EB-4CATEGORY

EB-4 Special Immigrant Green Card

For special immigrants such as religious workers, certain government employees, and special immigrant juveniles.

Permanent residenceConsular processing abroad or adjustment of status in the USLeads to PR
Check if you qualify →Indicative · ~60 seconds · free

The EB-4 Special Immigrant Green Card is a US work & skilled visa. This guide covers who it's for, the key eligibility criteria, the indicative 2025 cost (~US$1,015 I-360 petition fee plus US$1,440 I-485 (varies by subcategory)) and processing time (~1-3 years (subject to priority date availability and backlogs)), the route to permanent residence, common pitfalls and FAQs.

Who the EB-4 Special Immigrant Green Card is for

For special immigrants such as religious workers, certain government employees, and special immigrant juveniles.

Is itself a green card; leads to citizenship after 5 years as a permanent resident.

EB-4 Special Immigrant Green Card - eligibility criteria

  • Fall within a special immigrant category (e.g. religious worker, SIJ)
  • File or be the beneficiary of Form I-360
  • Meet the specific requirements of your subcategory
  • A visa number is available in your category
  • Be admissible to the US

EB-4 Special Immigrant Green Card cost & processing time (2025)

The indicative government fee for the EB-4 Special Immigrant Green Card (United States) is ~US$1,015 I-360 petition fee plus US$1,440 I-485 (varies by subcategory), with an indicative processing time of ~1-3 years (subject to priority date availability and backlogs). Figures are for 2025 and may change - confirm at U.S. Department of State (travel.state.gov).

TypePermanent residence
Where you applyConsular processing abroad or adjustment of status in the US
Length of stayPermanent (green card)
Work rightsFull work authorization as a permanent resident
Study rightsFull study rights as a permanent resident
Government fee~US$1,015 I-360 petition fee plus US$1,440 I-485 (varies by subcategory)
Processing time~1-3 years (subject to priority date availability and backlogs)
Route to PRIs itself a green card; leads to citizenship after 5 years as a permanent resident.

Pathway & next steps

Is itself a green card; leads to citizenship after 5 years as a permanent resident.

Many applicants also compare R-1 · R-1 Religious Worker Visa, EB-3 · EB-3 Skilled Worker Green Card. Run a free VisaChief check to see which US route best fits your profile, then prepare an application reviewed by a registered migration agency in our partner network.

Common EB-4 Special Immigrant Green Card pitfalls we fix

Religious-worker subcategory periodically faces backlogs
Each subcategory has distinct, strict rules
Special immigrant juvenile cases need a juvenile court order

EB-4 Special Immigrant Green Card - frequently asked questions

How much does the EB-4 Special Immigrant Green Card cost?

The EB-4 Special Immigrant Green Card government fee is ~US$1,015 I-360 petition fee plus US$1,440 I-485 (varies by subcategory). Figures are indicative for 2025; always confirm current fees at U.S. Department of State (travel.state.gov) before applying.

How long does the EB-4 Special Immigrant Green Card take to process?

Indicative processing time is ~1-3 years (subject to priority date availability and backlogs). Actual timeframes vary with caseload, completeness and your circumstances.

Does the EB-4 Special Immigrant Green Card lead to permanent residence?

Is itself a green card; leads to citizenship after 5 years as a permanent resident.

Can I work on the EB-4 Special Immigrant Green Card?

Work rights: Full work authorization as a permanent resident.

Who can apply for the EB-4 Special Immigrant Green Card?

For special immigrants such as religious workers, certain government employees, and special immigrant juveniles.

Sources & official references

This guide is compiled from official United States government sources and is updated periodically. Eligibility, fees and processing times change - always confirm the current rules with the issuing authority before you apply:

Figures are indicative for 2025 and government fees and rules change. Confirm current details at U.S. Department of State (travel.state.gov) before applying. General information only - not immigration advice.