Who qualifies for L-1?
The L-1 visa allows multinational companies to transfer employees from their foreign offices to U.S. affiliates, subsidiaries, parent companies, or branches. It is one of the few work visa categories that requires no labor market test and no prevailing wage compliance — the employer's qualifying relationship with both entities is what matters, not whether a U.S. worker could fill the role.
The visa divides into two subcategories. L-1A covers managers and executives — individuals who direct the organization or a major function within it, manage other professionals, and exercise wide latitude in decision-making. L-1B covers employees with specialized knowledge — those with an advanced level of proprietary knowledge about the company's products, services, processes, or internal operations that is not readily available in the U.S. labor market.
L-1A holders have a significant advantage beyond the visa itself: they are the natural candidates for the EB-1C green card, which also requires no PERM labor certification and is available only to multinational managers and executives. Filing L-1A now and EB-1C later — or simultaneously — is one of the most efficient paths to permanent residence available to corporate transferees.
What USCIS looks for.
All L-1 petitions must satisfy two threshold requirements that apply regardless of subcategory. Once those are met, the petition must demonstrate that the employee fits the L-1A or L-1B definition.
Qualifying organizational relationship
The U.S. and foreign entities must have a qualifying relationship — parent/subsidiary, affiliate, or branch. Control is key: USCIS will look at ownership percentages and who effectively controls both organizations.
One year of qualifying employment
The employee must have worked for the foreign entity for at least one continuous year within the three years preceding the petition. Ownership stakes and time on a prior L-1 do not count toward this requirement.
Managerial or executive capacity
The employee must have served as a manager or executive abroad and will serve in the same capacity in the U.S. This means directing the organization or a key function, managing professionals or essential functions, and exercising significant authority without close supervision.
Specialized knowledge
The employee must possess an advanced, proprietary level of knowledge about the company's products, services, research, equipment, techniques, management, or procedures — knowledge that is not widely available in the U.S. workforce and that the U.S. entity needs to function effectively.
Understanding the two subcategories.
Choosing the right subcategory matters beyond the visa itself — it determines green card eligibility, duration limits, and the evidentiary strategy for the petition.
| L-1A — Manager / Executive | L-1B — Specialized Knowledge | |
|---|---|---|
| Initial period | 3 years (1 year for new offices) | 3 years (1 year for new offices) |
| Maximum stay | 7 years total | 5 years total |
| Green card path | EB-1C — no PERM required | EB-2 or EB-3 — typically requires PERM |
| Key evidence | Org charts, reporting structure, decision-making authority | Technical documentation, proprietary knowledge scope, training records |
| USCIS scrutiny | Moderate — focus on whether role is truly managerial | High — "specialized knowledge" is frequently challenged |
| Blanket L available | Yes | Yes |
Transparent fees.
Fixed fees quoted upfront. Government filing fees are separate and vary by processing speed. Premium processing is available for faster adjudication.
Timeline from evaluation to transfer.
L-1 petitions are employer-filed, so the process depends on how quickly the company can provide organizational documentation. Premium processing is available and strongly recommended for time-sensitive transfers.
Evaluation
We assess the qualifying relationship between entities, the employee's role history, and whether L-1A or L-1B is the appropriate subcategory — and flag any structural issues before filing.
1–2 business daysDocumentation gathering
We coordinate with the employer to collect organizational charts, corporate ownership records, the employee's employment history, and role-specific evidence tailored to the subcategory.
2–4 weeksPetition preparation
Your attorney drafts the I-129 petition, support letter, and all exhibits. For new offices, a detailed business plan demonstrating viability is also prepared.
2–3 weeksUSCIS adjudication
We file the I-129 petition. Premium processing delivers a decision in 15 business days. Regular processing takes 3–6 months. Most L-1 petitions benefit from premium processing given the time-sensitivity of transfers.
15 days – 6 monthsVisa stamp & entry
After approval, employees outside the U.S. obtain an L-1 visa stamp at a consulate. Those already in the U.S. in valid status may begin work upon I-129 approval. The employee enters the U.S. and begins the transfer.
2–6 weeks (consular)