The first of two clocks.
USCIS publishes processing times per form, classification, and service center, and updates them monthly. The single biggest lever on this clock is premium processing — an optional paid service that guarantees USCIS takes action within a fixed number of business days, turning a multi-month wait into weeks. It does not change the standard of review or the odds of approval; it only changes the speed.
Processing times at a glance.
Standard processing ranges for the categories we handle, as of May 2026, with the premium processing option for each. Bars are scaled to a 24-month reference for comparison; the EB-5 immigrant petition runs well beyond that scale.
Read these as ranges, not promises. USCIS reports times as the point by which roughly 80% of cases in a category are completed, and they shift month to month and between service centers. Confirm your exact figure on the official USCIS processing times tool by form, classification, and field office.
Standard times by service center.
Approximate standard processing ranges as of May 2026. USCIS routes petitions to different service centers by form, geography, and workload, and times vary between them. Premium processing overrides these standard ranges where available.
| Category | Service center | Standard | Tier |
|---|---|---|---|
| O-1A / O-1B | Vermont Service Center | 2–4 months | Faster |
| O-1A / O-1B | California Service Center | 3–5 months | Moderate |
| L-1A | Vermont / California | 2–5 months | Moderate |
| L-1B | Vermont / California | 3–6 months | Moderate |
| H-1B (cap & non-cap) | Vermont / California | 2–4 months | Faster |
| Category | Service center | Standard | Tier |
|---|---|---|---|
| EB-1A | Texas / Nebraska | 6–10 months | Moderate |
| EB-1B | Texas / Nebraska | 6–11 months | Moderate |
| EB-1C | Texas / Nebraska | 8–14 months | Slower |
| EB-2 NIW | Texas / Nebraska | 7–13 months | Moderate |
| EB-5 (I-526E) | Investor Program Office | 29–61 months | Slower |
| EB-5 (rural TEA priority) | Investor Program Office | 12–24 months | Slower |
For your exact, current figure, use the official USCIS processing times tool — select your form, classification, and service center for a live estimate and the receipt date USCIS is currently working through.
Planning around the clock.
Processing time drives when you can start work, when you can travel, and which path is fastest overall. The right move depends on your category, your deadline, and whether you are inside or outside the US.
Use premium where it pays off
For I-129 (O-1, L-1) and I-140 (EB-1A/B), premium processing turns months into 15 business days for a fixed fee. We advise when the timeline justifies it — and when standard processing is fine.
Mind the second clock
USCIS approval is only the first wait. For green-card categories a per-country priority-date wait can follow, and applicants abroad then face a consular interview. We sequence all three.
Adjust in-country when possible
If you are already in the US in valid status, adjustment or change of status through USCIS can avoid the consulate entirely — no stamp, no appointment queue, just the USCIS timeline.