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L-2 EAD vs H-4 EAD: Why They're Completely Different in 2026

L-2 and H-4 spouses both need work authorization, but their paths differ completely. One works immediately. The other waits months.


If you're the spouse of an L-1 or H-1B visa holder, understanding the difference between L-2 and H-4 work authorization directly affects when you can work, how long you'll wait, and how vulnerable your career is to policy changes. This guide compares L-2 EAD and H-4 EAD in 2026, including three major policy shifts that made the gap even wider.

L-2 EAD vs H-4 EAD: Why They're Completely Different in 2026

L-2 and H-4 spouses both need work authorization in the U.S., but their paths could not be more different. One can start working immediately. The other may wait months with no guarantee.

If you're the spouse of an L-1 or H-1B visa holder, understanding the difference between L-2 and H-4 work authorization isn't just academic. It directly affects when you can work, how long you'll wait, and how vulnerable your career is to policy changes. This guide breaks down exactly how L-2 EAD and H-4 EAD work authorization compare in 2026, including three major policy shifts from 2025 that made the gap between them even wider. If you're on an H-4 visa and trying to figure out your options, our H-4 EAD guide covers the application process. And if you want to know whether you qualify, try our free H-4 EAD eligibility checker.

Quick Comparison: L-2 vs H-4 Work Authorization

Before getting into the details, here's what you need to know at a glance. This table captures the most important differences between L-2 and H-4 work authorization in 2026.

FactorL-2 SpouseH-4 Spouse
Legal basisStatutory: INA § 214(c)(2)(E)Regulatory: 2015 DHS rule, 8 CFR § 274a.12(c)(26)
Work authorization typeAutomatic (incident to status)Must apply for and receive EAD
EAD required to work?No. L-2S I-94 is enoughYes. EAD card is mandatory
EAD category code(a)(18), optional(c)(26), required
What triggers eligibilityValid L-2 spousal statusH-1B spouse's approved I-140 or AC21 extension
Time to start workingImmediately (with L-2S I-94)2 to 12+ months (EAD processing)
Filing fee$0 if using I-94; $520/$470 if filing optional EAD$520 paper / $470 online
Auto-extension (post Oct 2025)Irrelevant. Work auth tied to status, not EADEliminated. Severe work gap risk
I-9 documentationI-94 (List C) + ID (List B); or optional EAD (List A)EAD card only (List A)
Political vulnerabilityLow. Statutory basisHigher. Regulatory, can be rescinded
Self-employmentYes, unrestrictedYes, unrestricted

That comparison reveals the core issue: L-2 work authorization is built into the visa itself. H-4 work authorization requires a separate application, separate approval, and depends on your spouse's employer having filed specific immigration paperwork.

The Fundamental Divide: Statutory vs. Regulatory Work Authorization

The single most important difference between L-2 and H-4 work authorization is their legal foundation. And in 2026, this distinction matters more than ever.

L-2 spouses have statutory work authorization. Congress passed Public Law 107-125, which directs the Secretary of Homeland Security to authorize employment for L-2 spouses. In November 2021, USCIS settled the class-action case Shergill v. Mayorkas and formally recognized that L-2 spouses are "employment authorized incident to status." That means your right to work flows automatically from holding valid L-2 spousal status. No application needed. No waiting.

H-4 spouses have regulatory work authorization. The H-4 EAD program was created by a 2015 Obama-era regulation (80 FR 10284). It has no direct statutory mandate. The regulation at 8 CFR § 274a.12(c)(26) lists H-4 spouses as eligible to apply for work authorization. That word "apply" is the key difference. You must file Form I-765, pay the fee, and wait for USCIS to approve it.

Why does this matter? Because a statute is much harder to change than a regulation. Eliminating L-2 spousal work authorization would require an act of Congress. Eliminating H-4 EAD could be done through a new rule from the executive branch. The H-4 EAD program has already survived one attempt at rescission and a decade-long legal challenge that ended only when the Supreme Court denied certiorari in *Save Jobs USA v. DHS* on October 14, 2025. The program is on its firmest legal footing ever, but it remains more vulnerable than L-2 work authorization by design.

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L-2 Work Authorization in 2026: No EAD Needed

Since the Shergill settlement took effect, L-2 spouses no longer need an EAD card to work. Starting January 30, 2022, USCIS and CBP began issuing I-94 arrival records with a new "L-2S" Class of Admission code. The "S" distinguishes spouses (who can work) from children (who cannot).

Here's what this means in practice:

To start working as an L-2 spouse, you present your unexpired I-94 showing the L-2S designation as a List C document on Form I-9, plus a List B identity document like a driver's license. That's it. No EAD application, no filing fee, no months of waiting.

If you are truly self-employed (meaning there is no employer-employee relationship), you generally don't complete Form I-9 because Form I-9 is an employer requirement for employees. But you may still need your I-94 (and correct L-2S annotation) as evidence of work authorization for other purposes (for example, licensing, onboarding with clients, or E-Verify-related questions).

The optional EAD. L-2 spouses can still apply for an EAD under category (a)(18) if they want a single List A document that combines identity and work authorization. The filing fee is $520 by paper. (USCIS lists a lower online fee for Form I-765 in general, but USCIS does not currently list category (a)(18) as eligible for online filing.) But this is a convenience, not a requirement.

H-4 EAD in 2026: The I-140 Requirement and Growing Challenges

H-4 work authorization is a completely different situation. You cannot work at all until USCIS approves your EAD application. And you can only apply if your H-1B spouse meets specific criteria.

Two Eligibility Pathways

Pathway 1: Approved I-140. Your H-1B spouse is the beneficiary of an approved Form I-140 (Immigrant Petition for Alien Workers). The I-140 doesn't have to be filed by the current employer. This is the most common pathway (8 CFR § 214.2(h)(9)(iv)).

Pathway 2: AC21 extension beyond 6 years. Your H-1B spouse has been granted an extension beyond the standard 6-year H-1B limit under sections 106(a)/(b) of the American Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century Act. This requires a PERM labor certification or I-140 to have been filed at least 365 days before the 6th-year end. Approval isn't needed, just filing.

If you're not sure which pathway applies to your situation, Immiva's H-4 EAD eligibility checker walks you through it step by step.

The Application Reality

Filing requires Form I-765 under category (c)(26). The fee is $520 by paper. (USCIS lists a lower online fee for Form I-765 in general, but USCIS does not currently list category (c)(26) as eligible for online filing.) Processing time varies widely and USCIS updates posted timelines regularly; check the USCIS Processing Times tool for the latest current estimate for your service center. No premium processing is available for H-4 EAD (c)(26) applications.

Once approved, the H-4 EAD provides unrestricted work authorization. You can work for any employer, be self-employed, start a business, or work multiple jobs. You can check your EAD application status online through USCIS.

Three 2025 Policy Changes That Made the Gap Wider

Three policy shifts in 2025 made H-4 EAD holders significantly more vulnerable while barely affecting L-2 spouses. This is where the statutory vs. regulatory divide becomes painfully real.

1. Automatic EAD Extensions Were Eliminated (October 30, 2025)

DHS published an Interim Final Rule ending the 540-day automatic EAD extension for renewal applications filed on or after October 30, 2025. Previously, if you filed your renewal on time, you could keep working while USCIS processed it. That safety net is gone.

Impact on H-4 EAD holders: Devastating. If your EAD expires and your renewal hasn't been approved, you must stop working. With processing times averaging 5 months, that's a real and likely work gap. This is a major concern for anyone renewing their H-4 EAD in 2026.

Impact on L-2 spouses: Minimal. Your work authorization comes from your L-2S status, not from an EAD card. As long as your L-2 status is valid, you can work regardless of what happens to EAD extension policies.

2. Bundled Processing Expired (January 18, 2025)

The Edakunni v. Mayorkas settlement had required USCIS to process H-4 and L-2 applications together with the principal's H-1B or L-1 petition. When this settlement expired on January 18, 2025, standalone H-4 EAD processing slowed to 5 to 7+ months because applications are no longer guaranteed to be adjudicated alongside the principal's case.

3. No Premium Processing for H-4 EAD

There is still no premium processing option for standalone H-4 EAD applications. L-2 spouses don't need premium processing because they don't need an EAD to work. H-4 spouses are stuck waiting.

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Switching Between L-2 and H-4: The Work Gap Problem

One of the most painful scenarios happens when an L-1 principal switches to H-1B status. The L-2 spouse's automatic work authorization ends immediately because L-2 status ends when the principal is no longer on L-1. The spouse becomes an H-4, and suddenly they need an EAD to work.

Here's what the timeline typically looks like:

Day 1: L-1 principal's H-1B takes effect. L-2 spouse becomes H-4 spouse (through a change of status filing via Form I-539).

Day 1 onward: H-4 spouse must stop working. They file Form I-765 for an H-4 EAD.

Months 2 to 8+: Waiting. No work authorization. No income from the H-4 spouse.

Eventually: EAD approved. H-4 spouse can resume working.

This transition leaves families with potentially months of lost income. There's no way to avoid the gap entirely, but you can minimize it by filing the H-4 EAD application as early as possible. If your H-1B spouse already has an approved I-140, start the H-4 EAD application before the status change takes effect so processing begins sooner.

For Employers: I-9 Compliance Differences

If you're an HR professional or employer, the I-9 verification process is different for L-2 and H-4 employees.

For L-2S employees: Accept the unexpired I-94 showing "L-2S" as a List C document, combined with a List B identity document (like a driver's license). Alternatively, accept an EAD card as a List A document. Do not require an EAD if the employee has a valid L-2S I-94. Doing so may violate anti-discrimination provisions.

For H-4 EAD employees: The EAD card (Form I-766) is a List A document. There is no alternative. H-4 spouses must present a valid, unexpired EAD to work. If the EAD has expired and no automatic extension applies (which it won't for applications filed after October 30, 2025), the employee is not authorized to work.

Understanding the I-94 arrival/departure record and what the different class-of-admission codes mean is critical for proper employment verification of L-2 spouses.

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Official Sources

This guide is based on current USCIS policy and federal regulations. All information was verified against these official sources as of February 2026:

USCIS Resources

Federal Regulations

Federal Register

Immigration and Nationality Act

  • INA § 214(c)(2)(E) / 8 USC § 1184(c)(10) - Statutory basis for L-2 spousal work authorization

Key Case Law

  • Shergill v. Mayorkas, Case No. 21-cv-1296-RSM, W.D. Wash. (November 10, 2021) - L-2 incident to status
  • Save Jobs USA v. DHS, No. 24-923 (Supreme Court certiorari denied October 14, 2025) - H-4 EAD upheld

Immigration law changes frequently. We monitor USCIS policy updates and revise this guide when regulations change.

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