Regulatory criteria
You must satisfy at least three of the ten criteria defined in 8 CFR 204.5(h)(3), or present a single major internationally recognized award equivalent to a Nobel Prize, Pulitzer, or Olympic medal.
No employer. No job offer. No waiting on anyone else. The EB-1A recognizes that certain professional trajectories speak for themselves, and the U.S. government reserves an entire category for exactly that.
About EB-1A
Every EB-1A petition goes through two stages of evaluation, established by the precedent Kazarian v. USCIS.
You must satisfy at least three of the ten criteria defined in 8 CFR 204.5(h)(3), or present a single major internationally recognized award equivalent to a Nobel Prize, Pulitzer, or Olympic medal.
Even after satisfying the criteria, USCIS conducts a qualitative review of the full body of evidence to determine whether your trajectory, taken as a whole, demonstrates sustained national or international acclaim. This is where most petitions fail, not for lack of achievement, but for lack of narrative and legal strategy. The difference between approval and denial rarely comes down to the applicant’s accomplishments. It comes down to how those accomplishments are documented, contextualized, and presented.
The 10 criteria
You need to satisfy at least three. But the quality of evidence matters more than the number of criteria presented. A solid petition built on three criteria is stronger than a weak petition spread across six.
Nationally or internationally recognized prizes for excellence in your field. A Nobel Prize is not required. USCIS evaluates whether the award is recognized beyond your employer or immediate professional community.
Participation in professional associations that require outstanding achievements as a condition of membership, as judged by recognized experts in the field.
Coverage of you or your work in professional journals, major trade publications, or significant media. The focus is on independent coverage, not material you produced yourself.
Participation as an evaluator, jury member, or peer reviewer of the work of others in your field or an allied field.
Original scientific, artistic, academic, or business contributions with significant and recognized impact in your field.
Articles published in academic journals, professional periodicals, or major media outlets in your area of expertise.
Exhibition or performance of your work at venues recognized for artistic or professional distinction.
A central or leadership role in organizations or projects with a recognized reputation in your field.
Salary or compensation significantly above the average for professionals in your field, documented through market comparisons.
For performing arts professionals, demonstrable evidence of commercial success relative to others in the field.
The most common misconception about the EB-1A is that it is reserved for Nobel laureates and Olympic athletes. In practice, USCIS approves petitions across a far wider range of professions, provided the recognition is genuine, independent, and sustained. What matters is not what you do. It is how much your field recognizes what you do.
Publications with measurable impact, independent citations, and original contributions to the field. The standard is not the number of papers. It is the relevance of what was published and the recognition it generated.
Patents, contributions to projects with national or global impact, peer recognition, and leadership in strategic initiatives. For developers and technical leaders, product adoption metrics, code citations, and industry awards are valid evidence.
Leaders with documented results, independent media coverage, participation in prestigious boards, and recognition by industry associations. Marketing professionals with measurable impact on campaigns of national or international reach, sector awards, and independent editorial presence build strong cases in this category.
Independent critical acclaim, publications in prestigious outlets, literary or artistic awards, exhibitions at recognized venues, and editorial coverage that documents the impact of the work beyond the immediate circle. A writer published internationally, an illustrator with global editorial recognition, or an art director with industry awards has a real EB-1A argument.
Competitive record at national or international level, recognition by federations, independent sports media coverage, and documented titles. An Olympic medal is not required. A boxer with a recognized record, national rankings, and independent sports press coverage has the right elements for a petition.
Performances at prestigious venues, contracts with recognized labels or production companies, independent critical coverage, and documentable commercial impact. Recognition must extend beyond the immediate audience.
Professors, researchers, and consultants with contributions recognized by the professional community beyond the institution where they work. Participation as evaluator, invited speaker at prestigious conferences, and independent publications build the profile.
Sector awards, independent editorial coverage in specialized publications of national or international reach, and projects with documented impact in the field sustain a petition in these categories.
EB-1A or EB-2 NIW?
Why petitions are denied
In 2026, USCIS denies approximately 28% of EB-1A petitions. The most common reason is not a lack of achievement. It is failure at the final merits determination stage, when the officer reviews the full body of evidence and does not find a clear narrative of sustained recognition.
The most recurring errors are the following:
The difference between an approved petition and a denied one is rarely the applicant’s resume. It is the legal strategy behind the documentation.
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