Eligibility for a U.S. Green Card (lawful permanent residency) depends on various categories defined by U.S. immigration law. Here’s an overview of the main pathways
Who is eligible for a green card

Types of green card
Family-Based Green Cards
Employment‑Based (EB) Green Cards
Diversity Visa (DV) Lottery
Humanitarian Green Cards
Conditional Green Cards
Family-Based Green Cards
Immediate relatives of U.S. citizens are eligible without annual caps:
- Spouses
- Unmarried children under 21
- Parents (if the U.S. citizen is at least 21)
Other relatives fall under preference categories with annual limits:
- F1: Unmarried adult children of U.S. citizens
- F2A: Spouses and minor children of green card holders
- F2B: Unmarried adult children of green card holders
- F3: Married children of U.S. citizens
- F4: Siblings of U.S. citizens (if the citizen is at least 21)
how to apply
step:1 deternine category
Immediate Relatives (IR)
Family Preference (F1–F4)
step:2 File Form I‑130 (Petition for Alien Relative)
step:3 After I‑130 Approval — Next Steps
A. If the Beneficiary Is in the U.S. (Adjustment of Status)
B. If the Beneficiary Is Outside the U.S. (Consular Processing)
Step 4: Additional Requirements & Supporting Documents
Step 5: Timeline Estimates
Employment-Based Green Cards
Five preference categories exist, each with specific criteria:
- EB-1: Individuals with extraordinary ability, outstanding professors/researchers, multinational executives
- EB-2: Professionals with advanced degrees or exceptional ability
- EB-3: Skilled workers, professionals, and other workers
- EB-4: Special immigrants (e.g., religious workers, certain government employees)
- EB-5: Investors who invest $900,000–$1.8 million in U.S. businesses and create jobs
Diversity Visa Lottery

Annually, 55,000 visas are available through a lottery for individuals from countries with low U.S. immigration rates. Applicants must have at least a high school education or two years of qualifying work experience.
Who Is Eligible?
• Country of Birth
To qualify, you must have been born in a country that has sent fewer than 50,000 immigrants to the U.S. via family- or employment-based categories in the past five years. Certain countries—including India, China, Mexico, Bangladesh, Nigeria, Pakistan, Philippines, and several others—are typically ineligible.
However, exceptions may apply:
- If your spouse was born in an eligible country.
- Or, if neither of your parents were legal residents of your birth country at your birth, you may claim their country’s eligibility instead.
• Education or Work Experience
You must have either:
- Completed a formal 12-year education equivalent to a U.S. high school diploma (GEDs generally don’t count), or
- Two years of qualifying work experience within the past 5 years in an occupation requiring at least two years of training or experience, typically defined via O*Net Job Zones 4-5.
How to Apply green card
- Registration Window: Typically opens in early October and closes in early November. For DV-2026, the period was Oct 2 – Nov 5, 2024.
- Submit One Entry: It’s free to enter. Multiple entries will result in disqualification.
- Include Family: You can list your spouse and all unmarried children (< 21), even if they don’t plan to immigrate.
Humanitarian Green Cards (green card)
Eligibility: Based on protected status or abuse/victimization:
- Refugee or Asylee status: Eligible to apply after 1 year in the U.S. as a refugee or asylee; spouses/children may be eligible too
- Victims of abuse or crime (self‑petition categories):
- VAWA: Victims of domestic violence, child abuse, or parental abuse by U.S. citizen or LPR relative
- T Visa: Human trafficking survivors who assist law enforcement
- U Visa: Victims of qualifying crimes who cooperate with law enforcement
- Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS): For minors abused, abandoned, or neglected and under juvenile court jurisdiction
Registry / Long‑Time Residence
- For individuals who have lived continuously in the U.S. since before January 1, 1972, regardless of status; must show good moral character and continuous presence
Conditional Green Cards (green card)
These require further action within two years to remove conditions:
- CR‑1/IR‑1: If married less than two years at issuance
- EB‑5: Conditional investor—must demonstrate continued investment and job creation after two years
Registry
Individuals who have resided continuously in the U.S. since before January 1, 1972, may be eligible to apply under the registry provision.
What Is a Conditional Green Card?
If you married a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident less than 2 years before being granted permanent residency, you receive a conditional green card (CR-1 for spouses, CR-2 for children) valid for 2 years. This temporary status helps USCIS verify the authenticity of the marriage and prevent fraud.
After 2 years, the status expires automatically unless you file to remove the conditions.
How to Remove Conditions: Filing Form I-751
You must file Form I‑751, Petition to Remove Conditions on Residence, within the 90‑day period immediately before your conditional card expires.
Processing Steps & Timing
- Submit I‑751 and fee ($595 + $85 biometrics fee) with supporting evidence.
- Receive Form I‑797 receipt notice, which extends your conditional status for up to 24 months while USCIS reviews your petition.
- Attend biometric appointment (fingerprints/photos).
- USCIS may issue a Request for Evidence (RFE) if more documentation is needed.
- You may be required to attend an interview, although this is not always necessary.
- If approved, you’ll receive a 10‑year permanent green card in the mail.
Processing typically takes 12–18 months, though timelines vary by service center.
Summary Table
| Category | Who It’s For | Special Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Immediate Relative (IR/CR) | Spouse, minor child, parent of U.S. citizen | No caps; fastest processing |
| Family Preference (F‑1 to F‑4) | Broader family relations (adult children, siblings) | Annual limits; long waiting periods |
| EB‑1 to EB‑5 | Job-based: executives, professionals, investors | Some self-petition options; investment path |
| DV Lottery | Eligible nationals via random lottery | Annual lottery; low odds |
| Humanitarian (Asylum, VAWA…) | Refugees, asylees, victims of abuse or crime | Self-petition often allowed |
| Registry / Long‑Time Resident | Continuous U.S. residence since before 1972 | No sponsor needed; rare eligibility |
| Conditional (CR, EB‑5) | Spouse or investor cards under 2 years | Conditions must be removed after 2 years |
How to Choose the Right Category green card
- Are you applying based on family sponsorship? Focus on Immediate Relative or Family Preference categories.
- Are you eligible through employment, skill, or investment? Check EB‑1 to EB‑5.
- Do you qualify via refuge, asylum, or victim protection? Explore Humanitarian routes.
- Are you seeking relief based on long-term residency or registry rules? That pathway is often niche but applicable in rare cases.
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