Every year, hundreds of thousands of skilled workers face the same question: focus on maintaining H-1B status or prioritize getting a green card? The two are related but fundamentally different — understanding the distinction is essential for anyone building a career in the United States.
The Core Difference
| Feature | H-1B Visa | Green Card (LPR) |
|---|---|---|
| Status | Nonimmigrant (temporary) | Lawful Permanent Resident |
| Duration | 3 years, extendable to 6 (and beyond if green card pending) | Permanent (10-year card, renewable) |
| Employer tied? | Yes — tied to sponsoring employer | No — work for any employer |
| Travel restrictions | Can re-enter on valid visa; complications if visa expires | Re-entry permit needed for absences over 6 months |
| Voting | No | No (citizenship required) |
| Path to citizenship | No direct path | Eligible after 5 years (3 if married to US citizen) |
| Family | Spouse gets H-4 visa; H-4 EAD available in some cases | Spouse and children get green cards |
| Starting cost | ~$5,000–10,000 (employer-paid fees) | ~$5,000–25,000 depending on category and attorney |
The H-1B Visa: How It Works
The H-1B is a nonimmigrant work visa for specialty occupations — roles requiring a bachelor's degree or equivalent in a specific field. The annual cap is 85,000 new H-1B visas (65,000 regular cap + 20,000 US master's exemption). Because applications typically far exceed the cap, USCIS holds a computer-generated lottery in March for positions starting October 1.
H-1B Timeline
- Employer registers for the lottery in March ($215 fee per registration)
- USCIS conducts the lottery; selected registrants are notified in late March
- Employer files full H-1B petition April 1–June 30
- Standard processing: 3–6 months; premium processing (15 business days): $2,805 additional
- Employment begins October 1 (or later if approved after that)
Green Card Through Employment: EB Categories
For most H-1B workers, the green card path runs through employment-based immigrant visa categories:
- EB-1A: Extraordinary ability (self-petition, no employer required, shortest wait)
- EB-1B: Outstanding researchers/professors (employer-sponsored)
- EB-1C: Multinational managers
- EB-2: Advanced degree professionals or exceptional ability
- EB-2 NIW: National Interest Waiver (self-petition)
- EB-3: Skilled workers (bachelor's required); Professional; Other workers
The Backlog Problem: Retrogression
The single biggest challenge for employment-based green cards is the per-country limit. No country can use more than 7% of annual employment-based visas. This creates catastrophic backlogs for high-demand nationalities:
| Nationality | EB-2 Wait (Estimated) | EB-3 Wait (Estimated) |
|---|---|---|
| India | 50–70+ years | 15–20+ years |
| China | 8–12 years | 8–12 years |
| Philippines | 3–7 years | 5–10 years |
| All other countries | 1–3 years | 1–3 years |
These wait times are why Indian-born H-1B workers may spend their entire careers waiting for a green card — and why EB-1 petitions (which have shorter waits) are aggressively pursued by immigration attorneys.
Maintaining H-1B Status While Waiting
The good news: once you have an approved I-140 petition (the first stage of the green card process) and your priority date is not current, you can extend your H-1B in 3-year increments indefinitely under AC21 portability. You also gain the ability to change employers after 180 days without losing your place in the queue.
Alternative Routes to a Green Card
- Marriage to a US citizen: Immediate relative category — no annual cap, no per-country limit. Typically 12–24 months to green card.
- EB-5 Investor: $800,000–$1,050,000 investment in job-creating enterprise
- Diversity Visa Lottery: 55,000 green cards annually for nationals of underrepresented countries (Indians and Chinese ineligible)
- Asylum or refugee status
Bottom Line
The H-1B is the starting line; the green card is the finish line. For most nationalities outside India and China, the employment-based path takes 2–5 years. For Indian nationals, it requires a comprehensive strategy involving EB-1 pursuit, NIW applications, or family-based alternatives. See our full US visa guide for more detail on green card categories and timelines.