U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) announced today
that it will begin accepting H-1B petitions subject to the Fiscal Year
(FY) 2014 cap on Monday, April 1, 2013. Cases will be considered
accepted on the date that USCIS receives a properly filed petition for
which the correct fee has been submitted; not the date that the petition
is postmarked.
The cap (the numerical limitation on H-1B petitions) for FY 2014 is
65,000. In addition, the first 20,000 H-1B petitions filed on behalf of
individuals with U.S. master’s degree or higher are exempt from the
fiscal year cap of 65,000.
Based on feedback from a number of stakeholders, USCIS anticipates that
it may receive more petitions than the H-1B cap between April 1, 2013
and April 5, 2013. USCIS will monitor the number of petitions received
and notify the public of the date on which the numerical limit of the
H-1B cap has been met. This date is known as the final receipt date. If
USCIS receives more petitions than it can accept, USCIS will use a
lottery system to randomly select the number of petitions required to
reach the numerical limit.
USCIS will reject petitions that are subject
to the cap and are not selected, as well as petitions received after it
has the necessary number of petitions needed to meet the cap. The
lottery for the H-1B cap was last used in April 2008.
In addition, H-1B cap cases can continue to request premium processing
concurrently. Due to the historic premium processing receipt levels,
combined with the possibility that the H-1B cap will be met in the first
5 business days of the filing season, USCIS has temporarily adjusted
its current premium processing practice. To facilitate the prioritized
data entry of cap-subject petitions requesting premium processing, USCIS
will begin premium processing for H-1B cap cases on April 15, 2013.
For more information on premium processing for FY 2014 cap-subject
petitions, please see the USCIS Alert .
H-1B petitioners should follow all statutory and regulatory
requirements as they prepare petitions, in order to avoid delays in
processing and possible requests for evidence. USCIS has developed
detailed information, including an optional checklist to assist in the
completion and submission of a FY2014 H-1B petition. The processing
worksheet is available on the USCIS website, www.uscis.gov.
U.S. businesses use the H-1B program to employ foreign workers in
specialty occupations that require theoretical or technical expertise in
specialized fields, including, but not limited to, scientists,
engineers, and computer programmers.
For more information on the H-1B nonimmigrant visa program and current Form I-129 processing times, visit the H-1B FY 2014 Cap Season Web page (below) or call the National Customer Service Center at (800) 375-5283.
Update (April 3):
How USCIS will determine final date: H1B Cap Petition - Final Date Determination by USCIS
Update (April 5):
USCIS Reaches FY 2014 H-1B Cap and more updates: http://blog.mygcvisa.com/2013/04/uscis-reaches-fy-2014-h-1b-cap.html
Also See:
How to correctly file H1B: http://blog.mygcvisa.com/2013/03/how-to-file-h-1b-visa.html
How to apply for H1B Premium Processing: http://www.uscis.gov/portal/site/uscis/menuitem..
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