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KEY DIFFERENCES IN ROLES, STAY LIMITS, AND GREEN CARD PATHS
Contributor
Tukki
Reading time
7 mins read
Date published
Feb 26, 2026
Both visas, the L-1A and the L-1B, fall under the L-1 intracompany transferee classification, meaning both let U.S. multinational employers move foreign nationals from an overseas office to a U.S. location.
Intracompany transfers usually start with the question, "L-1A or L-1B?" because the two categories serve different purposes, carry different time limits, and open very different doors when it comes to permanent residence. If an employer picks the wrong category, they risk a denial or a Request for Evidence; by picking the right one, they give an employee a smoother landing in the U.S. with a clear path forward.
This post is a practical decision guide for HR teams and immigration coordinators. It covers the three core differences between the L-1A and L-1B, walks through the scenarios where each category fits best, and flags the mistakes that lead to avoidable petition problems.
The L-1 is a nonimmigrant work visa that allows a qualifying organization to transfer an employee from a foreign office to a related U.S. entity, and that entity can be a parent company, subsidiary, branch, or affiliate.
To qualify under L-1A or L-1B category, the employee or visa beneficiary must have worked for that same organization in an U.S overseas location for at least one continuous year within the past three years. The employer or visa petitioner files Form I-129 (Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker) with USCIS and they also have the option to file a blanket petition if the company transfer employees regularly, which is a pre-approved organizational filing that speeds up individual cases.
Both the L-1A and L-1B share several advantages over other work visa options.
So what's the difference between the L-1A and L-1B requirements if they look so similar?
While the overlap between these two categories is real, the differences are where your filing decision gets made. Three factors stand out: the type of role, how long the employee can stay, and what happens when they're ready for a green card.
| Feature | L-1A visa | L-1B visa |
|---|---|---|
| Role type | Managers and executives | Specialized knowledge employees |
| Initial period of stay | 3 years (1 year for new office) | 3 years (1 year for new office) |
| Maximum stay | 7 years | 5 years |
| Green card path | EB-1C (no PERM required) | EB-2 or EB-3 (PERM required) |
| Annual cap | None | None |
| Education requirement | None, except for blanket | None, except for blanket |
| Dual intent | Yes | Yes |
| Filing form | Form I-129 | Form I-129 |
| Blanket petition eligible | Yes | Yes |
| Qualifying employment | 1 year in past 3 years | 1 year in past 3 years |
The initial stay is the same in both cases: three years for an established office and one year if the U.S. entity has been operating for less than 12 months. From there, however, the timelines begin to diverge. L-1A holders can extend their status for up to seven years in total, while L-1B holders are limited to five. That two-year difference becomes especially significant when green card processing takes longer than anticipated.
The role your employee will fill in the U.S. determines everything. USCIS does not rely solely on the job title listed in the petition; adjudicators look closely at the actual duties, the organizational structure, and the level of authority the position truly carries.
For the L-1A, your employee must serve in a managerial capacity or executive capacity at the U.S. office. However, under immigration law, a job title that includes "Manager" or "Director" isn't enough on its own, since USCIS needs to verificate that the person's day-to-day work involves actually directing others or running a critical business function, not performing the same hands-on tasks as their reports.
In this scenario:
For more detail on how USCIS evaluates each role type, see our L-1A qualifying positions guide.
For the L-1B, the employee must possess specialized knowledge. USCIS defines this as either special knowledge of the company’s products, services, research, equipment, techniques, management, or procedures, or advanced knowledge of its processes and operations.
Consider, for example, a software architect who spent four years developing a proprietary platform that supports your company’s global supply chain. That expertise is embedded in internal systems and would not be easily replicated by a new hire without extensive training. This is the type of profile the L-1B category is designed to accommodate.
That said, specialized knowledge claims tend to face closer scrutiny than managerial or executive ones. Broad descriptions of technical skill are not enough. The petition must clearly explain what the employee knows, how that knowledge is company-specific, and why it cannot be readily sourced from the U.S. labor market.
For HR teams thinking beyond the initial transfer, the green card pathway is where the L-1A and L-1B diverge most.
L-1A holders can pursue permanent residence through the EB-1C multinational manager or executive category. This pathway does not require PERM labor certification—the process in which the employer tests the U.S. labor market by advertising the role and documenting that no qualified U.S. workers are available. Skipping PERM can save six to twelve months and avoids one of the more failure-prone stages of the employment-based green card process.
L-1B holders, by contrast, do not qualify for EB-1C. They typically seek permanent residence through the EB-2 or EB-3 categories, both of which require the employer to complete PERM before filing the immigrant petition. That additional step brings more cost, more time, and more risk, as even a small error in the recruitment process can require the employer to start over.
When you factor in the shorter maximum stay—five years instead of seven—alongside the longer green card timeline that includes PERM and potential EB-2 or EB-3 backlogs, the margin becomes tighter for L-1B holders. If processing times or visa bulletin wait times extend longer than expected, the employee may reach the five-year limit before securing permanent residence. Careful planning around that gap is essential.

The right category depends on what the employee will do in the U.S. and how long you expect them to stay. Here are the most common scenarios HR teams encounter.
File the L-1A when your employee will lead a team, a department, or an essential business function at the U.S. entity. This includes a VP of engineering overseeing product teams, a country manager directing operations, or a function manager running a critical area like global compliance. The L-1A is also the stronger choice whenever the employee is expected to stay long-term and eventually pursue a green card, because the EB-1C path is faster and simpler.
File the L-1B when the employee's value comes from proprietary company knowledge rather than a leadership role. Think of an engineer who built your internal data pipeline, a researcher with deep expertise in a product line unique to your organization, or an operations specialist who understands undocumented internal processes. The L-1B fits when you need to bring that knowledge to the U.S. team, even if the employee won't be managing anyone.
Consider both carefully when the role sits in a gray area. A senior technical lead who also manages a small team might qualify under either category. In those cases, weigh the green card implications: if the employee could realistically meet the managerial or executive standard, the L-1A's EB-1C pathway is a meaningful advantage worth pursuing.
If you're also evaluating options beyond the L-1, our L-1A vs H-1B comparison breaks down the trade-offs with the most common employer sponsorship alternative. For companies weighing investment-based visas, see the L-1 vs E-2 comparison.
There are 3 errors that come up repeatedly in L-1 petitions, and since all of them are preventable we urge you to take note:
1. Overstating the managerial role. Like we said before, USCIS will evaluate the role to see if you really perform director or executive tasks. Filing an L-1A for someone who spends most of their time doing the same work as their team is the fastest way to get a denial. If the answer skews toward hands-on production, the petition won't survive scrutiny.
2. Underselling the specialized knowledge. L-1B petitions fail when they describe general industry skills rather than company-specific expertise. Saying your engineer "knows Python and cloud infrastructure" isn't specialized knowledge. Saying they designed and maintain a proprietary orchestration system that handles your company's global transaction routing tells a different story. Be specific. Specificity wins.
3. Ignoring the green card timeline. Filing an L-1B when the employee could genuinely qualify for an L-1A means giving up the EB-1C green card pathway. For an employee from a country with EB-2/EB-3 backlogs, that decision could add years to their wait for permanent residence. Always evaluate both categories against the employee's long-term plans before filing.
WE CAN HELP
Need more clarity?
Find quick answers to frequent visa questions from our legal experts
Can I use a blanket petition for someone already in the United States?
No. Blanket petition beneficiaries must go through consular adjudication at a U.S. consulate abroad, which means they need to attend an in-person L-1 visa interview outside the United States.
If your employee is already in the U.S. and you want to avoid international travel, you'll need to file an individual petition on Form I-129 with USCIS.
Is the L-1 blanket visa success rate lower than individual petitions?
There's no published data comparing blanket and individual visa approval rates directly.
Consular officers adjudicating blanket beneficiaries can sometimes apply stricter scrutiny to the individual's role.
Well-prepared cases with clear managerial documentation typically do well.
The key is providing strong organizational charts and detailed role descriptions that distinguish the position from hands-on technical work.
Are USCIS filing fees refundable if my petition is denied?
No. USCIS does not refund filing fees if your petition is denied, withdrawn, or revoked.
This means a denial can be especially costly since you will need to pay the full set of government fees again if you choose to refile.
The only exception is premium processing: if USCIS does not meet the 15 business day deadline, you can request a refund of the I-907 fee.
What's the difference between an L-1A executive and a manager?
An L-1A manager either supervises professional or supervisory staff (personnel manager) or manages an essential function (function manager).
An L-1A executive directs the management of the organization or a major component, makes wide-latitude decisions with limited oversight, and establishes goals and policies.
The executive role requires broader authority and a higher position in the organizational hierarchy.
What does USCIS want to see for a new office L-1A?
USCIS wants proof that the office is real and ready to grow: a qualifying corporate relationship between the foreign and U.S. entities, secured physical premises, enough capital to begin operating, and a credible business and hiring plan.
At the extension stage, the agency shifts to results and looks for payroll records, contracts, revenue, and an org chart showing real hires that confirm the office is actually doing business.
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