a limited number of green cards per year by country and category. When more people want green cards than there are visa numbers available, USCIS and the State Department create a queue--and your priority date determines when you get to the front.

Think of it like a ticketed queue at a government office. You take a number (your priority date) when you file the right petition. The government calls numbers in order. When your number is called, you can file for your green card.

How Priority Dates Are Set

Employment-based (EB) priority dates: Your priority date is the date your employer filed your Form I-140 (Immigrant Petition for Alien Workers) with USCIS. Some categories (like EB-1) have the priority date set when the I-140 is filed; others (like PERM labor certification cases) use the PERM filing date.

Family-based priority dates: Your priority date is the date your U.S. citizen or LPR sponsor filed Form I-130 (Petition for Alien Relatives) with USCIS.

Immediate relatives of U.S. citizens (spouse, unmarried children under 21, parents) have no priority date waiting because there's no annual cap--visa numbers are always available for them.

Reading the Visa Bulletin: Final Action Dates vs. Dates for Filing

The U.S. Department of State releases the Visa Bulletin monthly. It contains two important charts:

Chart A -- Final Action Dates: The cutoff date for when USCIS can approve a green card (I-485 or immigrant visa at a consulate). Your priority date must be earlier than this date to receive a green card.

Chart B -- Dates for Filing: An earlier date that, when USCIS accepts it, allows you to file your I-485 even before your Final Action Date is current. Filing early locks in an EAD and advance parole while you wait.

Example: The May 2025 Visa Bulletin shows India EB-2 Final Action Date as January 1, 2013. If your priority date is March 15, 2012, it's current--you can file I-485 or have USCIS approve it. If your priority date is June 1, 2013, you must wait.

Check the Visa Bulletin monthly at travel.state.gov.

Why Country of Birth Matters

Green card quotas are applied by country of birth--not citizenship. So even if you're a citizen of Canada but were born in India, you're subject to India's oversubscribed quota for employment-based green cards.

Cross-chargeability: If a couple is from different countries, the spouse with the more backlogged birth country can use the other spouse's country for chargeability purposes, potentially avoiding the long wait. This requires both spouses to file together.

India and China face the longest employment-based waits because of high demand and annual per-country caps. India EB-2 and EB-3 have multi-decade backlogs for some applicants.

Real Examples: How Long Is the Wait?

Indian EB-2 professional (I-140 filed March 2015)
India EB-2 Final Action Date as of early 2026 is approximately January 2012. That means an applicant who filed in 2015 is still waiting. Estimated total wait from filing: 15+ years.

Chinese EB-3 skilled worker (I-140 filed June 2019)
China EB-3 Final Action Date as of early 2026 is approximately January 2020. Getting close--could become current within 1-2 years.

Mexican family F2A (spouse of lawful permanent resident)
Mexico F2A is often listed as 'C' (current) in the Visa Bulletin. No backlog--can file I-485 as soon as the I-130 is approved.

Indian EB-1 (extraordinary ability or outstanding researcher)
India EB-1 Final Action Date as of early 2026 is approximately October 2022--much faster than EB-2/EB-3. Self-petitioning as EB-1A is often the fastest green card path available for Indian nationals.

These examples are illustrative. Check the current Visa Bulletin at travel.state.gov for live cutoff dates.

What Is Retrogression?

Retrogression happens when the priority date cutoff moves backward. It sounds impossible--how can a date go backwards?--but it happens when USCIS or the State Department projects that too many applicants will use their visa numbers before the fiscal year ends (September 30). To prevent visa number exhaustion, they pull the date back.

Retrogression can happen mid-fiscal year and affects people who were expecting their date to be current. It's frustrating but not permanent--dates typically advance again in the next fiscal year (October onward).

If you already filed I-485 before retrogression, you stay in the queue--your application doesn't get returned.

What to Do When Your Priority Date Becomes Current

If your I-485 is already pending: USCIS will automatically process your case once your date is current and a visa number is available. No action required, but make sure your biometrics and any RFE responses are current.

If you haven't filed I-485 yet: Monitor the Visa Bulletin. When your Final Action Date becomes current (or when USCIS accepts Chart B filing dates), file your I-485 immediately along with your I-765 (EAD) and I-131 (advance parole).

If you're abroad: If adjusting status at a U.S. consulate (consular processing), the National Visa Center (NVC) will contact you to begin document collection once your priority date is approaching.

Enter your priority date and category — we will alert you when the Visa Bulletin moves in your favor.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How do I find my green card priority date?

Your priority date is on your I-140 approval notice (Form I-797) for employment-based cases, or on your I-130 receipt notice for family-based cases. It's listed as the 'Priority Date' on these notices.

How often does the Visa Bulletin change?

The Visa Bulletin is released monthly by the U.S. Department of State, typically in the third week of the month for the following month. Priority dates can advance, stay the same, or retrogress month to month.

What happens to my priority date if I change employers?

Your priority date generally stays with your approved I-140 petition from the original employer--even if you change employers--as long as your I-140 was approved. Under AC21, if your I-485 has been pending for 180+ days and you switch to a job in the same or similar occupational category, you keep your original priority date.

Can I get a faster priority date through EB-1?

EB-1A (Extraordinary Ability) and EB-1B (Outstanding Researcher) are premium categories with shorter waits--even for India nationals. The tradeoff is a higher evidentiary bar: you must demonstrate extraordinary ability or recognition as an outstanding researcher with significant contributions.

What is 'current' in the Visa Bulletin?

'C' (Current) in the Visa Bulletin means there is no backlog for that country and category--anyone in that category can immediately file or receive approval regardless of their priority date.

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Green Card Priority Date Explained 2025 | What It Means & How It Works | Migrossa