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Adjustment of Status Navigator is not a law firm. Content on this site is not legal advice. We are not affiliated with USCIS, DHS, or the Department of Justice EOIR. We are not a notario, notario público, asesor legal, consultor de inmigración, or immigration consultant. Information on this site is general educational content. It is not, and cannot be, advice about your specific case. For advice, consult a licensed immigration attorney or a DOJ EOIR-recognized representative. Read our full Terms, Privacy Policy, and Disclaimer.

Updated May 23, 2026.

H-1B Dual Intent and PM-602-0199: What May 2026 Means for Your Green Card Plans

If you are on an H-1B or L-1 visa and planning to file for a green card, the May 2026 policy shift can feel alarming. Here is the short version: the protection that matters most to you is still intact.

H-1B and L-1 dual intent survives PM-602-0199. USCIS expressly preserved the doctrine in the May 21, 2026 memorandum. A nonimmigrant in a dual-intent classification can still pursue Form I-485 without that intent itself being held against them. What changes is the discretionary review at adjudication. Per the Harris Beach Murtha May 2026 analysis, dual-intent status is now described as "not sufficient, on its own" to warrant approval.

This page is general educational information for nonimmigrant workers planning a concurrent or future I-485 filing. It is not a substitute for individualized review by a licensed immigration attorney.

What Is Dual Intent and Which Visas Carry It?

Dual intent is the doctrine that lets certain nonimmigrants lawfully pursue permanent residence while still holding a temporary visa. Per the USCIS Policy Manual, Volume 2 chapter on H-1B, H-1B and L-1 holders may file for a green card without that effort being treated as inconsistent with their visa status. The full list of classifications recognized as carrying dual intent in practice includes H-1B, L-1, O-1, P-1, and V.

Most other nonimmigrant categories do not carry this protection. B-1 and B-2 visitors, F-1 students, and J-1 exchange visitors are examples where pursuing a green card can raise questions about the original intent of the admission. For those categories, the timing of intent matters in ways that simply do not apply to H-1B and L-1 holders.

Think of dual intent as a green light that removes one specific barrier. It says: the government will not deny your temporary visa simply because you also want to stay permanently. It does not say: your green card application is automatically approved.

Dual-Intent vs. Single-Intent Classifications

ClassificationDual Intent?I-485 Compatible Without Status Risk?
H-1BYesYes (with discretionary review per PM-602-0199)
L-1A / L-1BYesYes (same discretionary review)
O-1YesYes
P-1YesYes
VYesYes
K-1 fiancéTreated as intending to immigrateYes (adjusting after marriage to petitioning citizen)
B-1 / B-2 visitorNoHigh scrutiny; 90-day rule and misrepresentation risk apply
F-1 studentNoHeightened intent scrutiny
J-1 exchange visitorNoPossible 2-year home residence requirement; additional analysis required

The takeaway for Priya, our H-1B persona, and Aliyah, our L-1 persona, is that the foundational doctrine that lets them file I-485 has not been removed. What has changed is the adjudicative lens applied to the file itself.

What Does the Memo Actually Say About Dual Intent?

The USCIS memorandum expressly preserves dual intent as compatible with adjustment of status. The operative language, per the Harris Beach Murtha May 2026 analysis, describes dual intent as "not sufficient, on its own, to warrant a favorable exercise of discretion."

That phrasing matters. USCIS did not say dual intent is disqualifying. USCIS did not say it is suspicious. USCIS said it is no longer enough on its own. Dual-intent status removes a barrier. It does not build the equity record that officers are now directed to weigh.

The Wolfsdorf Rosenthal employer advisory frames this for in-house counsel and HR teams: H-1B and L-1 employees are not at heightened risk because of their visa category, but the files they submit need to do affirmative work to present positive equities. The same record that would have been sufficient under prior practice may now look thin against the discretionary standard.

What Equities Typically Exist in an H-1B File?

Most H-1B holders have built a solid equity record over years of lawful status, often without realizing how it maps to the language of PM-602-0199. The discretionary framework borrows from Board of Immigration Appeals precedent on "unusual or outstanding equities." See our explainer on what those terms mean. Many H-1B career arcs check the relevant boxes naturally.

Common H-1B equity factors include:

For L-1 intracompany transferees, the multinational employer relationship is itself a positive factor. Prior overseas employment and the U.S. assignment demonstrate a coherent, employer-driven trajectory rather than opportunistic use of nonimmigrant status to seek immigration benefit.

What Risk Factors Should H-1B and L-1 Applicants Anticipate?

Most H-1B and L-1 careers also include events that are normal compliance milestones. None of the following are new statutory bars or automatic negatives. They are simply items that an attorney reviewing the file under PM-602-0199 will want to address affirmatively.

Concurrent I-140/I-485 Filing vs. Consular Processing

Many EB-2 and EB-3 applicants face a choice between concurrent I-140/I-485 filing (when the priority date is current) and consular processing abroad. PM-602-0199 does not change the procedural rules for either pathway, but the discretionary framing it introduces affects the strategic calculation.

Per USCIS concurrent-filing guidance, an employment-based applicant whose priority date per the State Department Visa Bulletin is current may file I-485 together with I-140. The applicant receives interim work authorization and advance parole while the package is pending. Under PM-602-0199, the I-485 stage of that package is subject to the new discretionary lens. The I-140 itself is not.

Consular processing avoids the in-country discretionary review because the immigrant visa is adjudicated abroad under separate Department of State procedures. The tradeoffs include departure from the United States, possible triggering of unlawful-presence bars if any prior status issues exist, and consular-processing wait times. A licensed immigration attorney can advise whether the immigrant visa route abroad or in-country adjustment fits a specific situation.

How Do EB-2 and EB-3 Priority-Date Dynamics Interact with PM-602-0199?

The visa bulletin priority-date system is unchanged by the memorandum. EB-2 and EB-3 applicants from countries with long backlogs, India and China most notably, will still wait for their priority dates to become current before they can file I-485. What changes is what happens when that filing window opens.

Many backlogged applicants have spent five, ten, or more years on H-1B extensions while waiting for their priority dates. That long lawful presence is exactly the kind of equity the BIA-derived framework recognizes. An applicant with a decade of continuous H-1B status, consistent tax filing, U.S.-born children, and demonstrated community ties has built precisely the affirmative equity record that PM-602-0199 directs officers to weigh. The structural feature of the backlog means many EB-2 and EB-3 applicants arrive at the I-485 stage with stronger equity records than applicants in other categories.

The practical implication, per multiple May 2026 law firm analyses, is that the I-485 filing should affirmatively present that equity record. Tax transcripts, employment letters covering the full H-1B history, evidence of community involvement, and family-relationship documentation belong in the initial submission, not just in response to a Request for Evidence.

What To Do Before Meeting With an Attorney

Organize the factual record first. The most efficient use of attorney time is a consultation built on a complete chronological file. Gather:

With this in hand, your attorney consultation becomes a strategic conversation about the equity record and any sensitive items, not a fact-finding interview. For Priya on H-1B mid-EB-2 wait and Aliyah on L-1 considering concurrent filing, that preparation work is the highest-leverage thing either of them can do before retaining counsel.

Organize your H-1B history and equity record before your attorney consultation. Start the intake walkthrough to build a structured record you can bring to a licensed immigration attorney.

Frequently asked questions

Does PM-602-0199 end H-1B dual intent?
No. The memorandum expressly acknowledges that H-1B, L-1, O-1, P-1, and V classifications carry statutory dual intent and remain compatible with pursuing adjustment of status. What changes is the discretionary lens applied at I-485 adjudication. Per Harris Beach Murtha's May 2026 analysis, dual intent alone is now described as 'not sufficient, on its own, to warrant a favorable exercise of discretion.'
Can I still file an I-485 concurrently with my I-140?
Concurrent filing rules are unchanged by PM-602-0199. When the EB-2 or EB-3 priority date is current per the State Department Visa Bulletin, an employment-based applicant may still file Form I-485 together with Form I-140 under the existing USCIS concurrent-filing framework. The memorandum does not amend the eligibility procedure; it changes how officers weigh discretion at the adjudication step.
What equity factors typically help H-1B and L-1 adjustment applicants?
Common positive factors include continuous lawful work authorization since admission, consistent federal and state tax filing, multi-year employer sponsorship history, no overstays or status gaps, U.S. citizen or LPR family members, community ties, and evidence of economic contribution. An attorney can review which factors are documented in a specific file and which may need additional supporting evidence.
Does a prior H-1B amendment, transfer, or RFE hurt my I-485 chances?
Routine amendments, transfers, and answered RFEs are normal H-1B compliance events and are not negative factors on their own. What officers may scrutinize under PM-602-0199 are unexplained gaps in status, periods of unauthorized employment, prior denials without context, or filings inconsistent with later representations. Topics worth discussing with a licensed immigration attorney include how to present the full H-1B history in context.
Should H-1B holders consider consular processing instead of I-485?
Consular processing remains available for employment-based immigrants. The practical tradeoff depends on the applicant's current location, family situation, prior immigration history, any unlawful-presence exposure, and processing-time differentials. An attorney can advise whether the immigrant visa route abroad or the in-country adjustment is appropriate for a specific situation, including any inadmissibility risks triggered by departure.
H-1B Dual Intent and PM-602-0199: What May 2026 Means for Your Green Card Plans — Adjustment of Status Navigator