H-1B LAWYERS IN
BURLINGTON
Compare 7 verified H-1B immigration attorneys in Burlington, Vermont. Find the right lawyer for your H-1B Specialty Occupation Visa case with transparent reviews and success rates.
H-1B Attorneys
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Why Hire a H-1B Lawyer in Burlington?
Burlington is home to 7 verified H-1B immigration attorneys with an average of 12 years of experience and a 94% average success rate. These attorneys collectively serve clients in 7 languages including English, Japanese, French, Portuguese and more.
The H-1B visa program is one of the most sought-after work visa categories in the United States, designed for professionals in specialty occupations that require at least a bachelor's degree. Industries with high H-1B demand include technology, engineering, healthcare, finance, and academia. Each fiscal year, USCIS caps new H-1B visas at 85,000 (65,000 regular plus 20,000 for US advanced degree holders), making the annual lottery highly competitive. An experienced H-1B attorney can help strengthen your petition by properly documenting the specialty occupation requirement, prevailing wage compliance, and the employer-employee relationship. Common challenges include RFEs questioning job specialty, wage level disputes, and visa stamping delays at consulates.
H-1B Process Overview
Employer Files LCA
1-2 weeksYour employer submits a Labor Condition Application (LCA) to the Department of Labor, certifying wage and working conditions.
Lottery Registration
March each yearEmployer registers you in the annual H-1B electronic lottery held each March. Selection is random.
Petition Filing
1-3 months processingIf selected, employer files Form I-129 with USCIS along with supporting documents proving the specialty occupation.
USCIS Adjudication
3-6 months (15 days with Premium Processing)USCIS reviews the petition. They may issue a Request for Evidence (RFE) if additional documentation is needed.
Visa Stamping & Entry
2-4 weeksOnce approved, you attend a visa interview at a US consulate and enter the US on October 1 or later.
Common Challenges
- •High lottery competition with selection rates often below 30%
- •Requests for Evidence (RFEs) on specialty occupation qualification
- •Wage level disputes and prevailing wage determination issues
- •Employer-employee relationship scrutiny for staffing companies
- •Visa stamping delays and administrative processing at consulates
Required Documents
- •Employer's Labor Condition Application (LCA)
- •Form I-129 Petition for Nonimmigrant Worker
- •Degree certificates and transcripts
- •Credential evaluation for foreign degrees
- •Detailed job description and organizational chart
- •Employer support letter and tax documents