What “sponsorship” means
- An employer (or program sponsor) offers you a job/placement and files immigration paperwork on your behalf (e.g., Form I-129 for work visas; labor condition application for certain categories; PERM/ETA-9089 and I-140 for employment green cards). USCISDOL
Fast matches by profile
- STEM/Professional job, bachelor’s+ → H-1B (lottery-capped, specialty occupation). Annual cap selection is now beneficiary-centric (FY-2025 onward). Typical cycle: employer registers you in March, earliest start Oct 1 if selected and approved. Consider cap-exempt roles at universities/nonprofit research orgs to skip the lottery. USCIS+1
- Canadian or Mexican professional → TN (offer letter + listed profession; generally faster, employer “sponsors” with job offer). Foreign Affairs Manual
- Australian professional → E-3 (like H-1B but Australia-only; needs LCA; typically no lottery). DOL
- Chile/Singapore national → H-1B1 (similar to H-1B; separate caps; often under-used). DOL
- Transferred from your company abroad (manager/executive/specialized knowledge) → L-1. USCISForeign Affairs Manual
- National/industry-level track record → O-1 (extraordinary ability) — strong evidence needed. USCIS
- Seasonal jobs → H-2A (agricultural) or H-2B (non-agricultural); employer must petition. USCISDOL
- Exchange programs (intern/trainee/teacher/research, etc.) → J-1 via a State-Dept-designated sponsor (not a direct employer petition). BridgeUSA+1
- Student in the U.S. finishing F-1 OPT → STEM OPT 24-month extension (employer must be E-Verify enrolled); many then move to H-1B/cap-exempt or PERM. E-VerifyUSCIS
Employer-sponsored green cards (permanent)
Common tracks:
- EB-1 (extraordinary ability, outstanding researcher/professor, multinational manager/executive; some can self-petition).
- EB-2 / EB-3 (advanced degree/exceptional ability; PERM labor certification and I-140 by employer).
- EB-2 NIW (national interest waiver) lets qualified applicants self-petition without PERM/job offer. USCIS+1DOL
What employers actually do (high level)
- H-1B / H-1B1 / E-3: file a Labor Condition Application (LCA) with DOL, then petition (or consular process for H-1B1/E-3). DOL+1
- L-1 / O-1 / H-2A / H-2B: file Form I-129 with evidence for the category. USCISDOL
- Green card via PERM: get a prevailing wage, run recruitment, then file ETA-9089 (PERM). After DOL certifies, employer files I-140. DOL
Quick decision helper
- I have a U.S. job offer in a tech/business/engineering role → Try H-1B; if not selected, look for cap-exempt (university/affiliated nonprofit/government research) employers as a bridge. USCIS
- I work for a multinational abroad → Ask HR about L-1 to a U.S. office. USCIS
- I’m Canadian/Mexican/Australian/Chilean/Singaporean → Consider TN / E-3 / H-1B1 first (faster, often simpler). Foreign Affairs ManualDOL+1
- I have major awards, publications, patents, or executive experience → Explore O-1 now and EB-1/EB-2 NIW in parallel. USCIS+1
If you tell me a few details—your citizenship, job field, years of experience, degree, and whether you already have a U.S. offer—I’ll map your best sponsorship path (work visa now + green-card plan) and the exact filings/timelines your employer would use.