Section 01

What Is the National Interest Waiver?

Quick Answer

The National Interest Waiver (NIW) is an immigration benefit under INA § 203(b)(2)(B) that allows certain foreign nationals to obtain a U.S. green card without an employer sponsor or PERM labor certification. To qualify, a petitioner must demonstrate under the Matter of Dhanasar framework that their work has substantial merit and national importance, that they are well positioned to advance it, and that waiving standard requirements would benefit the United States.

The National Interest Waiver (NIW) falls under the EB-2 preference category, which is reserved for professionals with advanced degrees or individuals of exceptional ability. Normally, an EB-2 petition requires a U.S. employer to sponsor the foreign national and complete a lengthy Department of Labor certification (PERM) demonstrating that no qualified American worker is available. The NIW waives both of these requirements — hence the name — on the basis that the applicant's work is so beneficial to the United States that the standard process should be set aside.

The legal authority comes from the Immigration and Nationality Act, specifically INA § 203(b)(2)(B), which permits USCIS to grant the waiver in the national interest. The current adjudication standard is governed by the 2016 AAO precedent decision Matter of Dhanasar, 26 I&N Dec. 884 (AAO 2016), which replaced the older NYSDOT standard with a more flexible, three-prong framework.

In practical terms, an NIW petition means you file directly with USCIS as an individual, control your own case, and are not dependent on any single employer's willingness to sponsor or maintain your petition. This is a significant strategic advantage — particularly for researchers, entrepreneurs, and professionals in competitive or fast-moving fields.

Key Advantage

Unlike most employment-based green card paths, the NIW requires no job offer, no employer sponsor, and no PERM labor certification. You file for yourself.

Related: EB-2 vs EB-2 NIW — What's the Difference?
Section 02

Who Qualifies for the NIW?

Quick Answer

Any foreign national who qualifies as an EB-2 immigrant (advanced degree or exceptional ability) and can satisfy the three-prong Dhanasar test may apply for the NIW. There is no restriction by profession or nationality — USCIS has approved NIW petitions in fields ranging from academic research and medicine to entrepreneurship, engineering, and the arts.

The NIW is not limited to a specific profession or industry. USCIS has approved NIW petitions across an exceptionally wide range of fields, including academia, medicine, engineering, public health, technology, national security, entrepreneurship, education policy, environmental science, and the arts. What matters is not your title or field, but the nature, significance, and impact of your work — and how well you can document it.

That said, certain profiles appear with regularity in successful NIW petitions:

  • Academic researchers and scientists with strong publication records, citations, and peer recognition
  • STEM professionals working in areas identified as national priorities (AI, quantum computing, biodefense, clean energy)
  • Physicians — particularly those who commit to serving in medically underserved areas
  • Entrepreneurs and startup founders whose ventures address significant national challenges
  • Government researchers or contractors working on national security, defense, or public health
  • Engineers and technical professionals with patents, industry recognition, or evidence of substantial impact
  • Artists, writers, and cultural figures who can demonstrate broad national impact
  • Policy experts and economists working on issues of demonstrated national importance

What these profiles share is the ability to tell a clear, evidence-supported story: that their work matters at scale, that they are uniquely positioned to advance it, and that the U.S. benefits from granting the waiver. The NIW is ultimately a narrative and evidentiary exercise as much as a legal one.

Note on Self-Assessment

Many qualified candidates underestimate their eligibility, especially those mid-career who haven't yet accumulated large citation counts. USCIS evaluates potential and trajectory, not just past achievement. A consultation with an experienced NIW attorney is often the most valuable first step.

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Related: NIW Eligibility — Who Qualifies and Who Doesn't
Section 03

The Three-Prong Dhanasar Test Explained

Quick Answer

Under Matter of Dhanasar, 26 I&N Dec. 884 (AAO 2016), every NIW petition must satisfy three prongs: (1) the proposed endeavor has substantial merit and national importance; (2) the petitioner is well positioned to advance the proposed endeavor; and (3) on balance, it would benefit the United States to waive the job offer and labor certification requirements. Failing any single prong is grounds for denial.

Every NIW petition is evaluated against the framework established in the 2016 AAO precedent decision Matter of Dhanasar, which replaced the older NYSDOT standard. The Dhanasar framework is more flexible and more favorable to petitioners — but it requires a carefully crafted argument across three distinct prongs.

The Proposed Endeavor Has Substantial Merit and National Importance

USCIS must be convinced that the work itself — the field, the specific project, the contributions — has genuine, broad significance. "Substantial merit" can be shown in fields like science, technology, medicine, education, business, athletics, and the arts. "National importance" requires showing that the impact extends beyond a local or regional level, or that it addresses a recognized national priority. Work that affects large populations, underpins critical infrastructure, or addresses a problem explicitly identified by government bodies tends to satisfy this prong.

The Petitioner Is Well Positioned to Advance the Proposed Endeavor

Even if the work is nationally important, USCIS needs to be confident that you specifically are capable of advancing it. This is where your credentials, track record, citations, collaborations, awards, letters of support, and future plans come in. You must demonstrate not just past achievement, but a credible, evidence-backed path forward. USCIS will weigh your education, experience, past successes, support from experts in your field, and whether you have a plan to continue this work in the U.S.

On Balance, It Would Benefit the U.S. to Waive the Job Offer and Labor Certification

The final prong is where you argue directly that the standard requirements should be set aside. This is typically supported by showing that your work is too urgent, too unique, or too entrepreneurial to wait for an employer. It helps to show that requiring a job offer would be impractical (e.g., self-employed entrepreneurs, researchers switching institutions), or that the U.S. has a pressing need that your work uniquely addresses. USCIS weighs the national benefit of granting the waiver against the policy interest in protecting U.S. workers.

Strategy Note

Many petitioners write their NIW petition as a CV summary. The strongest petitions instead read as a legal argument: each prong is addressed directly, with specific evidence tied to specific points. Think of it as building a case for a judge, not writing a grant application.

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Related: How to Prove the Dhanasar Test for Your NIW Petition
Section 04

NIW Eligibility Criteria in Detail

Before the three-prong Dhanasar analysis even applies, a petitioner must first qualify as an EB-2 immigrant. This is a prerequisite. The EB-2 category has two pathways, and you must satisfy one of them:

Pathway 1: Advanced Degree Professional

You qualify if you hold a U.S. master's degree (or foreign equivalent) or higher in your field of endeavor. You may also qualify with a U.S. bachelor's degree (or foreign equivalent) plus five years of progressive post-baccalaureate experience in your specialty. The key word is "progressive" — your experience must show growth in responsibility and expertise, not just longevity.

Pathway 2: Exceptional Ability

You qualify if you can demonstrate exceptional ability — defined by USCIS as a degree of expertise significantly above that ordinarily encountered in your field. To establish this, you must satisfy at least three of the following six criteria:

  • An official academic record showing a degree relating to the area of exceptional ability
  • Letters from current or former employers documenting at least 10 years of full-time experience
  • A license or certification to practice your profession
  • Evidence that you have commanded a salary or remuneration demonstrating exceptional ability
  • Membership in professional associations that require outstanding achievement of their members
  • Recognition for achievements and significant contributions to your industry by peers, governmental entities, or professional or business organizations
Important

Meeting the EB-2 threshold is necessary but not sufficient. After establishing EB-2 qualification, the NIW argument — the three-prong Dhanasar analysis — must separately be made and supported with evidence. Both halves of the case need to be strong.

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Related: EB-2 Advanced Degree vs Exceptional Ability — Which Category Fits You?
Section 05

How to File an NIW Petition: Step-by-Step

The NIW petition is filed using Form I-140 (Immigrant Petition for Alien Workers), with the "National Interest Waiver" checkbox selected. As of a phased rollout beginning in 2022, premium processing (Form I-907) is available for an additional fee. The process from petition to green card involves six distinct stages:

01

Assess Your EB-2 and NIW Eligibility

Before filing anything, honestly evaluate whether you meet the EB-2 threshold (advanced degree or exceptional ability) and whether your work can satisfy all three Dhanasar prongs. Consult an immigration attorney if uncertain — a realistic assessment up front saves months of wasted effort.

02

Build Your Evidence Package

This is the most time-intensive part. Gather degrees, transcripts, publication records, citation data, expert support letters, awards, patent records, and media coverage. Your personal statement — sometimes called a "cover letter" or "self-petition letter" — ties all of this together into a coherent legal argument structured around the three Dhanasar prongs.

03

Prepare and File Form I-140

Complete Form I-140, pay the current filing fee of $715 (effective April 1, 2024; the fee varies for certain petitioner types — verify at uscis.gov before filing), and submit your entire evidence package to the USCIS service center with jurisdiction over your case.

04

Respond to Any Request for Evidence (RFE)

USCIS may issue a Request for Evidence (RFE) asking for additional information. You typically have 87 days to respond. A thorough, well-organized response substantially improves approval odds. Many NIW RFEs target Prong 2 (positioning) or Prong 3 (waiver justification).

05

Wait for I-140 Approval

Once USCIS approves your I-140, your priority date is established — the receipt date of your petition. This date determines your place in line for an immigrant visa number, which is required before the final green card can be granted.

06

Adjust Status or Consular Processing

If you are in the U.S. in valid nonimmigrant status, you may file Form I-485 (Adjustment of Status) once a visa number is available for your country of birth. If you are outside the U.S., you proceed through consular processing at a U.S. embassy. Both paths lead to permanent residence.

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See your personalized NIW filing timeline.
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Related: How to File Form I-140 for NIW — A Step-by-Step Guide
Section 06

Building a Strong NIW Evidence Package

The strength of your NIW case lives or dies in the evidence. USCIS adjudicators review hundreds of petitions; a well-organized, clearly labeled, and substantively rich evidence package stands out and reduces the chance of an RFE. Think of your evidence as building blocks for each prong of the Dhanasar test.

Below are the most commonly used and most impactful types of evidence, organized by what they tend to support:

Published Research & Citations Google Scholar printouts, Web of Science data, citation counts, h-index, and a narrative explaining the impact of your most-cited work. Essential for academic petitioners.
Expert Support Letters Letters from prominent researchers or practitioners in your field who can independently attest to your contributions. The more specific and detailed, the better. Avoid form letters.
Awards & Honors Documentation of competitive awards, fellowships, grants (especially federal grants like NSF, NIH, DOE), and other forms of peer recognition. Include selection criteria to show selectivity.
Peer Review Activity Evidence that you have been invited to peer-review articles for respected journals or serve on editorial boards. This demonstrates how the field views your expertise.
Patents Issued or pending patent documentation, plus evidence of adoption, licensing, or commercial impact. Strong for engineers, inventors, and product developers.
Media Coverage News articles, press releases, podcast appearances, conference invitations — anything showing that your work has attracted attention beyond your immediate professional circle.
Government & Policy Connections Evidence that your work aligns with national priorities — federal agency funding, policy citations, Congressional testimony, advisory roles, or collaboration with government bodies.
Future Work Plan A clear, specific description of what you intend to do in the U.S. and how it serves the national interest. Vague plans hurt petitions; detailed, credible plans help significantly.
Common Mistake

Submitting a pile of documents without a clear narrative thread is one of the most common errors in NIW petitions. Each piece of evidence should be labeled and explained in your personal statement, connecting it explicitly to the relevant Dhanasar prong. Don't make the adjudicator guess.

NextMiles
Find the evidence gaps in your NIW case.
NextMiles compares what you have against what USCIS has been approving in your field — and shows you exactly what's missing before you spend months building the wrong evidence.
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Related: NIW Evidence Checklist — What to Include in Your Petition
Section 07

NIW Processing Times and Timelines

Quick Answer

Standard NIW I-140 processing takes approximately 8–24 months. With premium processing (Form I-907), USCIS guarantees an initial action within 45 business days. For most countries (excluding India and China), the full process from I-140 filing to green card can take 12–24 months with premium processing. Indian and Chinese nationals may face multi-year waits for visa availability due to per-country caps.

Stage Estimated Time Notes
I-140 (Standard) ~8–24 months Varies by service center; check uscis.gov for current processing times
I-140 (Premium) 45 business days (~9–11 calendar weeks) Clock resets if RFE is issued; premium processing fee is $2,965
Visa availability (most countries) Current / minimal wait EB-2 dates are generally current for non-backlogged countries
Visa availability (India / China) Multi-year backlog, potentially very long Per-country caps create significant delays; consult Visa Bulletin monthly
I-485 Adjustment of Status ~8–24 months (after visa number available) Filed concurrently if visa dates are current; includes biometrics, interview if required
Total (best case, premium) ~12–24 months Non-backlogged countries; assumes no RFE and smooth adjustment

Priority Date and Visa Availability

After I-140 approval, your journey to a green card depends on your priority date and the monthly Visa Bulletin published by the U.S. Department of State. For most countries, EB-2 dates are current, meaning no significant wait. However, nationals of India and China face multi-year backlogs due to per-country caps on employment-based visas. Planning ahead and establishing an early priority date is critical for affected nationals.

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What does your green card timeline actually look like?
Processing times vary widely by country, service center, and case strength. NextMiles models your specific situation and shows a realistic, continuously updated timeline.
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Related: NIW Processing Times — What to Expect in 2026
Section 08

Premium Processing for the NIW

Premium processing for NIW I-140 petitions became available through a phased rollout beginning in 2022, a significant development for applicants who previously had to wait years for routine processing. Here's what you need to know:

How It Works

You file Form I-907 (Request for Premium Processing) alongside your I-140 petition (or separately if your petition is already pending). USCIS then commits to issuing an initial decision or action within 45 business days — approximately 9–11 calendar weeks.

Current Fee

The premium processing fee for EB-2 I-140 petitions is $2,965. This is in addition to the standard I-140 filing fee. Always verify current fees at uscis.gov before filing, as fees are updated periodically.

What Premium Processing Does — and Doesn't — Do

Premium processing guarantees a faster initial action on your I-140 — meaning an approval, denial, RFE, or Notice of Intent to Deny within 45 business days. It does not guarantee approval. If USCIS issues an RFE, the 45-day clock resets after you respond, so the total time can still stretch to 4–6 months if an RFE is involved. Premium processing does not speed up the subsequent I-485 Adjustment of Status or consular processing steps.

Is It Worth It?

For most petitioners, yes. The certainty of a faster outcome is worth the additional cost, especially if you are planning career moves, job changes, or travel that depends on your immigration status. The peace of mind alone is significant when standard processing can stretch 1–2 years.

NextMiles
Is your case strong enough to file with premium processing?
Premium processing costs $2,965 and resets if you get an RFE. NextMiles helps you assess readiness before you commit — so you're not paying for speed on a petition that isn't ready.
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Related: NIW Premium Processing — Is It Worth It?
Section 09

NIW for Specific Professions

While the NIW framework applies broadly, certain professions have well-established pathways and specific considerations worth understanding before you file.

Researchers & Scientists

The most common NIW profile. Citation impact, peer review activity, awards, and expert letters are the primary evidence. Strong STEM alignment with national priorities (AI, clean energy, biomedical research) helps significantly with Prong 1.

Physicians

Physicians have a special pathway under INA § 203(b)(2)(B)(ii): agreeing to work full-time in a Health Professional Shortage Area (HPSA) or Veterans Affairs facility can substitute for the Dhanasar analysis. Consult an attorney to evaluate both routes.

Entrepreneurs & Founders

A growing and increasingly successful category. Evidence should include company financials, job creation, funding raised, patents, media coverage, and letters from investors or industry experts. A compelling future work plan is especially important here.

Engineers & Technical Professionals

Patents, technical publications, conference presentations, and expert letters are core evidence. Government contracts, national security clearances, and work at federally funded research facilities strengthen Prong 1 considerably.

Educators & Policy Experts

Focus evidence on national scale of impact: federal grants, curriculum adoption, legislative citations, policy influence, and expert recognition. Local or state-level impact alone is generally insufficient for Prong 1.

Artists & Cultural Figures

Less common but approved. Must demonstrate national-scale impact, not merely commercial success. Evidence of cultural influence, government arts funding, critical recognition, and international representation helps significantly.

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NextMiles pulls from real AAO decisions and approved petitions to show you what evidence profile, framing, and prong arguments have worked for people in your exact profession.
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Related: NIW for Researchers and Scientists
Related: NIW for Entrepreneurs
Related: NIW for Engineers & Technical Professionals
Section 10

Common Reasons for NIW Denial and RFEs

Understanding why NIW petitions fail is as important as knowing what makes them succeed. Denials and RFEs are common when petitions are not carefully constructed.

Most Common RFE Triggers

  • Weak Prong 1 framing: Describing work that is regionally or institutionally important, not nationally important. USCIS looks for evidence that the work affects the country broadly, not just a local community or a single research institution.
  • Insufficient positioning evidence (Prong 2): Submitting a CV without enough third-party validation. USCIS wants independent confirmation — letters from people who have no professional obligation to praise you are far more persuasive than colleagues or supervisors.
  • Unconvincing waiver justification (Prong 3): Failing to explain specifically why the job offer and labor certification requirements should be set aside. Simply stating that your work is important is not enough.
  • Generic support letters: Letters that read as form templates, praise the petitioner in vague terms, and fail to address specific contributions with specificity and authority.
  • Low citation count without explanation: Researchers in applied fields, newer graduates, or those in non-traditional academic paths may have low citation counts. Failing to contextualize these in light of field norms is a common error.
  • Vague or implausible future work plan: A future plan that doesn't tie clearly to established U.S. national interests, or that reads as generic rather than specific, weakens Prong 3 considerably.

Responding to an RFE

If you receive an RFE, read it carefully. USCIS will specify exactly what evidence is missing or insufficient. Your response should address each point directly, providing new evidence where possible and bolstering existing evidence with stronger documentation or expert context. An attorney experienced in NIW RFE responses can be invaluable here — a weak RFE response can turn an otherwise approvable case into a denial.

On Denial

A denial is not necessarily the end. You may file a motion to reopen or reconsider (Form I-290B), or appeal to the AAO. You may also refile with stronger evidence if your situation has materially changed. Consult an attorney before deciding on the best path forward after a denial.

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Find your weak spots before USCIS does.
Most RFEs are predictable. NextMiles identifies the prongs most likely to draw scrutiny in your specific case and tells you what to strengthen before you file.
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Related: How to Respond to an NIW RFE
Section 11

NIW vs. EB-1A Extraordinary Ability: Which Should You File?

Many strong candidates qualify — or come close to qualifying — for both the NIW and the EB-1A (Extraordinary Ability) category. Choosing between them, or deciding to file both simultaneously, is a strategic decision that depends on your evidence profile and goals.

Factor NIW (EB-2) EB-1A (Extraordinary Ability)
Evidence standard Substantial merit, national importance, well-positioned, waiver justified (Dhanasar) Extraordinary ability: sustained national/international acclaim (meet 3 of 10 criteria)
Job offer required? No No
Degree required? Yes (advanced degree or exceptional ability) No
Visa priority date EB-2 (slightly longer backlog for some countries) EB-1 (priority category, shorter waits)
Typical evidence strength needed Moderate-to-high; newer professionals can qualify High; requires top-of-field recognition
Best for Researchers, professionals, entrepreneurs with strong but not elite profiles Truly elite professionals: major award winners, widely cited figures, nationally recognized experts
Filing both simultaneously? Possible and often advisable for strong candidates. Two approved petitions, two priority dates. EB-1A approval can be used for a faster green card path while EB-2 priority date accumulates.

The bottom line: if your evidence is truly at the level of the top few percent of your field, EB-1A may be the better primary vehicle. If you are well-credentialed and impactful but not nationally famous in your field, the NIW is typically the right path. Many strong candidates file both and let the approvals decide.

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NIW or EB-1A — which path fits your profile?
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Related: NIW vs EB-1A — Which Green Card Path Is Right for You?
Section 12

Frequently Asked Questions About the NIW

What is the National Interest Waiver?
The National Interest Waiver (NIW) is an immigration benefit under INA § 203(b)(2)(B) that allows certain foreign nationals to obtain a U.S. green card without an employer sponsor or PERM labor certification. It is available under the EB-2 preference category, and adjudicated under the three-prong framework established in Matter of Dhanasar, 26 I&N Dec. 884 (AAO 2016).
What are the three prongs of the Dhanasar test?
Under Matter of Dhanasar, a petitioner must show: (1) the proposed endeavor has substantial merit and national importance; (2) the petitioner is well positioned to advance the proposed endeavor; and (3) on balance, it would benefit the United States to waive the job offer and labor certification requirements. Failing any single prong results in denial.
Can I file an NIW without a lawyer?
Yes — NIW is a self-petition, and there is no legal requirement to use an attorney. Some candidates with strong writing skills, legal literacy, and clear evidence profiles file successfully on their own. That said, the NIW petition is a complex legal argument, not just a document assembly exercise. The majority of successful petitioners use experienced immigration attorneys, particularly for drafting the personal statement and structuring the evidence around the Dhanasar framework. If your profile is strong but your petition is weak, you may get an RFE or denial that could have been avoided.
Can I change jobs after my NIW I-140 is approved?
Yes, with important caveats. Unlike employer-sponsored green cards, NIW I-140 approval is not tied to a specific employer — it's tied to your proposed endeavor. You may change employers, go independent, or change institutions as long as you remain working in the same or a similar field. However, if you change to a completely unrelated career, USCIS could view this as abandonment of the stated endeavor, which could complicate future adjustment of status filings.
Does the NIW require a job offer?
No — the entire point of the NIW is to waive the job offer and labor certification requirements under INA § 203(b)(2)(B). You can file as a self-petitioner with no employer involvement whatsoever. You do not need to be employed by a U.S. company at the time of filing, though you should have a credible, detailed plan for continuing your work in the U.S.
Can entrepreneurs apply for the NIW?
Yes, and USCIS has become increasingly receptive to entrepreneur petitions in recent years. The key is demonstrating that your startup or business venture addresses a genuine national challenge, that you are the right person to advance it (through track record, investment, traction), and that requiring standard job offer and PERM processes would be impractical for an entrepreneur. Evidence typically includes funding raised, job creation, patents, revenue, and letters from investors or industry experts.
What happens if my NIW petition is denied?
A denial is not final. You have several options: file a Motion to Reopen (if there was new evidence or a factual error), a Motion to Reconsider (if you believe USCIS misapplied the law), or appeal to the AAO. You may also refile a new I-140 with stronger evidence, particularly if your professional record has significantly advanced since the original filing. Consult an experienced immigration attorney before choosing a path, as the right response depends heavily on the reason for denial.
How long does the NIW process take from start to green card?
For applicants from most countries (excluding India and China), the total process with premium processing can take as little as 12–24 months from filing the I-140 to receiving the green card. For Indian and Chinese nationals, I-140 approval can happen quickly, but the wait for an available visa number may be multi-year — potentially very long — due to per-country caps. Planning ahead and establishing an early priority date is critical for affected nationals.
Do I need to be in the United States to file an NIW?
No. You can file the I-140 petition from anywhere in the world. If you are outside the U.S. when your visa number becomes available, you proceed through consular processing at a U.S. embassy or consulate. If you are in the U.S. in a valid nonimmigrant status, you can file Form I-485 (Adjustment of Status) concurrently or once your priority date is current.
What is the NIW approval rate?
USCIS does not publish category-specific NIW approval rates. Based on attorney reports and advocacy data, NIW approval rates are generally favorable — estimated broadly in the range of 70–90% for well-prepared petitions at experienced firms — but this varies significantly by profession, country of chargeability, and quality of the petition. The single greatest predictor of approval is the quality and organization of the evidence package and the strength of the legal argument.
Related: NIW Self-Petition — Can You File Without a Lawyer?
Related: NIW Approval Rates — What the Data Shows
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Section 13

Know Exactly Where You Stand — Before You File

Most NIW candidates spend months trying to answer two questions on their own: Am I ready to file? and What do I need to build before I am? The answer depends on dozens of variables — your field, your evidence profile, current USCIS adjudication trends, and how your credentials compare to recently approved cases. That's a hard problem to solve with a spreadsheet or a single attorney consultation.

"The strongest NIW petitions aren't filed when someone feels ready — they're filed when the evidence actually aligns with what USCIS has been approving."

What NextMiles Does

NextMiles is an AI planning system built specifically for high-skilled immigrants navigating complex visa paths like the NIW. It turns your immigration goal into a personalized, continuously updated roadmap — grounded in real case data, not generic advice.

The system integrates four inputs simultaneously:

  • Real AAO decisions and approved NIW cases — your profile is compared against petitioners in similar fields who were approved, so you understand concretely what the bar looks like for someone like you
  • Real-time policy and adjudication changes — when USCIS shifts how it evaluates a prong, or processing times move, your plan updates to reflect it
  • Your evolving credentials — as you publish, get cited, win grants, or receive new recognition, those achievements are factored into your roadmap and readiness score
  • Your personal profile and timeline goals — the plan is built around where you are, not a generic template

What You Get

NextMiles shows you which visa paths are viable for your profile right now, what evidence gaps exist between where you are and what USCIS has been approving, and what specific actions to prioritize — in what order, and by when. As conditions change or you add new achievements, the roadmap updates automatically.

On Legal Representation

NextMiles focuses on planning and decision support — not legal representation. When you're ready to file, the platform connects you with vetted immigration attorneys who specialize in your category. You arrive at that conversation knowing exactly where you stand.

Who It's Built For

NextMiles is designed for high-skilled immigrants who are serious about their path and want more than a checklist. If you're a researcher trying to understand whether your citation profile is NIW-ready, an engineer weighing NIW against EB-1A, or an entrepreneur who doesn't know where to start — the platform gives you a concrete, data-grounded answer.

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No templates. No guesswork. A personalized plan built from actual USCIS decisions — updated as your credentials grow.

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Section 14

Glossary of NIW Key Terms

The following definitions cover the core legal terms used throughout this guide. These are drawn from USCIS policy, the INA, and AAO precedent decisions.

National Interest Waiver (NIW)
An immigration benefit under INA § 203(b)(2)(B) that permits USCIS to waive the job offer and PERM labor certification requirements for an EB-2 petitioner whose work is deemed to be in the national interest of the United States.
EB-2 (Employment-Based Second Preference)
The second-tier employment-based immigrant visa category, available to professionals with an advanced degree or individuals with exceptional ability. The NIW is a subcategory of EB-2.
Matter of Dhanasar
The 2016 AAO precedent decision (Matter of Dhanasar, 26 I&N Dec. 884 (AAO 2016)) that established the current three-prong test for NIW adjudication, replacing the prior NYSDOT standard. This decision is binding on all USCIS officers adjudicating NIW petitions.
Form I-140
Immigrant Petition for Alien Workers — the USCIS form used to file for most employment-based green card categories, including the NIW. The NIW box must be checked to invoke national interest waiver consideration.
PERM Labor Certification
A process administered by the Department of Labor (DOL) in which a U.S. employer must demonstrate that no qualified U.S. worker is available to fill a job before sponsoring a foreign national for an employment-based green card. The NIW waives this requirement.
Priority Date
The date on which USCIS receives a petitioner's I-140 petition. This date determines the petitioner's place in the visa queue. For backlogged countries (India, China), the priority date must be "current" in the monthly Visa Bulletin before adjustment of status can proceed.
Premium Processing
An optional USCIS service (filed via Form I-907) that guarantees USCIS will issue an initial action — approval, denial, RFE, or NOID — on an I-140 petition within 45 business days. It is available for NIW I-140 petitions following the phased rollout beginning in 2022.
Request for Evidence (RFE)
A USCIS notice requesting that a petitioner submit additional documentation or clarification before a decision is made. The petitioner typically has 87 days to respond. An RFE is not a denial; a thorough response can result in approval.
Adjustment of Status (Form I-485)
The process by which a foreign national already in the United States converts their nonimmigrant status to lawful permanent residence (green card status) without leaving the country. Available once an I-140 is approved and a visa number is current.
Consular Processing
The pathway by which a foreign national obtains an immigrant visa at a U.S. embassy or consulate abroad, rather than adjusting status inside the United States. Used by NIW petitioners who are outside the U.S. when their visa number becomes available.
Administrative Appeals Office (AAO)
The USCIS body that issues binding precedent decisions on immigration petitions, including NIW cases. The Dhanasar decision was issued by the AAO. Petitioners may appeal a USCIS denial to the AAO via Form I-290B.
Proposed Endeavor
The specific work, project, or professional activity that a petitioner intends to pursue in the United States. Under Dhanasar, the proposed endeavor — not just the petitioner's field generally — must have substantial merit and national importance.
Exceptional Ability (EB-2 pathway)
A degree of expertise significantly above that ordinarily encountered in a given field, as defined under 8 CFR § 204.5(k)(2). An EB-2 petitioner who does not hold an advanced degree may qualify through exceptional ability by meeting at least three of six specified criteria.
Health Professional Shortage Area (HPSA)
A geographic area or population group designated by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) as having insufficient access to primary care, mental health, or dental care providers. Physicians who commit to serving in an HPSA may qualify for the NIW under the special physician waiver pathway in INA § 203(b)(2)(B)(ii).
Section 15

Sources & Legal Citations

This guide is based on primary legal sources, USCIS policy, and applicable federal regulations. The following citations are the foundational authorities for the NIW framework described on this page.

  • INA § 203(b)(2)(B) — Immigration and Nationality Act, Section 203(b)(2)(B): Statutory authority for the National Interest Waiver; permits USCIS to waive the job offer and labor certification requirements "in the national interest." 8 U.S.C. § 1153(b)(2)(B).
  • Matter of Dhanasar, 26 I&N Dec. 884 (AAO 2016) — Binding AAO precedent decision establishing the current three-prong framework for adjudicating NIW petitions. Replaced the prior standard set in Matter of New York State Dep't of Transportation (NYSDOT), 22 I&N Dec. 215 (Acting Comm'r 1998).
  • 8 CFR § 204.5(k) — Code of Federal Regulations governing EB-2 petitions, including the definition of "exceptional ability" and the six criteria used to establish it.
  • INA § 203(b)(2)(B)(ii) — Special physician NIW pathway: physicians who commit to full-time service in a Health Professional Shortage Area (HPSA) or Veterans Affairs facility for a specified period.
  • USCIS Policy Manual, Volume 6, Part F — USCIS adjudication guidance on employment-based immigrant petitions including the NIW. Available at uscis.gov/policy-manual.
  • Form I-140 Instructions (current edition) — USCIS instructions for Immigrant Petition for Alien Workers. Available at uscis.gov/i-140.
  • Form I-907 Instructions (current edition) — USCIS instructions for Request for Premium Processing Service. Available at uscis.gov/i-907.
  • U.S. Department of State Visa Bulletin — Monthly publication tracking priority date availability for employment-based categories. Available at travel.state.gov.