Skip to content
GreenCardTracker .com

Wait time estimates · April 2026

How long does a green card take?

The honest answer: it depends on your category and your country of birth. Below is the current wait estimate for every family and employment green card line, based on the April 2026 Visa Bulletin. Click any row for a plain-English explanation of what that wait actually means in practice.

Bulletin month

April 2026

Wait estimates

65

Source

U.S. State Department

Longest waits in the system right now

These categories have the largest gap between today's date and the current cutoff in the April 2026 bulletin.

Family-based green card waits

25 estimates · sponsored by a U.S. citizen or LPR relative

Category Country of birth Estimated wait
F1 All Other Countries ~8.6 yrs
F1 China (mainland-born) ~8.6 yrs
F1 India ~8.6 yrs
F1 Mexico ~20.5 yrs
F1 Philippines ~11.0 yrs
F2A All Other Countries Current
F2A China (mainland-born) Current
F2A India Current
F2A Mexico Current
F2A Philippines Current
F2B All Other Countries ~1.9 yrs
F2B China (mainland-born) ~1.9 yrs
F2B India ~1.9 yrs
F2B Mexico ~19.5 yrs
F2B Philippines ~12.5 yrs
F3 All Other Countries ~13.8 yrs
F3 China (mainland-born) ~13.8 yrs
F3 India ~13.8 yrs
F3 Mexico ~24.5 yrs
F3 Philippines ~22.0 yrs
F4 All Other Countries ~17.9 yrs
F4 China (mainland-born) ~17.9 yrs
F4 India ~19.8 yrs
F4 Mexico ~24.8 yrs
F4 Philippines ~22.0 yrs

Employment-based green card waits

40 estimates · sponsored by a U.S. employer or self-petitioned

Category Country of birth Estimated wait
EB-1 All Other Countries Current
EB-1 China (mainland-born) ~3.3 yrs
EB-1 India ~4.0 yrs
EB-1 Mexico Current
EB-1 Philippines Current
EB-2 All Other Countries ~2.3 yrs
EB-2 China (mainland-born) ~5.5 yrs
EB-2 India ~12.9 yrs
EB-2 Mexico ~2.3 yrs
EB-2 Philippines ~2.3 yrs
EB-3 All Other Countries ~2.8 yrs
EB-3 China (mainland-born) ~5.0 yrs
EB-3 India ~12.7 yrs
EB-3 Mexico ~2.8 yrs
EB-3 Philippines ~2.8 yrs
EB-3 Other All Other Countries ~4.3 yrs
EB-3 Other China (mainland-born) ~8.3 yrs
EB-3 Other India ~12.7 yrs
EB-3 Other Mexico ~4.3 yrs
EB-3 Other Philippines ~4.3 yrs
EB-5 Unreserved All Other Countries Current
EB-5 Unreserved China (mainland-born) ~8.3 yrs
EB-5 Unreserved India ~3.5 yrs
EB-5 Unreserved Mexico Current
EB-5 Unreserved Philippines Current
EB-5 Rural All Other Countries Current
EB-5 Rural China (mainland-born) Current
EB-5 Rural India Current
EB-5 Rural Mexico Current
EB-5 Rural Philippines Current
EB-5 High Unemployment All Other Countries Current
EB-5 High Unemployment China (mainland-born) Current
EB-5 High Unemployment India Current
EB-5 High Unemployment Mexico Current
EB-5 High Unemployment Philippines Current
EB-5 Infrastructure All Other Countries Current
EB-5 Infrastructure China (mainland-born) Current
EB-5 Infrastructure India Current
EB-5 Infrastructure Mexico Current
EB-5 Infrastructure Philippines Current

Why green card waits exist

U.S. immigration law caps the number of green cards issued each year. Family preference categories are limited to about 226,000 visas annually, employment categories to about 140,000, and no single country may receive more than 7% of the total in either pool. When more people apply from a country than its share allows, a backlog forms — and the older a category's "cutoff date" gets, the longer the wait.

The State Department publishes the Visa Bulletin every month. Each entry on this page corresponds to one row in that bulletin. A "Current" estimate means there is no numerical wait — applicants in that category can move forward as fast as USCIS can process their paperwork. A wait of "~12.0 years" means an applicant who files today should expect roughly 12 years before the priority date becomes current.

What the wait estimate does and does not include

These estimates measure the visa availability backlog only — the gap between today's date and the published cutoff. They do not include USCIS processing time on the petition itself (Form I-130 or I-140), which can add another several months to a year before you even have a priority date locked in.

They also assume the cutoff line moves forward at roughly the same pace it has in recent years. In practice, cutoff dates can retrogress (move backward) when too many people in a category have filed, or jump ahead suddenly when a category gets unused visas spilled down from another preference. Your actual wait could be shorter or longer than the headline number.

For category- and country-specific narrative — including the historical pattern, what triggers retrogression, and what to do while you wait — click into any row above.

Not legal advice. Wait time estimates are derived from the official Department of State Visa Bulletin and assume current cutoffs hold. Backlogs change every month. For case-specific guidance, consult a licensed immigration attorney. Confirm against the official Visa Bulletin.