गाइड

How to read an employer's H-1B record

Before you let an employer carry your visa, it helps to read their public filing record. Here's what the numbers mean and how to weigh them.

यह पृष्ठ अंग्रेज़ी में दिखाया गया है — पूरा अनुवाद अभी उपलब्ध नहीं है। अंग्रेज़ी संस्करण ही आधिकारिक है।

The signals

Denial rate: the share of USCIS petitions denied vs. the national baseline (~7%). A long, consistent filing history across many years is reassuring; a very thin record means little on its own and isn't evidence of wrongdoing.

LCA filings show what they've attested to paying and at what wage levels; a pattern of mostly Level I for senior roles is worth questioning. PERM filings indicate green-card sponsorship activity.

What it doesn't tell you

Filing volume is not a quality rating or an endorsement, and absence of records is not a verdict. Pair the public record with your own research — the company's registry, reviews, and direct questions about role, worksite, and who signs your paycheck.

अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले प्रश्न

What's a normal H-1B denial rate?
The national baseline is roughly 7% across all employers and years; much higher than that for an employer is worth a closer look.
Is a thin record a bad sign?
Not by itself. A new company, a recent legal-name change, or an employer that rarely files all produce thin records — it simply isn't strong evidence either way.

संबंधित गाइड

Educational summary, not legal advice. Figures come from official U.S. government data and may lag 1–3 months.