US June Visa Bulletin 2026: India's green card line just got longer, EB categories hit the hardest - check details

US June Visa Bulletin 2026: India's green card line just got longer, EB categories hit the hardest - check details

Released by the US Department of State, the bulletin shows that EB-1 and EB-2 India Final Action Dates have moved backwards sharply, signalling rising demand pressure and tighter visa availability in heavily backlogged categories

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June 2026 Visa Bulletin: India's EB-1 and EB-2 retrogress as green card wait deepensJune 2026 Visa Bulletin: India's EB-1 and EB-2 retrogress as green card wait deepens
Sonali
  • May 14, 2026,
  • Updated May 14, 2026 12:48 PM IST

The June 2026 US Visa Bulletin has delivered a setback for Indian green card applicants, with major retrogression in key employment-based categories after months of gradual forward movement.

Released by the US Department of State, the bulletin shows that EB-1 and EB-2 India Final Action Dates have moved backwards sharply, signalling rising demand pressure and tighter visa availability in heavily backlogged categories.

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While some family-sponsored categories continued to inch forward and EB-3 saw limited progress, the June bulletin largely marks a reversal of the momentum Indian professionals had seen earlier in 2026.

Employment-based green cards: EB-1 and EB-2 move backwards

For Indian professionals waiting in the employment-based green card queue, June brings one of the biggest setbacks in recent months.

Employment-based Final Action Dates – India (June 2026)

PreferenceCategoryMay 2026June 2026
EB-1Priority workers01Apr2315Dec22
EB-2Advanced degree/professionals15Jul1401Sep13
EB-3Skilled workers & professionals15Nov1315Dec13
Other WorkersUnskilled workers15Nov1315Dec13
EB-4Special immigrants15Jul2215Jul22
EB-5 UnreservedEB-5 (unreserved)01May2201May22

 

According to the State Department, India’s EB-1 category retrogressed by nearly three and a half months, while EB-2 moved back by more than ten months.

The rollback comes after steady movement earlier this year had raised hopes among Indian applicants stuck in decade-long green card backlogs.

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At the same time, EB-3 and Other Workers categories moved ahead modestly by one month, offering limited relief for some applicants.

The State Department also noted that EB-5 Unreserved categories for India remained at May 1, 2022, but warned that the category could still face retrogression or become unavailable later because of rising demand.

Filing dates remain unchanged

Unlike the Final Action chart, the Dates for Filing chart remained unchanged across all employment-based categories for June.

Employment-based Dates for Filing – India (June 2026)

PreferenceCategoryMay 2026June 2026
EB-1Priority workers01Dec231Dec23
EB-2Advanced degree/professionals15Jan1515Jan15
EB-3Skilled workers & professionals15Jan1515Jan15
Other WorkersUnskilled workers15Jan1515Jan15
EB-4Special immigrants1Jan231Jan23
EB-5 UnreservedEB-5 (unreserved)01May2401May24

 

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The State Department said the filing chart would remain unchanged for all countries and categories.

USCIS is expected to separately announce whether adjustment-of-status applicants can use the Final Action Dates chart or the Dates for Filing chart for June filings.

For many applicants, filing eligibility remains important because it can provide access to benefits such as Employment Authorization Documents (EADs), Advance Parole and job flexibility while awaiting final green card approval.

Family-sponsored categories show selective movement

While employment-based applicants saw setbacks, some family-sponsored categories for India recorded limited forward movement.

Family-sponsored Final Action Dates – India (June 2026)

PreferenceCategoryMay 2026June 2026
F1Unmarried sons/daughters of U.S. citizens01Sep171Sep17
F2ASpouses & children of LPRs1Aug2401Jan25
F2BUnmarried sons/daughters (21+) of LPRs22May1722Sep17
F3Married sons/daughters of U.S. citizens15Feb1215Feb12
F4Brothers/sisters of adult U.S. citizens1Nov061Nov06

 

Family-sponsored Dates for Filing – India (June 2026)

PreferenceCategoryMay 2026June 2026
F1Unmarried sons/daughters of U.S. citizens01Oct181Oct18
F2ASpouses & children of LPRsC (Current)C
F2BUnmarried sons/daughters (21+) of LPRs1Jan1822Mar18
F3Married sons/daughters of U.S. citizens8Dec128Dec12
F4Brothers/sisters of adult U.S. citizens15Dec0615Dec06

The F2A category continued to remain current for filing purposes, allowing eligible applicants to continue submitting paperwork despite broader backlog pressures.

What June’s bulletin means for Indian applicants

The June Visa Bulletin highlights how fragile green card movement remains for India’s employment-based applicants.

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Earlier bulletins in 2026 had shown notable gains in EB-2 and EB-3 categories, creating optimism that older applications were gradually being cleared. June’s retrogression, however, suggests visa demand has again outpaced available numbers.

For Indian professionals, particularly those in the EB-1 and EB-2 categories, the rollback means longer waits for final approvals despite already extensive queues.

At the same time, the unchanged filing dates preserve procedural flexibility for many applicants who may still be able to submit adjustment-of-status applications and secure interim immigration benefits.

The June bulletin therefore reflects a mixed picture: limited movement in family categories, small gains in EB-3, but a significant setback for highly skilled Indian professionals waiting in the employment-based green card line.

The June 2026 US Visa Bulletin has delivered a setback for Indian green card applicants, with major retrogression in key employment-based categories after months of gradual forward movement.

Released by the US Department of State, the bulletin shows that EB-1 and EB-2 India Final Action Dates have moved backwards sharply, signalling rising demand pressure and tighter visa availability in heavily backlogged categories.

Advertisement

While some family-sponsored categories continued to inch forward and EB-3 saw limited progress, the June bulletin largely marks a reversal of the momentum Indian professionals had seen earlier in 2026.

Employment-based green cards: EB-1 and EB-2 move backwards

For Indian professionals waiting in the employment-based green card queue, June brings one of the biggest setbacks in recent months.

Employment-based Final Action Dates – India (June 2026)

PreferenceCategoryMay 2026June 2026
EB-1Priority workers01Apr2315Dec22
EB-2Advanced degree/professionals15Jul1401Sep13
EB-3Skilled workers & professionals15Nov1315Dec13
Other WorkersUnskilled workers15Nov1315Dec13
EB-4Special immigrants15Jul2215Jul22
EB-5 UnreservedEB-5 (unreserved)01May2201May22

 

According to the State Department, India’s EB-1 category retrogressed by nearly three and a half months, while EB-2 moved back by more than ten months.

The rollback comes after steady movement earlier this year had raised hopes among Indian applicants stuck in decade-long green card backlogs.

Advertisement

DON'T MISS: US waives $15,000 visa bond requirement for FIFA ticket holders from 50 flagged countries- Check full list

At the same time, EB-3 and Other Workers categories moved ahead modestly by one month, offering limited relief for some applicants.

The State Department also noted that EB-5 Unreserved categories for India remained at May 1, 2022, but warned that the category could still face retrogression or become unavailable later because of rising demand.

Filing dates remain unchanged

Unlike the Final Action chart, the Dates for Filing chart remained unchanged across all employment-based categories for June.

Employment-based Dates for Filing – India (June 2026)

PreferenceCategoryMay 2026June 2026
EB-1Priority workers01Dec231Dec23
EB-2Advanced degree/professionals15Jan1515Jan15
EB-3Skilled workers & professionals15Jan1515Jan15
Other WorkersUnskilled workers15Jan1515Jan15
EB-4Special immigrants1Jan231Jan23
EB-5 UnreservedEB-5 (unreserved)01May2401May24

 

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The State Department said the filing chart would remain unchanged for all countries and categories.

USCIS is expected to separately announce whether adjustment-of-status applicants can use the Final Action Dates chart or the Dates for Filing chart for June filings.

For many applicants, filing eligibility remains important because it can provide access to benefits such as Employment Authorization Documents (EADs), Advance Parole and job flexibility while awaiting final green card approval.

Family-sponsored categories show selective movement

While employment-based applicants saw setbacks, some family-sponsored categories for India recorded limited forward movement.

Family-sponsored Final Action Dates – India (June 2026)

PreferenceCategoryMay 2026June 2026
F1Unmarried sons/daughters of U.S. citizens01Sep171Sep17
F2ASpouses & children of LPRs1Aug2401Jan25
F2BUnmarried sons/daughters (21+) of LPRs22May1722Sep17
F3Married sons/daughters of U.S. citizens15Feb1215Feb12
F4Brothers/sisters of adult U.S. citizens1Nov061Nov06

 

Family-sponsored Dates for Filing – India (June 2026)

PreferenceCategoryMay 2026June 2026
F1Unmarried sons/daughters of U.S. citizens01Oct181Oct18
F2ASpouses & children of LPRsC (Current)C
F2BUnmarried sons/daughters (21+) of LPRs1Jan1822Mar18
F3Married sons/daughters of U.S. citizens8Dec128Dec12
F4Brothers/sisters of adult U.S. citizens15Dec0615Dec06

The F2A category continued to remain current for filing purposes, allowing eligible applicants to continue submitting paperwork despite broader backlog pressures.

What June’s bulletin means for Indian applicants

The June Visa Bulletin highlights how fragile green card movement remains for India’s employment-based applicants.

Advertisement

Earlier bulletins in 2026 had shown notable gains in EB-2 and EB-3 categories, creating optimism that older applications were gradually being cleared. June’s retrogression, however, suggests visa demand has again outpaced available numbers.

For Indian professionals, particularly those in the EB-1 and EB-2 categories, the rollback means longer waits for final approvals despite already extensive queues.

At the same time, the unchanged filing dates preserve procedural flexibility for many applicants who may still be able to submit adjustment-of-status applications and secure interim immigration benefits.

The June bulletin therefore reflects a mixed picture: limited movement in family categories, small gains in EB-3, but a significant setback for highly skilled Indian professionals waiting in the employment-based green card line.

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