Skip to content
GreenCardTracker .com

Employment preference · April 2026

How long does EB-3 take for Philippines?

Skilled workers (2+ years) and professionals with bachelor's degrees.

Estimated wait · April 2026 bulletin

Approximately 2.8 years

Cutoff date for EB-3 Philippines: Jun 1, 2023 (Dates for Filing chart)

This is the visa-availability backlog only — it does not include USCIS processing time on the underlying petition (I-140), which adds 6 to 12 months (or ~2 weeks with premium processing for I-140) on top.

Final Action Dates

Mar 1, 2023

When the green card can be issued

Dates for Filing

Jun 1, 2023

When Form I-485 may be submitted

What this wait actually means

For April 2026, the EB-3 Dates for Filing cutoff for Philippines is Jun 1, 2023. That puts the visa-availability backlog at roughly 2.8 years from today. An applicant filing now should plan on around 3 years before becoming eligible to take the final step (adjustment of status or consular interview), plus several months of USCIS processing on the underlying petition.

The full timeline, step by step

  1. Petition filed. The employer files Form I-140 (or in EB-1A/NIW cases, the applicant self-petitions). For PERM-required EB-2/EB-3, the priority date is actually the date the Department of Labor accepted the PERM application — earlier than the I-140 itself.
  2. USCIS processes the petition. I-140 adjudication typically takes 6 to 12 months (or ~2 weeks with premium processing for I-140).
  3. Wait for visa number. Wait for your priority date to become current. Right now that wait is approximately 2.8 years for EB-3 Philippines.
  4. File the green card application. If you are already in the United States in valid nonimmigrant status (H-1B, L-1, O-1, F-1 with OPT, etc.) and a visa number is available, you can file Form I-485 to adjust status without leaving. Otherwise the case finishes at a U.S. consulate abroad.
  5. Interview and decision. Most green card cases include an in-person interview at a USCIS field office (for adjustment of status) or a U.S. consulate abroad (for consular processing). After approval, the green card arrives by mail within a few weeks.

What you can do right now

  • File the underlying petition as early as possible. The priority date locks in on the day USCIS or DOL receives the form, so any delay on your end pushes back the entire timeline.
  • Track your priority date against the monthly Visa Bulletin. Set a reminder on the second Tuesday of each month, when the State Department releases the next bulletin.
  • Maintain valid status if you are inside the United States. Letting nonimmigrant status lapse can complicate or block adjustment of status later.
  • Keep a clean immigration record. New criminal issues, prolonged absences abroad, or unauthorized employment can derail an otherwise straightforward case.
  • Once your I-140 is approved and over 180 days old, you have portability rights — you can change employers without losing your priority date, as long as the new job is in the same or similar occupation.

Why these waits exist at all

Congress sets the annual cap at roughly 226,000 family preference visas and 140,000 employment-based visas. No single country may receive more than 7% of either pool — the per-country cap. When demand from a single country exceeds 7% of the worldwide total in a given category, a backlog forms. Worldwide demand can also push the cutoff backward in late summer when annual numbers run low.

EB-3 wait time in other countries

Philippines wait times in other employment categories

Frequently asked questions

How long does EB-3 take for Philippines in 2026?

Based on the April 2026 Visa Bulletin, the EB-3 cutoff for Philippines is Jun 1, 2023. That puts the current backlog at approximately 2.8 years. A new applicant filing today should expect that long before the priority date becomes current, plus several months for USCIS processing.

What is my priority date for EB-3?

Your priority date is the date the Department of Labor accepted your PERM labor certification application (for EB-2 and EB-3 cases that require PERM), or the date USCIS received your Form I-140 petition (for EB-1, EB-2 NIW, and other categories that do not require PERM). USCIS prints the priority date on the I-140 approval notice.

Can I work in the U.S. while waiting for EB-3?

Only if you have a separate work authorization. Sitting in the green card line does not by itself give you the right to work in the United States. Most employment-based applicants stay in H-1B, L-1, or O-1 status during the wait. After filing Form I-485 (which requires a current priority date), you can apply for an EAD work permit on Form I-765.

Can the wait time get worse?

Yes. The Visa Bulletin can retrogress — meaning the cutoff date moves backward — if more applicants become eligible than visas remain available in a given fiscal year. Retrogression is most common between July and September. The wait estimate on this page assumes today's cutoff stays the same; in practice it can shorten or lengthen month to month.

Do I keep my place in line if I move or change jobs?

Your priority date stays with you, even if you change employers. Under "porting," an applicant with an approved I-140 that is over 180 days old can move to a new job in the same or similar occupation and keep the original priority date — the new employer files a new I-140, but the priority date carries over.

What is the difference between Final Action Dates and Dates for Filing?

The Visa Bulletin publishes two charts each month. The Final Action Dates chart tells you when USCIS or a consular officer can actually approve your green card — your priority date must be earlier than this cutoff. The Dates for Filing chart is earlier and lets you submit Form I-485 sooner if USCIS allows it for the month. For April 2026, USCIS is using the Dates for Filing chart for employment adjustment filings.

See the raw data

Want the full Visa Bulletin chart for EB-3 Philippines, including the historical pattern? Visit EB-3 Philippines on the Visa Bulletin page.

Sources & Citations

All claims in this guide link to primary government sources.

  1. 1
    Visa Bulletin for April 2026— U.S. Department of State
  2. 2
  3. 3

Not legal advice. Wait time estimates are derived from the official April 2026 Visa Bulletin and assume current cutoffs hold. The Visa Bulletin can retrogress without warning. For case-specific guidance, consult a licensed immigration attorney.