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My situation: - I am on an H-1B visa and working at BIG_TECH_CO - I am in the final stages of my EB-2 green card application process, which is sponsored by BIG_TECH_CO. My I-140 was approved a few months ago, and I-485 is pending. BIG_TECH_CO's immigration lawyers have told me that they believe my priority date will become current in October, when the green card numbers refresh for the government's fiscal year. - In mid September, my I-485 will have been pending for >6 months.

I would love your help understanding two scenarios. Specifically - If I were to leave BIG_TECH_CO and join another company in October, would I be able to maintain my green card application according to AC21? - Same question, but what would it look like to work for my own company instead?

From what I have been able to gather by reading online, I would qualify to transfer employers after six months. However, a few pieces are still unclear to me: - If I switched employers, my understanding is that I would want to stay on my H1B until the I-485 is approved, to minimize risk in case the I-485 is denied. I assume that would be a fairly seamless process if I were to transfer it to another employer, but would I be able to transfer it to my own company? - If I pursue a naturalisation application 5 years after the green card is granted, would the government look unfavorably on the fact that I moved employers so soon after the I-485 window has passed? My limited research has raised this as a concern, on the basis that USCIS grants green cards on the assumption that the applicant has the intent to be "permanently employed" by the filing party? - Is there anything else I'm missing?



There's no issue from a naturalization standpoint with changing employers if AC21 applies. That's the whole point of AC21, facilitating job change. AC21 is easy, as long as the I-140 has been approved, the I-485 has been pending 6 months, and the new job is in the same or similar occupation as the sponsored job, the I-485J should get approved without any issue. Regarding maintaining H-1B status, it's a nice back-up but not all employers will support it - as long as the new employee has an EAD of course - although it's rare that a pending I-485 application isn't approved.


Thank you for the response Peter! Really decent of you to take the time to help us all. The process can be stressful, as I'm sure you know.




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