March 2025 bulletin

U.S. Visa Bulletin for March 2025

Final Action Dates and Dates for Filing for March 2025, with movement from the month before

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Which chart to show

When a green card may finally be issued

Current
Current: numbers are available to everyone in that row, whatever your priority date.
Unavailable
Unavailable: no numbers are being issued for that row this month.

Family-Sponsored

Final Action Dates for Family-Sponsored categories, by country of chargeability.
CategoryAll other countriesChina (mainland born)IndiaMexicoPhilippines
F1Unmarried adult sons and daughters of U.S. citizensNov 22, 2015Nov 22, 2015Nov 22, 2015Nov 22, 2004Mar 8, 2012
F2ASpouses and minor children of green card holdersJan 1, 2022Jan 1, 2022Jan 1, 2022May 15, 2021Jan 1, 2022
F2BUnmarried adult sons and daughters of green card holdersMay 22, 2016May 22, 2016May 22, 2016Jul 1, 2005Oct 22, 2011
F3Married sons and daughters of U.S. citizensJul 1, 2010Jul 1, 2010Jul 1, 2010Nov 22, 2000Jan 22, 2003
F4Brothers and sisters of adult U.S. citizensAug 1, 2007Aug 1, 2007Apr 8, 2006Mar 1, 2001Oct 15, 2004

F1

Unmarried adult sons and daughters of U.S. citizens

All other countries
Nov 22, 2015
China (mainland born)
Nov 22, 2015
India
Nov 22, 2015
Mexico
Nov 22, 2004
Philippines
Mar 8, 2012

F2A

Spouses and minor children of green card holders

All other countries
Jan 1, 2022
China (mainland born)
Jan 1, 2022
India
Jan 1, 2022
Mexico
May 15, 2021
Philippines
Jan 1, 2022

F2B

Unmarried adult sons and daughters of green card holders

All other countries
May 22, 2016
China (mainland born)
May 22, 2016
India
May 22, 2016
Mexico
Jul 1, 2005
Philippines
Oct 22, 2011

F3

Married sons and daughters of U.S. citizens

All other countries
Jul 1, 2010
China (mainland born)
Jul 1, 2010
India
Jul 1, 2010
Mexico
Nov 22, 2000
Philippines
Jan 22, 2003

F4

Brothers and sisters of adult U.S. citizens

All other countries
Aug 1, 2007
China (mainland born)
Aug 1, 2007
India
Apr 8, 2006
Mexico
Mar 1, 2001
Philippines
Oct 15, 2004

Employment-Based

Final Action Dates for Employment-Based categories, by country of chargeability.
CategoryAll other countriesChina (mainland born)IndiaMexicoPhilippines
EB-1Priority workers: extraordinary ability, top professors, multinational managersCurrentNov 8, 2022Feb 1, 2022CurrentCurrent
EB-2Professionals with advanced degrees or exceptional abilityMay 15, 2023May 8, 2020Dec 1, 2012May 15, 2023May 15, 2023
EB-3Skilled workers and professionalsDec 1, 2022Aug 1, 2020Feb 1, 2013Dec 1, 2022Dec 1, 2022
EB-3 Other WorkersOther workers (roles needing less than two years of training)Feb 1, 2021Jan 1, 2017Feb 1, 2013Feb 1, 2021Jan 15, 2021
EB-4Certain special immigrantsAug 1, 2019Aug 1, 2019Aug 1, 2019Aug 1, 2019Aug 1, 2019
EB-4 Religious WorkersCertain religious workersAug 1, 2019Aug 1, 2019Aug 1, 2019Aug 1, 2019Aug 1, 2019
EB-5 UnreservedImmigrant investors, unreservedCurrentJul 15, 2016Jan 1, 2022CurrentCurrent
EB-5 RuralImmigrant investors, rural set-asideCurrentCurrentCurrentCurrentCurrent
EB-5 High UnemploymentImmigrant investors, high-unemployment set-asideCurrentCurrentCurrentCurrentCurrent
EB-5 InfrastructureImmigrant investors, infrastructure set-asideCurrentCurrentCurrentCurrentCurrent

EB-1

Priority workers: extraordinary ability, top professors, multinational managers

All other countries
Current
China (mainland born)
Nov 8, 2022
India
Feb 1, 2022
Mexico
Current
Philippines
Current

EB-2

Professionals with advanced degrees or exceptional ability

All other countries
May 15, 2023
China (mainland born)
May 8, 2020
India
Dec 1, 2012
Mexico
May 15, 2023
Philippines
May 15, 2023

EB-3

Skilled workers and professionals

All other countries
Dec 1, 2022
China (mainland born)
Aug 1, 2020
India
Feb 1, 2013
Mexico
Dec 1, 2022
Philippines
Dec 1, 2022

EB-3 Other Workers

Other workers (roles needing less than two years of training)

All other countries
Feb 1, 2021
China (mainland born)
Jan 1, 2017
India
Feb 1, 2013
Mexico
Feb 1, 2021
Philippines
Jan 15, 2021

EB-4

Certain special immigrants

All other countries
Aug 1, 2019
China (mainland born)
Aug 1, 2019
India
Aug 1, 2019
Mexico
Aug 1, 2019
Philippines
Aug 1, 2019

EB-4 Religious Workers

Certain religious workers

All other countries
Aug 1, 2019
China (mainland born)
Aug 1, 2019
India
Aug 1, 2019
Mexico
Aug 1, 2019
Philippines
Aug 1, 2019

EB-5 Unreserved

Immigrant investors, unreserved

All other countries
Current
China (mainland born)
Jul 15, 2016
India
Jan 1, 2022
Mexico
Current
Philippines
Current

EB-5 Rural

Immigrant investors, rural set-aside

All other countries
Current
China (mainland born)
Current
India
Current
Mexico
Current
Philippines
Current

EB-5 High Unemployment

Immigrant investors, high-unemployment set-aside

All other countries
Current
China (mainland born)
Current
India
Current
Mexico
Current
Philippines
Current

EB-5 Infrastructure

Immigrant investors, infrastructure set-aside

All other countries
Current
China (mainland born)
Current
India
Current
Mexico
Current
Philippines
Current

How the Visa Bulletin works

Every month the U.S. Department of State publishes the Visa Bulletin, the schedule that decides when a green card number is available for your category and country of birth. The checker above reads the latest one, so you can enter your priority date and see where you stand, how the cutoff moved this month, and a plain-language estimate of when your date may become current.

Final Action Dates vs Dates for Filing

The bulletin shows two charts each month, and they answer different questions. Knowing which one applies to you is half the battle.

Final Action Dates

Final Action Dates tell you when a green card can actually be approved and issued. When your priority date is earlier than the Final Action cutoff for your category and country, a visa number is available and your case can be completed.

Dates for Filing

Dates for Filing tell you the earliest point at which you may submit your application or send documents, often months before a number is truly available. Each month USCIS decides which of the two charts adjustment-of-status applicants may use, and it can pick a different chart for family cases than for employment cases.

You will also see two letters in the tables. "C" means current: numbers are available for everyone in that row regardless of priority date. "U" means unavailable: no numbers are being issued for that row this month.

The strict rule: One rule trips people up: being current means your priority date is strictly earlier than the cutoff. A priority date that exactly matches the cutoff is not current yet. You become current once the cutoff moves past your date.

Frequently Asked Questions

Your priority date is the date that holds your place in line for a green card. For family cases it is the day USCIS received your I-130 petition. For most employment cases it is the day the PERM labor certification was filed, or the day the I-140 was filed if your category does not require PERM. You keep that date as your spot in the queue, and you become current once the bulletin cutoff for your category and country moves past it.

Your priority date is current when it is earlier than the cutoff date listed for your category and country of chargeability. At that point a visa number is available to you. If the cell shows "C" the whole category is current, so your date does not matter. If it shows "U" no numbers are being issued that month. One detail catches people out: a priority date that exactly matches the cutoff is not current yet, you become current only once the cutoff moves past your date.

It is usually your country of birth that counts, not which passport you carry or which country you are a citizen of. That is what "chargeability" means, so holding a second passport normally does not change your place in line. There is one helpful exception called cross-chargeability: in some cases you can be charged to your spouse's country of birth (or, for a child, a parent's country of birth) when that country's dates are more favorable. This is general information, not legal advice, so check your specific situation before relying on it.

Final Action Dates tell you when your green card can actually be approved. Dates for Filing tell you the earliest you may submit your application or documents, which is often months earlier. Each month USCIS announces which chart adjustment-of-status applicants may use, and family and employment categories can be on different charts in the same month, so always check which one applies to you.

It is a non-binding estimate, not a promise. We look at how the cutoff for your category and country has actually moved over the recent months and project that pace forward, while ignoring the large backward jumps that often happen at the October fiscal-year reset. Visa Bulletin dates are set monthly by the State Department and can speed up, stall, or move backward without notice. Do not make travel, job, or filing decisions on the projection alone.

Each category and country has a limited annual supply of green card numbers. When demand runs ahead of supply, the State Department moves the cutoff date backward to slow things down, which is called retrogression. It is frustrating but normal, and dates often recover later in the fiscal year. Our checker flags when your category moved backward this month so you are not caught off guard.

Yes, the checker is completely free and we do not ask you to create an account or hand over personal details to use it. If your date is current and you want help filing, Immiva guides you through Form I-130 and Form I-485 for $129, which is far less than most attorneys charge.

Is your date current? Start your application

If your priority date is current, the clock is running and you do not want to leave a window on the table. Immiva walks you through Form I-130 and Form I-485 step by step for just $129, a fraction of what most attorneys charge.

Start with Form I-130

Check your eligibility first. Not sure which form fits your situation? Our free eligibility checker points you to the right path in a couple of minutes.

This tool reads the published U.S. Visa Bulletin and helps you interpret it. It is not legal advice, and the prediction is a non-binding estimate based on recent movement, not a guarantee. Visa availability is set monthly by the U.S. Department of State and can change without notice. Always confirm your status against the official bulletin and, for legal counsel, consult a qualified immigration attorney.
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