Visa and Status Types
Written in plain language for general understanding. This is educational content, not legal advice. Based on federal statutes and official sources.
What is this right?
U.S. visas fall into two main groups: nonimmigrant visas (temporary stays) and immigrant visas (permanent residence). Each type has its own rules, requirements, and application process.
The four major categories are family-based visas (IR, F1–F4), employment-based visas (H-1B, L-1, O-1, EB-1 through EB-5), student visas (F-1, M-1, J-1), and humanitarian visas (U-visa, T-visa, TPS, asylum). Understanding which category fits your situation is the first step in any immigration case. You can also adjust your status from within the United States in many cases by filing Form I-485 with USCIS.
When does it apply?
This information applies when:
- You want to come to the United States for work, school, or to join family
- You are already in the U.S. and want to change or adjust your immigration status
- You need humanitarian protection (asylum, trafficking victim status, or Temporary Protected Status)
- You want to check the current status of a pending application or petition
Key visa categories:
- Family-based: Immediate relative visas (spouses, parents, unmarried children under 21 of U.S. citizens) have no annual cap. Family preference categories (F1–F4) have annual limits and long backlogs.
- Employment-based: H-1B (specialty occupations — 65,000 annual cap plus 20,000 for advanced degrees), L-1 (intracompany transfers), O-1 (extraordinary ability), H-2A/H-2B (temporary agricultural/seasonal workers), EB-1 through EB-5 (permanent employment-based green cards).
- Student visas: F-1 (academic programs), M-1 (vocational programs), J-1 (exchange visitors). F-1 students can work through CPT and OPT programs.
- Humanitarian: U-visa (crime victims — 10,000 annual cap), T-visa (trafficking victims), TPS (Temporary Protected Status for nationals of designated countries), asylum.
How to check your status: Use the USCIS Case Status Online tool at egov.uscis.gov/casestatus with your receipt number. You can also call the USCIS Contact Center at 1-800-375-5283.
What should you do?
Step 1: Determine your goal. Are you coming temporarily (nonimmigrant) or permanently (immigrant)? This determines which visa category to pursue.
Step 2: Check eligibility requirements at uscis.gov. Each visa type has specific requirements for education, employment, family relationships, or humanitarian need.
Step 3: For employment visas, your employer usually starts the process by filing a petition (Form I-129 for nonimmigrant or Form I-140 for immigrant) with USCIS. For family visas, a qualifying U.S. citizen or permanent resident files Form I-130.
Step 4: If you are already in the U.S. and eligible, file Form I-485 (Application to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status) to get a green card without leaving the country. This is called adjustment of status under INA § 245.
Step 5: Track processing times and your case status at the USCIS website. Wait times vary dramatically — some family preference categories have backlogs of 10–20 years. Check the Visa Bulletin at travel.state.gov for priority date information.
Step 6: Consult an immigration attorney or a Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) accredited representative before applying. Mistakes on applications can cause delays, denials, or bars to future immigration benefits.
What should you NOT do?
Don't overstay your visa. Staying past your authorized period (shown on your I-94 record, not the visa stamp expiration) can result in a 3-year or 10-year bar from reentering the United States under INA § 212(a)(9)(B).
Don't work without authorization. Working without an Employment Authorization Document (EAD) or valid work visa violates your status and can make you removable under INA § 237(a)(1)(C).
Don't pay "notarios" or unlicensed consultants. In many countries, a "notario" is a qualified legal professional, but in the U.S., they are not authorized to give immigration advice. Only attorneys or BIA-accredited representatives can represent you in immigration matters.
Don't miss deadlines. Many immigration applications have strict filing windows. For example, H-1B cap-subject petitions are filed during a specific registration period each year (typically March). Adjustment of status applications require a current priority date.
Don't assume your visa stamp date is your deadline to leave. Your authorized stay is determined by your I-94 record (available at i94.cbp.dhs.gov), which may be different from the expiration date on your visa stamp.
How Texas differs from federal law
Texas provides some state-level benefits for immigrants, though fewer than states like California and New York:
- In-state tuition (HB 1403, 2001): Texas was the first state to pass an in-state tuition law for undocumented students. Students who lived in Texas for 3+ years before graduation and graduated from a Texas high school can pay in-state tuition under Texas Education Code § 54.052.
- Limited financial aid: Texas does not broadly offer state financial aid to undocumented students the way California or New York do. Some institutional aid may be available depending on the school.
- No driver's license for undocumented residents: Texas does not issue driver's licenses to undocumented immigrants. A valid visa, EAD, or other federally recognized status document is required under Texas Transportation Code § 521.142.
- Texas Workforce Commission: All workers in Texas, regardless of immigration status, can file wage claims with the Texas Workforce Commission for unpaid wages.
- SB 4 requires ICE cooperation: Unlike sanctuary states, Texas law requires local law enforcement to cooperate with federal immigration authorities, which can create additional risks for immigrants interacting with state systems.
Additional Steps in Texas
For in-state tuition eligibility, contact your school's admissions office or visit thecb.state.tx.us. For wage claims, contact the Texas Workforce Commission at twc.texas.gov. For immigration legal help, contact RAICES at raicestexas.org.
Relevant Law: Texas Education Code § 54.052 (residency for tuition), HB 1403 (2001), Texas Transportation Code § 521.142 (driver's license requirements), Texas SB 4 (Gov. Code Chapter 752)
Legal Resources
We may earn a commission if you use these services — at no extra cost to you. This supports our mission to make legal information free for everyone.