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Best EB-3 Strategy Guide for H-1B Workers Facing Layoffs

If your company is announcing layoffs and you're on H-1B with a pending EB-3 green card, here's what matters: the consequences for your green card depend entirely on which stage you're in, and the difference between adjacent stages can mean preserving your priority date versus losing years of progress permanently. The best resource is one that gives you a stage-specific contingency plan — not general reassurance, not anonymous forum advice, and not a $400 attorney consultation that tells you what you could have known in advance.

Why Layoffs Are Different for EB-3 Applicants

When a US citizen or permanent resident loses their job, they update their resume and start interviewing. When an H-1B worker with a pending EB-3 green card loses their job, they face three simultaneous crises:

  1. Immigration status: the 60-day H-1B grace period starts ticking. After 60 days without a new employer filing an H-1B transfer, you must leave the United States.
  2. Green card progress: depending on your stage, the entire green card process may terminate, your priority date may be destroyed, or your case may continue unaffected.
  3. Dependent status: your spouse's H-4 visa and H-4 EAD (if applicable) depend on your H-1B status. If your status terminates, theirs does too.

Standard resources — USCIS.gov, law firm blogs, forums — explain each of these in isolation. What they don't provide is a unified contingency matrix that tells you exactly what to do based on your specific stage at the moment of termination.

The Stage-Specific Layoff Survival Matrix

Stage 1: During PERM (Before I-140 Filing)

What happens: The PERM process terminates immediately. The labour certification is entirely employer-specific — it cannot be transferred to a new employer. No priority date has been established.

Your 60-day clock: You have 60 consecutive days to find a new employer who will file an H-1B transfer petition. This keeps your immigration status alive. But the green card process restarts from zero with the new employer — prevailing wage determination, structured recruitment, ETA-9089 filing.

What to prioritise: Securing H-1B transfer first (status preservation), then finding an employer willing to sponsor a new green card. If you're from India, your new priority date goes to the back of a 12+ year queue.

Stage 2: I-140 Filed but Approved Less Than 180 Days

What happens: This is the most dangerous stage. If the employer withdraws the I-140 before 180 days of approval, the approval is revoked and your priority date is permanently destroyed. Even without active withdrawal, the employer has no legal obligation to maintain the petition after your employment ends.

Your negotiation leverage: The most critical action is negotiating your separation agreement to include a provision that the employer will not withdraw the I-140 for 180 days after approval. Not all employers will agree, but many will — especially if the withdrawal provides no financial benefit to the company. HR departments and in-house counsel are often indifferent about I-140 maintenance; the petition costs the employer nothing to keep active.

What to prioritise: (1) Negotiate non-withdrawal of the I-140, (2) secure H-1B transfer to a new employer within 60 days, (3) start counting days toward the 180-day protection threshold.

Stage 3: I-140 Approved 180+ Days (No Pending I-485)

What happens: Your priority date is permanently locked in. Even if the employer withdraws the I-140, the approval cannot be revoked (unless it was based on fraud or material error). This priority date belongs to you and can be used with any future employer's EB petition.

Additional protections:

  • Your approved I-140 supports H-1B extensions beyond the six-year limit under AC21 Section 104(c)
  • Your spouse's H-4 EAD eligibility is maintained as long as the I-140 remains approved (which it does after 180 days, regardless of withdrawal)

What to prioritise: Secure H-1B transfer. Find a new employer willing to sponsor a new PERM. Your place in the queue is preserved — you're restarting the filing process, not the wait.

Stage 4: I-485 Pending 180+ Days (Full AC21 Portability)

What happens: Maximum protection. Under AC21 portability, you can change employers without any new PERM or I-140 filing, as long as the new job is in the same or similar occupational classification as the original PERM position. Your I-485 continues processing uninterrupted.

What to prioritise: Find a new position in a same or similar occupational classification, then file Supplement J to notify USCIS of the employer change. The EAD (Employment Authorization Document) from your pending I-485 provides independent work authorisation — you don't even need an H-1B transfer.

Why Standard Resources Fall Short

Attorney consultations

A consultation costs $100–$600 per hour and addresses your specific stage. The problem: by the time layoffs are announced, you're operating under extreme time pressure. Scheduling an attorney, waiting for the appointment, and paying for enough time to cover all contingencies isn't realistic when you need a plan today.

Forum advice

Reddit and Blind threads during layoff waves are filled with panicked posts and contradictory responses. One commenter says "your priority date is fine after I-140 approval." Another says "only if it's been approved for 180 days." A third says "the employer can still revoke it." All three are partially correct, but the distinctions between them determine whether your years of waiting are preserved or destroyed.

Law firm blogs

Law firm articles about layoffs and immigration status are accurate but generic. They explain the 60-day grace period and AC21 portability as separate concepts. They don't provide a unified matrix that maps your exact stage to your exact contingency plan, including severance negotiation tactics and evidence documentation you should assemble before the layoff becomes official.

Prediction tools

AM22Tech and RedBus2US track priority dates and processing times. They cannot tell you what to do when you lose your job.

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Everything in this article as a printable checklist — plus action plans and reference guides you can start using today.

What the Best Resource Looks Like

For H-1B workers with pending EB-3 green cards, the best layoff preparation resource combines:

  1. Stage-specific matrix: exact consequences and action plans for each of the four stages above
  2. Severance negotiation guidance: what to request regarding I-140 non-withdrawal, timeline for 180-day protection, and documentation of your immigration status
  3. 60-day grace period strategy: how to maximise your window, which employers to target for H-1B transfers, and what to do if day 60 approaches without a transfer
  4. Evidence documentation checklist: copies of PERM, I-140 approval, I-485 receipts, EAD cards, and employment records that you should assemble before layoff rumours become reality
  5. Dependent protection plan: how your spouse's H-4 EAD is affected at each stage and what alternative work authorisation (if any) exists

The US EB-3 Skilled Worker Green Card Guide includes the complete layoff survival matrix as one of its 12 chapters, plus a printable standalone reference card. It covers all four stages with specific action protocols, severance negotiation frameworks, and the evidence documentation you need before the situation becomes urgent.

Who This Is For

  • H-1B workers whose companies have announced layoffs, hiring freezes, or restructuring — and who need to know their exact contingency plan based on their green card stage
  • EB-3 beneficiaries in the pre-I-485 stages who want to prepare in advance rather than scramble during a crisis
  • Workers whose spouses depend on H-4 EAD income and need to understand how a layoff cascades through the family's work authorisation
  • Indian and Chinese nationals in the backlog who face a statistical certainty of experiencing at least one layoff cycle during their 10+ year green card wait

Who This Is NOT For

  • H-1B workers without a pending green card application — the 60-day grace period rules still apply, but the EB-3-specific strategy isn't relevant
  • Workers already at Stage 4 (I-485 pending 180+ days with EAD) who have a straightforward AC21 port — your protections are strong and the transition is well-documented
  • Anyone facing concurrent immigration complications (violations, overstay, criminal issues) who needs an attorney regardless

Frequently Asked Questions

How long do I have to find a new job after being laid off on H-1B?

You have a 60-day grace period to maintain lawful status. During these 60 days, a new employer can file an H-1B transfer petition. If the transfer petition is filed within 60 days, you can continue working for the new employer while the petition is pending. If no transfer is filed within 60 days, you must leave the United States or change to another valid immigration status.

Can my employer revoke my I-140 after laying me off?

Yes, but the consequences depend on timing. If the I-140 has been approved for less than 180 days, revocation destroys the approval and your priority date. If the I-140 has been approved for 180 days or more, the employer can request withdrawal, but the approval is not revoked — your priority date is permanently protected.

Does my spouse lose their H-4 EAD if I'm laid off?

Your spouse's H-4 EAD depends on your I-140 status, not your employment status. If your I-140 has been approved for 180+ days, the approval survives a layoff and your spouse's H-4 EAD eligibility is maintained. If your I-140 approval is less than 180 days old and the employer withdraws it, the approval is revoked and H-4 EAD eligibility is lost.

Should I start looking for a job before the layoff is official?

Yes. If your company has announced layoffs, restructuring, or hiring freezes, begin assembling documentation immediately: copies of your PERM, I-140 approval notice, I-485 receipts, EAD cards, and employment records. Start networking and interviewing. Having a contingency employer identified before the layoff is announced gives you the best chance of staying within the 60-day grace period.

What if I can't find a same-or-similar job within 60 days?

If you're at Stage 4 (I-485 pending 180+ days), your EAD from the pending I-485 provides independent work authorisation — you don't need the H-1B transfer at all. At earlier stages, if the 60-day window is closing without a transfer, consult an immigration attorney about change of status options (B-1/B-2) as a temporary measure. This is one of the situations where attorney involvement is worth the cost.

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