The O-1A critical role criterion - how to prove you've been essential to a distinguished organization
5 mins read | May 6, 2026
EB-2 VS. EB-3
Contributor
Tukki
Reading time
9 mins read
Date published
Apr 30, 2026
PERM by itself is neither EB-2 nor EB-3. It's the labor certification step that supports both employment-based green card categories. The category your case falls under is set by the minimum job requirements your employer wrote on the PERM application itself. The I-140 filing with USCIS is where that designation becomes formal, but the substance of the choice was already made on the PERM.
That distinction matters because two engineers with the same resume can end up in different green card lines depending on how their employers worded the job posting. The PERM doesn't care what you have on your CV. It cares what the role requires. If you're an H-1B holder trying to figure out which line you're standing in, the answer is on Form ETA-9089.
PERM stands for Program Electronic Review Management. It's the labor certification process administered by the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) for most employer-sponsored, employment-based green cards. The employer files Form ETA-9089 after a structured recruitment campaign known as the labor market test, which exists to prove that no qualified and willing U.S. worker is available to take the role at the prevailing wage.
PERM is a prerequisite for both EB-2 and EB-3 sponsorship in most cases. The main exceptions are EB-2 NIW (the National Interest Waiver, which lets the employee self-petition without a job offer) and Schedule A occupations, where DOL has pre-certified that workers are in short supply. For the full process, see Tukki's PERM visa guide. This article focuses on one question: how to tell whether your PERM supports an EB-2 or EB-3 I-140.
EB-2 is for jobs that require advanced credentials. EB-3 is for jobs with lower minimum requirements. Both lead to the same green card, but the wait times and eligibility rules can differ significantly. The table below lays out the five subcategories.
| Factor | EB-2 advanced degree | EB-2 exceptional ability | EB-3 professional | EB-3 skilled worker | EB-3 other workers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum education | U.S. master's or higher | Exceptional ability in sciences, arts, or business | U.S. bachelor's | High school plus vocational training | No degree |
| Minimum experience | None beyond the advanced degree | Meet 3 of 6 regulatory criteria | None beyond the degree | At least 2 years training/experience | Less than 2 years |
| Who it's for | Engineers, scientists, senior researchers | Recognized practitioners | Roles where a 4-year degree is the floor | Trades, technical roles | Entry-level labor |
| Typical jobs | Senior engineer, research scientist, physician | Concert musician, accomplished business leader | Software developer, accountant, RN | Chef, machinist, paralegal | Housekeeper, food prep |
| 2026 priority dates | Heavy retrogression for India/China; current for most others | Same as advanced degree | Varies; check Visa Bulletin | Tied to EB-3 numbers | Severe backlogs |
EB-2 demands an advanced degree or an extensive track record. EB-3 covers everything from a four-year degree job down to entry-level labor. Where you land depends on what the role requires, not what you have.
A nuance worth flagging: education and experience aren't always cumulative. For some EB-3 roles, the position can be satisfied by either the degree or its equivalent in experience (for example, a bachelor's or 24 months of qualifying experience). A worker who happens to have both can still take the role, but the prevailing wage tied to higher requirements is typically higher too. The PERM is built around the minimums, not what any specific candidate brings to the table.
Form ETA-9089's Job Opportunity Information section lists the role's minimum education, years of experience required, any alternate combinations, and any special skills. Those entries decide your category. Examples of how the same job description maps to different green card lines:
The prevailing wage determination (PWD) plays a supporting role. The wage level (I, II, III, or IV) DOL assigns on Form ETA-9141 often correlates with the experience required, which in turn affects EB-2 versus EB-3 eligibility. There's also a business necessity guardrail: every requirement must be justified by the actual duties of the role. Tailored requirements that look customized to one individual can trigger DOL audits or denials.
To know which category your PERM supports:

PERM certifies the labor market test. It does not designate an I-140 category. Once DOL approves the PERM, the employer files Form I-140, the Immigrant Petition for Alien Worker, and selects EB-2 or EB-3 based on what the certified ETA-9089 supports. If something doesn't match (for example, the employer claims EB-2 but the PERM only listed bachelor's plus 2 years), USCIS issues a Request for Evidence or denies the petition. The I-140 also locks in your priority date, which is the day DOL accepted the PERM filing.
For Indian and Chinese nationals, the difference between EB-2 and EB-3 can mean years of additional wait time. The State Department's Visa Bulletin publishes monthly cutoff dates by category and country of chargeability. As of 2026, EB-2 India remains heavily backlogged while EB-3 India has at times moved more quickly, though the pattern reverses. Whether your case can move between categories depends on what the certified PERM actually supports, and that's a conversation to have with your immigration attorney before making any decision based on the bulletin.
Small wording differences on the PERM application have years-long consequences, so don't guess.
Tukki is a U.S. immigration provider that helps skilled professionals and employers with green cards and work visas, from EB-1A and EB-2 NIW to employer-sponsored paths through PERM labor certification, with dedicated attorney support and full case visibility at every step.
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Need more clarity?
Find quick answers to frequent visa questions from our legal experts
How do I check my PERM status?
Through flag.dol.gov, using the case number on the ETA-9089. Only employers and their designated attorneys have direct FLAG access — beneficiaries should ask HR or their attorney.
How long does I-140 processing take without premium processing?
Standard I-140 processing time is approximately 6 to 12 months or longer, depending on the USCIS service center handling your case and the specific category you filed under.
You can check current estimates on the USCIS processing times page.
Filing with premium processing reduces this to either 15 or 45 business days depending on your category.
Is PERM an immigrant petition?
No. PERM is a labor certification. The immigrant petition is the I-140, filed with USCIS after PERM is approved.
What is the I-140, and why does it matter after PERM?
The I-140 Immigrant Petition is the second stage of the EB-2/EB-3 green card process.
Once PERM is certified, the employer files the I-140 with USCIS to prove three things:
Do I need a new Form G-28 for every case I file?
Yes. USCIS requires a new Form G-28 for each separate application, petition, or appeal.
Even if the same attorney is handling multiple filings for you, they must submit a new G-28 with each one.
The form applies only to the specific case it is filed with and does not carry over to other matters.
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