Current visa bulletin cutoff dates are the specific dates published monthly by the U.S. government that tell you when your green card application can move forward. They work by comparing your priority date—the date you first filed—to a listed cutoff; if your date is earlier, you’re eligible to proceed. Simply check your visa category and country in the bulletin to see if your number is current, helping you plan your next steps with clarity.
Understanding This Month’s Visa Bulletin Numbers
This month’s visa bulletin numbers tell a story of where you stand in line. The current visa bulletin cutoff dates act as a border: if your priority date falls before that listed number, your case is actionable. You can check your priority date against the “Final Action Dates” chart to see when a visa number is actually available for you. If your date is earlier, you are cleared to move forward. If it is later, you are still waiting for the line to inch closer. The “Dates for Filing” chart shows when you can submit paperwork early, but only the cutoff dates in “Final Action” define real progress this month.
Decoding the Priority Date System
Decoding the Priority Date System is essential for navigating cutoff dates. Your priority date—listed on your I-797 receipt—acts as your place in line. When a bulletin’s “Final Action Date” matches or postdates your priority date, your green card can be issued. Priority date determination relies on your USCIS case receipt, not the filing date. An earlier priority date does not guarantee faster movement if your category faces retrogression.
- Check your I-797 Notice of Action for the exact priority date.
- Compare your date monthly against the “Final Action Dates” chart for your category.
- Track “Dates for Filing” if you are eligible to submit adjustment forms early.
- Only a current priority date (ahead of the cutoff) allows final visa issuance.
How Cutoff Dates Impact Your Green Card Queue
Your spot in the green card queue is directly tied to the cutoff date in the Visa Bulletin. If your priority date is earlier than the cutoff, you can file or receive a visa. If it falls after, you’re stuck waiting. This date moves forward or stalls each month, meaning your queue position advances only when the cutoff changes. A slower cutoff means longer waits; a fast jump can suddenly clear your path. Watching this date each month is the only real way to gauge your personal timeline.
| Your Priority Date vs. Cutoff | Status in Queue |
| Before the cutoff | Active – file or get visa |
| After the cutoff | Waiting – queue on hold |
| Matches the cutoff | Typically eligible for processing |
Family-Sponsored Preference Categories
In the Family-Sponsored Preference Categories, the Current visa bulletin cutoff dates determine eligibility for filing or final action. Each category (F1, F2A, F2B, F3, F4) has a separate monthly date, with dates often vary significantly by country of chargeability. For example, the F2A (spouses/children of permanent residents) cutoff may be current while F4 (siblings of U.S. citizens) shows multi-year backlogs. Applicants must compare their priority date against the specific category and country cutoff in the bulletin to know when to submit Form I-485 or schedule an interview.
F1: Unmarried Sons and Daughters of U.S. Citizens
The F1 category for unmarried sons and daughters of U.S. citizens has its own specific cutoff dates in the Visa Bulletin, which determine when a priority date becomes eligible for final action. To proceed, you must first confirm that your petition (Form I-130) is approved and that your priority date is earlier than the published cutoff for your country of chargeability. Date filing charts may also apply, allowing an earlier submission of adjustment of status documents if the Department of State opens that category. The process involves a clear sequence:
- Verify your priority date against the F1 “Final Action Dates” chart for your country.
- If the cutoff date advances past your priority date, you may receive a National Visa Center interview notice.
- Attend the interview with required civil documents to obtain an immigrant visa.
F2A: Spouses and Minor Children of Permanent Residents
For family-sponsored immigration, the F2A: Spouses and Minor Children of Permanent Residents category often maintains a “Current” cutoff date in the visa bulletin, meaning no backlog exists for most countries. However, applicants from high-demand nations like Mexico may see a specific priority date cutoff. To use this category, a lawful permanent resident must file Form I-130. Once the priority date becomes current, the beneficiary can apply for an immigrant visa or adjustment of status. Unlike the F2B category for adult children, F2A prioritizes younger dependents and spouses, resulting in shorter waiting periods.
F2B: Unmarried Sons and Daughters (Age 21+) of LPRs
The F2B preference category covers unmarried sons and daughters (age 21+) of LPRs, and its cutoff dates in the current visa bulletin reflect significant backlog. For October 2024, the final action date for F2B is set at December 8, 2016 for most countries, meaning only petitioners with a priority date earlier than this may receive a visa. China’s cutoff is October 1, 2016, while India and the Philippines show later dates (January 1, 2012 and January 1, 2012, respectively). Applicants must monitor these monthly updates to estimate wait times.
F3: Married Sons and Daughters of U.S. Citizens
The F3 category for Married Sons and Daughters of U.S. Citizens moves slowly, often lagging behind F1 and F2A in the visa bulletin. Your priority date must be earlier than the cutoff date listed under “F3” in the “Dates for Filing” chart to submit your adjustment application. If your date is current in the “Final Action Dates” chart, the U.S. citizen parent can proceed with the visa interview for you and your spouse. Because demand in this category is high, even a small bulletin retrogression can halt processing for months.
F3: Married Sons and Daughters of U.S. Citizens requires your priority date to be before the current monthly cutoff to proceed with a green card.
F4: Siblings of Adult U.S. Citizens
The F4 category covers siblings of adult U.S. citizens, and its cutoff date in the current visa bulletin determines when a sibling can finally apply for a green card. These dates advance slowly—often by days or weeks each month—due to high global demand and per-country limits. If your priority date is earlier than the posted cutoff, you can proceed; otherwise, you wait for a later bulletin. Since this is a numerically limited category, backlogged countries like India and Mexico show much older cutoff dates than the worldwide chargeability line.
In F4: Siblings of Adult U.S. Citizens, your priority date must fall before the current visa bulletin’s cutoff date to move forward with your green card application.
Employment-Based Priority Dates
Your Employment-Based Priority Dates are the single most critical factor in determining when you can file for adjustment of status or schedule an immigrant visa interview. The U.S. Department of State publishes current visa bulletin cutoff dates each month, which establish a hard line: your priority date must be earlier than the posted cutoff for your specific category (e.g., EB-2 or EB-3) and country of chargeability. If your date is not current, you must wait for future bulletins to push the final action or filing date forward. Proactively monitoring these monthly updates allows you to act instantly the moment your date becomes current, skipping unnecessary delays. Your priority date is your place in line—so know it, track it, and be ready.
EB-1: Extraordinary Ability and Multinational Executives
For EB-1: Extraordinary Ability and Multinational Executives, the current visa bulletin cutoff dates are generally quite favorable since this category often remains current for most countries. You’ll typically see a current visa bulletin cutoff date listed, meaning no backlog exists for many nationals, allowing you to file your green card application immediately if your priority date is earlier than the published date. However, applicants from India and China frequently face a backlog, so you must check the specific cutoff date for your country to confirm eligibility. Always verify the Dates for Filing chart to submit your paperwork sooner if eligible.
EB-2: Advanced Degrees and Exceptional Ability
For professionals in the EB-2: Advanced Degrees and Exceptional Ability category, the visa bulletin’s cutoff dates directly determine when you can file your adjustment of status or schedule an immigrant visa interview. These dates vary significantly by country of chargeability, with India and China typically experiencing the longest backlogs. Your priority date—the date USCIS received your labor certification or I-140 petition—must fall on or before the bulletin’s published date for you to proceed. Monitoring monthly cutoff movements is essential to plan your next steps without delay.
- Check your priority date against the final action date for your country.
- If your date is current, file Form I-485 immediately to lock in your place.
- Expect prolonged waits if your country is subject to high demand and retrogression.
- Use the filing date chart to submit your application earlier when available.
EB-3: Skilled Workers, Professionals, and Other Workers
For EB-3 green card applicants, the visa bulletin’s cutoff dates determine when you can file or get approved. In the “Final Action Dates” chart, your priority date must be earlier than the listed date for your country. “Other Workers” (unskilled) typically have slower movement than Skilled Workers or Professionals due to low visa supply. Check the “Dates for Filing” chart to see if you can submit your adjustment of status application early, even if your final action date isn’t current yet.
- Your priority date is the date USCIS received your PERM or I-140 petition.
- Check both “Final Action Dates” and “Dates for Filing” each month for your country.
- “Other Workers” share a separate, often slower, cutoff line than skilled/professional EB-3 applicants.
EB-4: Special Immigrants and Religious Workers
The EB-4 category for Special Immigrants and Religious Workers often remains current in the “Final Action Dates” chart of the visa bulletin, particularly for most countries, though it can retrogress for high-demand nations like India and Mexico. This means applicants from those countries may face waiting periods before their priority dates become available. Your priority date is the filing date on your approved I-360 petition, which must fall before the published cutoff for your country to proceed with adjustment of status or consular processing. Monitoring the monthly bulletin is critical, as dates can shift unexpectedly. EB-4 priority date tracking is essential for timing your application.
Q: How can I check if my EB-4 priority date is current for Religious Workers?
A: Compare the priority date on your I-360 approval notice to the “Final Action Dates” chart under EB-4 for your country of chargeability in the latest visa bulletin; if your date is earlier than the cutoff, your case is current.
EB-5: Immigrant Investor Program
For the EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program, the visa bulletin’s cutoff date determines when you can file your adjustment of status or consular application. The date is tied to your priority date, which is the day USCIS received your I-526 petition. EB-5 priority dates move slowly, especially for Chinese and Indian applicants, due to high demand. You must confirm your date is “current” before submitting the final paperwork or you risk rejection. Always check the “Final Action Dates” chart for the specific EB-5 category you fall under, whether standard, rural, or high-unemployment.
Regional and Country-Specific Cutoff Trends
In family-sponsored preference categories, regional visa bulletin cutoffs reveal a stark divide: Mexico’s dates for F2A often stall years behind the global final action date, while the Philippines for F3 can suddenly leap forward by months when a prior year’s unused numbers roll over. For employment-based visas, India’s EB-2 and EB-3 cutoff dates routinely stagnate for quarters, yet China’s EB-3 can retrogress abruptly after a sudden surge of demand, erasing years of waiting progress overnight. A petitioner from South Korea might watch their priority date become current in the regional “All Chargeability Areas” column while knowing their country-specific filing date remains stubbornly frozen. This means a green card applicant born in El Salvador under the F4 category cannot rely on the global trend of slow forward movement—their regional cutoff may hold steady for eighteen months as the country’s per-year cap absorbs spillover from other categories.
India and China: Retrogression and Forward Movement
For India and China, the visa bulletin exhibits persistent retrogression and forward movement affecting final action dates. When demand spikes, cutoff dates for these two countries often retrogress, meaning previously current dates move backward, delaying eligibility for green card applicants. Conversely, forward movement occurs when visa numbers are underutilized, advancing dates to allow more applicants. This cyclical pattern is unique to India and China due to high application volume and per-country caps, creating discontinuous cutoff date progression.
- Retrogression typically resets advancement gains, extending wait times unpredictably.
- Forward movement is often sudden, following quarterly visa allocation reviews.
- Dates for India and China rarely move in sync due to differing demand levels.
Mexico and Philippines: Family-Based Backlogs
For family-based green card applicants from Mexico and the Philippines, the current visa bulletin reveals deeply entrenched backlogs that demand strategic patience. Mexico’s F2A (spouses/children of permanent residents) remains stuck in early 2024, offering some relief, while all other categories crawl at a glacial pace. The Philippines faces even steeper delays, particularly in the F1 (unmarried adult children) and F4 (siblings) categories, where cutoff dates have barely advanced, reflecting overwhelming demand. Applicants should track these stark regional divergence trends closely, as even minor date shifts can signal long-term processing bottlenecks.
| Category | Mexico Cutoff | Philippines Cutoff |
|---|---|---|
| F1 | August 2001 | October 2012 |
| F2A | Early 2024 | Current |
| F2B | July 2003 | October 2011 |
| F4 | June 2001 | August 2004 |
Rest of the World: Current or Limited Availability
The Rest of the World category for employment-based preferences often shows current or limited availability in the visa bulletin, signaling that demand has not yet triggered a strict cutoff. For EB-1 and EB-2, applicants frequently see “Current” status, meaning immediate visa issuance is possible if a priority date is established. However, limited availability can appear abruptly when global demand spikes, retrogressing the cutoff to a specific month. This unpredictability requires applicants to monitor monthly updates, as even a “Current” designation may shift to a set date without extensive warning.
Differences Between the Final Action Dates and Dates for Filing
The main difference between Final Action Dates and Dates for Filing in the current visa bulletin is when you can actually submit your green card application. Final Action Dates show when the government is ready to approve your case—if your priority date is before this cutoff, you’ll get your visa number. Dates for Filing are earlier, allowing you to submit your paperwork sooner while waiting for the Final Action cutoff to move forward.
Using the Dates for Filing can get your application in the queue months earlier, but your case won’t be approved until your priority date reaches the Final Action Date.
Always check which chart your specific category and country can use—uscis sometimes allows the Filing Dates for initial submissions, giving you a head start on the waiting process.
When to Use the Final Action Date Chart
Use the Final Action Date Chart when USCIS determines that visa numbers are unavailable for the current month, indicated on the visa bulletin. This chart applies if you are adjusting status in the U.S. and the Department of State has not authorized the “Dates for Filing” chart. To file your adjustment of application, your priority date must be earlier than the cut-off date in the Final Action Dates chart for your preference category and country. The sequence for checking eligibility is:
- Confirm the bulletin month indicates “Final Action Dates” are in effect.
- Locate your immigration category and country of chargeability.
- Compare your priority date to the listed cut-off date.
- Proceed only if your priority date is before the Final Action Date.
This chart ultimately governs the final allocation of immigrant visas.
Navigating the Dates for Filing Chart for Early Submission
To navigate the Dates for Filing Chart for early submission, first verify your priority date against the chart’s cutoff. If your date is earlier, you may file the I-485 adjustment immediately, even if the Final Action Date is not current. This allows you to lock in your place and secure interim benefits like work authorization. Cross-reference your category and country each month, as the Dates for Filing Chart can retract. Only use this chart if USCIS explicitly activates it in their visa bulletin instructions; otherwise, the Final Action Date governs all submissions.
Why Two Charts Matter for Adjustment of Status
For Adjustment of Status applicants, two charts matter because they determine eligibility to file an I-485. The Dates for Filing chart allows early submission when the Department of State opens it. The Final Action Dates chart dictates when USCIS can actually approve the green card. Using the earlier chart lets you lock in your priority date and obtain work or travel authorization sooner. Monitoring which chart USCIS accepts each month is critical, as they may revert to Final Action Dates only, blocking early filing.
How to Check Your Priority Date Status
To check your priority date status against the current visa bulletin cutoff dates, first locate the Department of State’s monthly Visa Bulletin. Find the chart for your category and country of chargeability—your priority date must be earlier than the listed cutoff date for that specific chart. Compare your exact priority date (from your I-130 or I-140 receipt) to the “Final Action Dates” column; if it’s before the cutoff, visas are available. For concurrent filing of adjustment of status, you may use the “Dates for Filing” chart instead. Always verify with the “Applicability of Adjustment of Status” instructions on USCIS’s website to see which chart you can rely on. Your case remains current until the cutoff date moves past your priority date—monitor the bulletin monthly to act immediately when your date becomes current.
Locating Your Priority Date on USCIS Receipt Notices
Your priority date is typically found on the I-797 Notice of Action, labeled clearly as “Priority Date.” On employment-based petitions like the I-140, this date appears in the upper-right section of the receipt. For family-based I-130 forms, it is often near the bottom under case details. Check all notices you receive, as USCIS issues multiple receipts during processing. Cross-referencing your priority date with the current visa bulletin cutoff dates is essential to determine when your visa number becomes available.
- Look for the “Priority Date” field on your I-797C Notice of Action.
- Employment-based receipts place the date in the top-right corner.
- Family-based receipts show it near the “Beneficiary” section.
- Check each receipt notice, as corrections sometimes update the date.
Comparing Your Date to the Published Cutoffs
To check your status, locate your visa category and country in the current bulletin. Matching your priority date to the cutoff is the core action: if your date is earlier than the published cutoff, a visa number is available now; if later, you must wait. The sequence is clear:
- Find your filing date (Form I-797) or original receipt.
- Identify your category and chargeability area on the visa bulletin’s “Dates for Filing” chart.
- Compare your priority date to the published cutoff date for your category.
If your priority date falls exactly on the cutoff, you are not yet current and must wait for the next bulletin. When your date is earlier, you may proceed with adjustment of status or consular processing.
Using the Visa Bulletin’s Monthly Updates
Each month, the Visa Bulletin updates its cutoff dates, which you must cross-reference against your priority date to check progress. Open the PDF and locate your visa category and preference class; then find the final action or dates for filing chart. Compare your priority date to that specific cutoff. If your date is earlier, a visa number is available; if later, you must wait for a future monthly update. Only the current month’s bulletin reflects real-time eligibility, so check the latest release from the Department of State’s website. Monthly bulletin tracking is essential for timely filing.
Strategies for Managing a Delayed Cutoff Date
When the visa bulletin cutoff date delays, immediately file for adjustment of status if your priority date is current, locking in the queue regardless of future retrogressions. Maintain a monthly review of the bulletin to anticipate shifts and adjust your strategy. Should I file concurrently with a delayed visa bulletin date? No, filing before your priority date is current guarantees rejection; instead, prepare your complete I-485 packet so you can submit the day the cutoff advances. Proactively collect medical exams and affidavits of support now to avoid last-minute delays. This readiness transforms a waiting period into an opportunity for seamless filing the moment your date becomes available.
Monitoring Retrogression and Predicting Shifts
To manage a delayed cutoff date, monitor retrogression by tracking the Visa Bulletin’s monthly publication and comparing final action dates with dates for visa bulletin filing. Predict shifts by analyzing past retrogression patterns, such as seasonal demand surges from fiscal year ends, and observing priority date movement trends. Focus on the priority date position outlook by checking USCIS’s historical charts. Q: How often should I check the bulletin for retrogression signs? A: Review it monthly immediately after release, cross-referencing your category’s movement to anticipate potential rolling back of dates.
Exploring Porting Options Between Categories
When your primary visa category’s cutoff date is stuck, porting options between categories can be your lifeline. This means moving your existing priority date to a different visa class—like from EB-2 to EB-3—where the cutoff might be more current. You can do this if you already have an approved petition in a slower category. It’s a tactical shift, not a new application. Just check that your current role qualifies under the target category’s requirements before asking your employer to file the upgrade.
Porting moves your place in line to a faster lane by using an existing priority date in a different visa category.
Consulting an Immigration Attorney for Timing
When your cutoff date stalls, chatting with an immigration attorney about timing can help you read between the lines of the visa bulletin. They can estimate how long a specific priority date might stay delayed based on past patterns, then suggest whether filing early or waiting feels safer for your case. An attorney might also spot if a date could retrogress further, helping you decide when to submit documents or renew status. This saves you from guessing wrong and losing your place in line.
Visa Availability Forecasts for the Coming Months
For the coming months, visa availability forecasts hinge directly on current cutoff dates and applicant demand volume. If your priority date is within two months of the current cutoff, anticipate forward movement, but anticipate retrogression if the demand surge exceeds quarterly allotments. Q: Will cutoff dates advance steadily? A: Not necessarily; advancing depends on USCIS usage patterns, often leading to sudden halts or retrogressions after rapid movement. Monitor the monthly bulletin closely, especially for final action dates rather than filing dates, as only final action dates guarantee visa issuance.
Expected Movements in Employment-Based Categories
For employment-based categories, forward movement in cutoff dates is anticipated for EB-2 and EB-3 India, driven by low demand and annual quota reset expectations. EB-1 Worldwide is expected to remain current, while EB-3 China may see slow, incremental advances. Retrogression risks are minimal for EB-2 Worldwide due to low usage. Expect final action dates to shift 2–4 weeks monthly for backlogged categories.
- EB-2 India could advance 2–3 weeks per month as unused numbers roll down.
- EB-1 Worldwide dates will likely stay current with no retrogression.
- EB-3 China may move 1–2 weeks monthly, dependent on consular efficiency.
- EB-4 and EB-5 set-asides should hold steady with no major shifts.
Seasonal Patterns in Family-Based Visa Supply
Family-based visa supply follows a predictable annual cycle tied to the fiscal year. Cutoff dates typically advance most rapidly in October, when the new fiscal year’s full annual quota becomes available to USCIS. By late spring, demand begins to outpace supply, causing cutoffs to slow or retrogress. Seasonal slowdowns in visa issuance are most pronounced during summer months, when consular processing peaks and numerical limits tighten. Priority date movement often stalls entirely between July and September as quotas near exhaustion. For applicants, the key sequence is:
- File in October or November to capture fresh annual numbers.
- Expect rapid date advancements through February.
- Prepare for stagnation or regression after May.
This cycle recurs each year, directly affecting when a priority date becomes current.
Legislative Changes Affecting Cutoff Lines
Legislative changes directly recalibrate cutoff lines by altering visa category caps or per-country limits. For example, a new law reallocating unused family-sponsored visas to employment-based categories can retroactively advance cutoff dates for EB applicants. Conversely, legislation that tightens per-country caps may freeze or retrogress cutoff lines for high-demand nations. Statutory modifications to visa recapture mechanisms also shift cutoff projections, as uncaptured visas from prior years can be reintroduced, creating sudden date movements. These adjustments are not predictive but reactive, requiring users to monitor final rule changes.
Legislative changes affect cutoff lines by statutorily altering visa supply and per-country limits, causing immediate, non-discretionary shifts in priority date progression.

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