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USCIS RESPONSE TIMES
Contributor
Tukki
Reading time
10 mins read
Date published
Apr 28, 2026
If you've just mailed off a box of supporting evidence to USCIS, the next question is almost always the same: how long does USCIS take to respond to an RFE? The real answer depends on which form you filed and how complex the reviewing officer finds your response. It also varies if you apply to premium processing for your case.
This guide walks through typical USCIS timelines after an RFE (Request for Evidence) response by form type, what the 87-day response deadline actually means, and what you can do if your case sits longer than it should.
These two timelines often get confused. They are not the same and here's why:
If your question goes on the line of "how long does RFE take to process" your answer is first one, but the deadline you see printed on the RFE notice is the second.
The standard RFE response deadline is up to 87 days from the date of the notice, though some RFEs carry shorter windows depending on the form and scenario. A NOID (Notice of Intent to Deny) is different, since those typically give you only 30 days to respond. Note that missing either of the deadlines almost always results in a denial.
Once your response reaches USCIS, the clock that matters for "how long USCIS takes to respond to an RFE" starts ticking. That's the timeline the rest of this guide covers.
Response times vary widely based on the form and, as we mentioned, whether premium processing is in play. Here's a snapshot of what most applicants see as of April 2026.
| Form type | Regular processing after RFE response | With premium processing |
|---|---|---|
| Form I-129 (H-1B, L-1, O-1, etc.) | 2 - 6 months | 15 business days |
| Form I-140 (EB-1A, EB-1B, EB-2 PERM, EB-3) | 3 - 8 months | 15 business days |
| Form I-140 (EB-1C, EB-2 NIW) | 6 - 12 months | 45 business days |
| Form I-485 (Adjustment of Status) | 3 - 6 months (varies widely) | Not available |
| Form I-130 (Family-based petition) | 4 - 12 months | Not available |
These figures reflect typical adjudication windows, not guarantees. Service center backlogs, staffing, and the depth of your RFE response all shift the range. You can check the latest official numbers on the USCIS processing times page.
The pattern worth noticing: premium-eligible forms have a predictable ceiling, while I-485 and family-based petitions don't. If you're waiting on an I-485 post-RFE, your timeline is driven almost entirely by the service center handling your case.
Form I-129 covers nonimmigrant worker petitions, most commonly the H-1B visa, as well as L-1, O-1, TN, and several others. The answer here depends heavily on whether you upgraded to premium processing.
Under regular processing, USCIS typically takes 2 to 6 months to adjudicate after receiving the RFE response. Service center and visa category make a real difference: a straightforward H-1B extension usually lands on the faster end, while an O-1 with subjective criteria may sit longer.
With premium processing, the math changes entirely. When USCIS issues an RFE on a premium-processed I-129, the clock stops the moment the notice is mailed. Once you submit your RFE response, a new 15-business-day premium clock begins. That gives you a hard ceiling of about three calendar weeks before USCIS must take action, whether that's approval, denial, a second RFE or a NOID.
Form I-140 is the immigrant petition for employment-based green cards, and RFEs are common, especially in EB-1A and EB-2 NIW cases where officers evaluate subjective criteria.
Regular processing after an I-140 RFE response runs 3 to 8 months for most EB categories, and can stretch to a year for EB-1C and EB-2 NIW. The range is wide because I-140 petitions often require a second substantive review by a different officer, not just a quick check that the requested documents arrived.
Premium processing dramatically tightens that window. The I-140 premium processing time after an RFE response is:
So how long does it take after an RFE to get a response for a green card? It has two layers in reality.
The I-140 decision itself is fast under premium processing, but the green card only issues after you complete adjustment of status through Form I-485 (or consular processing abroad). If your priority date is current and you're filing concurrently, an approved I-140 moves you closer to a decision on your I-485. If your priority date is years away, the I-140 approval locks in your place in line but doesn't speed up the green card itself.

Form I-485 is where timing gets the most unpredictable, because there's no premium processing option for adjustment of status. Once you submit your RFE response, you're waiting on the regular adjudication queue.
Typical I-485 processing after an RFE response runs 3 to 6 months, but it can stretch well past that depending on the service center, whether an interview is required, and whether the RFE touched on eligibility or admissibility issues. Medical exam RFEs tend to close quickly once the new Form I-693 arrives. Substantive RFEs on underlying petitions, employment history, or inadmissibility grounds often take longer.
If you've already had an adjustment interview, the common question is how long after I-485 interview for a decision. Most decisions come within 60 to 120 days of the interview, though some take more than six months. An RFE issued after the interview often signals that the officer needs one specific piece of evidence to close the case, so those can resolve faster than you might expect.
One of the most misunderstood parts of RFE processing time under premium is what happens to the clock.
When USCIS issues an RFE on a premium-processed case, the premium clock stops completely. It doesn't pause and resume when you reply. Instead, once you submit the response, USCIS starts a brand-new 15 or 45 business-day clock (matching the original window for your form and category). That's still substantially faster than regular processing, but it adds weeks to your timeline relative to a straight-through approval.
If USCIS misses the new premium deadline without taking further action, you're entitled to a refund of the premium processing fee. In practice, the agency rarely misses these windows.
Most cases stay within the typical ranges. But some don't, and there are a handful of tools worth knowing about if your case sits well past the posted times.
Work through these in order:
A mandamus isn't appropriate for every case. It works best when the facts are clear, the delay is well-documented, and the underlying petition is strong. For shorter delays, a service request or ombudsman inquiry is usually the better path.
The fastest way to shorten your post-RFE timeline is to make sure the officer doesn't need to ask again. A few practical moves:
For deeper guidance on building the response itself, the USCIS RFE guide walks through the common RFE categories and how to address each one.
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Need more clarity?
Find quick answers to frequent visa questions from our legal experts
Can my spouse work on an L-2 visa?
Yes. Your spouse and unmarried children under 21 can accompany you under L-2 status. L-2 spouses are authorized to work in the United States.
For more on dependent work options across visa types, see our spouse work authorization guide.
What happens if my employer withdraws my I-140 after I leave?
If your I-140 was genuinely approved and your I-485 has been pending 180 days or more, your priority date generally stays yours even if the employer withdraws the petition. A withdrawal during the first 180 days, before portability attaches, is the riskier scenario.
An I-140 revoked for fraud or a material error is treated differently from a routine withdrawal.
Is it better to file the NIW during or after the PhD?
It depends on whether you have a qualifying EB-2 basis now and how backlogged your country is. If you have a solid basis and face a long EB-2 line, filing during the program secures an earlier priority date while your record keeps growing.
If your case leans mostly on the PhD or your evidence is still thin, waiting until conferral can produce a stronger petition.
Does being invited as a conference speaker help in an EB-1A or O-1 petition?
Absolutely. Speaking engagements—especially at well-known or international conferences—show that you are recognized as an authority in your field. The more selective and prestigious the event, the stronger the evidence. Although it does not fall into a specific category, it is very important for the final merits evaluation.
What's the best visa for a startup founder who wants full control?
The O-1A visa is often the strongest option for founders who want majority ownership and operational control. It can be sponsored by an agent, avoids the employer-employee relationship issue entirely, and has no annual cap.
For founders focused on a permanent solution, the EB-1A or EB-2 NIW green card allows self-petitioning without any employer sponsor.
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