Your priority date is your place in line for an immigrant visa. When it becomes "current" per the Visa Bulletin, you can file I-485 (if in U.S.) or proceed with consular processing. Below: how to find it, track it, and project when it'll move.
What is your priority date?
Priority date is established by the underlying petition or labor certification:
- Family-based (I-130): Date USCIS receives properly filed I-130
- Employment-based with PERM: Date DOL receives PERM labor certification
- Employment-based without PERM (EB-1, EB-2 NIW, EB-5): Date USCIS receives the I-140 or I-526E
- DV Lottery: Case number rank within region (functions as priority date)
Where to find your priority date
- Form I-797 receipt notice from USCIS (date stamped on top)
- Form I-140 / I-130 / I-526E approval notice
- USCIS Case Status check at uscis.gov
- NVC welcome letter (for cases that transferred)
How to check if your date is current
- Identify your category and country of birth
- Look up the current month's Visa Bulletin at travel.state.gov
- Find your category/country cell in the chart applicable for your purpose (Final Action Dates for visa issuance, Dates for Filing if USCIS accepts that chart for I-485)
- Compare your priority date to the cell's date
- If your date is earlier than the cell's date OR cell shows "Current" or "C" → you're current
Tracking forward movement
Charles Oppenheim, the chief of the Visa Control Office, publishes monthly forecasts in addition to the official bulletin. Movement patterns:
- October: New fiscal year begins; aggressive forward movement common
- November-March: Steady forward movement in most categories
- April-June: Movement may slow as annual quotas fill
- July-September: Some categories may retrogress; final-quarter retrogression common in heavy-demand categories
Retrogression — what to do
If your date retrogresses after you've filed I-485, your case stays in the queue. USCIS holds adjudication until the date moves forward again. You retain EAD/AP renewal eligibility.
If you haven't filed I-485 yet and your date retrogresses, you can't file. Watch the bulletin monthly. The date will eventually move forward again.
Strategies if your date is years away
- EB-1 upgrade (if EB-2): Stronger evidence might qualify for the much-shorter EB-1 line, with priority date porting
- Cross-chargeability: If your spouse was born in a country with better dates, charge to their country
- Concurrent filing window: When Dates for Filing are accepted by USCIS, file I-485 even if Final Action Date isn't current — gets you in the queue and unlocks EAD/AP
- Priority date porting: Approved I-140 priority dates port to subsequent I-140 filings (e.g., EB-3 → EB-2)
- Maintain status meanwhile: H-1B can extend beyond 6-year cap with approved I-140; AC21 §104(c) and §106(a)/(b)