Who qualifies for EB-1C?
The EB-1C green card is designed for executives and managers who have been employed abroad by a multinational organization and are being transferred to — or are already working at — a qualifying U.S. affiliate, subsidiary, or parent. It sits in the first employment preference category alongside EB-1A and EB-1B, which means no PERM labor certification and, for nationals of most countries, priority dates that are current or nearly so.
EB-1C is the green card that L-1A visa holders are built for. The qualifying criteria are essentially the same — managerial or executive capacity, qualifying organizational relationship, one year of foreign employment — so the evidence developed for the L-1A petition carries directly into the EB-1C. Many clients file both petitions in sequence or, where timing allows, simultaneously.
For multinational companies that routinely transfer senior personnel to the U.S., EB-1C is typically the fastest, cleanest path to permanent residence available. It avoids the labor market test entirely, has no prevailing wage requirement, and produces a green card that is not tied to the sponsoring employer once the adjustment of status is complete.
What USCIS looks for.
EB-1C has four core requirements. All must be satisfied — there is no "meet X of Y" flexibility. USCIS scrutinizes the genuineness of the managerial or executive role most closely, particularly for smaller organizations where one person may wear many hats.
Qualifying organizational relationship
The U.S. entity and the foreign entity must be related as parent and subsidiary, affiliate, or branch. USCIS examines actual ownership and control — not just nominal structure — and requires documentation of the corporate relationship.
One year of qualifying foreign employment
The employee must have worked for the qualifying foreign entity for at least one continuous year within the three years immediately preceding the I-140 petition (or, if already in the U.S. on L-1, prior to the initial L-1 admission).
Managerial or executive capacity abroad
The foreign role must have been managerial or executive in the legal sense — directing the organization or a major function, managing professionals or essential operations, and exercising authority without close oversight. Front-line supervision of production staff generally does not qualify.
Managerial or executive role in the U.S.
The prospective U.S. role must also be managerial or executive. The U.S. entity must have been doing business for at least one year and must be sufficiently staffed to support a genuine management structure above the petitioner.
Transparent fees.
Fixed fees quoted upfront. Government filing fees are separate. Adjustment of status or consular processing fees are additional. The L-1A + EB-1C bundle is the most common engagement for corporate clients.
Timeline from filing to green card.
EB-1C sits in the EB-1 preference category, which is current or near-current for most countries. For nationals of India and China, EB-1 backlogs exist but are shorter than EB-2. Premium processing on the I-140 is strongly recommended to keep the overall timeline tight.
Evaluation
We assess the qualifying relationship between entities, review the employee's foreign role history, and evaluate the U.S. position to confirm genuine managerial or executive capacity on both sides.
1–2 business daysDocumentation gathering
We collect corporate ownership records, organizational charts showing reporting structures, job descriptions, employment verification letters, financial statements, and any prior L-1A approval notices.
2–4 weeksPetition drafting
Your attorney drafts the I-140 petition and support letter, building the managerial or executive capacity argument for both the foreign and U.S. roles with precision and anticipating common RFE issues.
2–3 weeksUSCIS I-140 adjudication
We file the I-140 petition with premium processing for a 15-business-day decision. Your priority date is established on the filing date and locks in your place in the visa queue.
15 days – 6 monthsAdjustment or consular processing
Once the priority date is current, we file I-485 for adjustment of status if you are in the U.S., or manage NVC and consular processing if abroad. For most nationalities, this step follows I-140 approval with minimal delay.
6–18 months