The O-1A critical role criterion - how to prove you've been essential to a distinguished organization
5 mins read | May 6, 2026
PERM FULL TIMELINE
Contributor
Tukki
Reading time
9 mins read
Date published
May 4, 2026
In 2026, a PERM application takes about 22-24 months end to end, with no premium processing option to speed it up. That total covers the prevailing wage determination, recruitment, and the long DOL analyst review queue, and it can stretch significantly longer if your case is selected for audit.
| Step | Typical time (2026) | Faster path? |
|---|---|---|
| Prevailing Wage Determination (ETA-9141) | ~6 months | None |
| Recruitment + 30-day quiet period | ~2 months | None |
| PERM analyst review (ETA-9089) | 14-16 months | None |
| Audit (if selected) | +6-12 months on top of analyst review | None |
| Total to PERM approval (no audit) | 22-24 months | — |
| I-140 after PERM approval | 6-9 months regular | 15 business days with premium ($2,965) |
If you only have ten seconds, that's the answer. The rest of this article explains how to read the current DOL queue, how to check your own case, what can make your timeline longer, and how to plan around your H-1B clock. For the step-by-step process itself, see our full PERM visa guide.
PERM stands for Program Electronic Review Management. It's the Department of Labor's labor certification process for employer-sponsored, employment-based green cards, filed on Form ETA-9089 through the FLAG (Foreign Labor Application Gateway) system. It's not a visa or an immigrant petition — it's a labor market test that proves no qualified and willing U.S. worker is available for the role, and it's a prerequisite to filing the I-140 with USCIS. EB-2 NIW and EB-2 Exceptional Ability cases skip PERM; the rest of the EB-2 and EB-3 employer-sponsored route goes through it. Full step-by-step process in the PERM visa guide.
The most useful page on the internet for PERM timing is flag.dol.gov/processingtimes. DOL updates it monthly, and it shows the month-of-filing currently being adjudicated for each stage: prevailing wage requests on ETA-9141, PERM applications on ETA-9089, audited PERM cases, and reconsideration requests.
Here's how the queue looked at the time of writing (May 2026):
| Queue | Most recent month being adjudicated |
|---|---|
| ETA-9141 prevailing wage determinations | Roughly 6 months behind filing date |
| ETA-9089 PERM analyst review (non-audit) | Roughly 14-16 months behind filing date |
| ETA-9089 PERM audit review | 18+ months behind filing date |
| Reconsideration requests | 12+ months behind filing date |
Last verified: May 2026. Always check the live page — these numbers shift every month, and they have generally been getting worse, not better, over the past two years.
Two things worth knowing: the queue isn't strictly FIFO (cases filed the same month don't always clear in the same order), and audited cases leave the standard queue for a much longer one.
The single most-asked question from PERM beneficiaries: where is my case right now? Visibility is limited, and most updates come through your employer's attorney rather than directly to you.
There are three places to look:
If your case is far past the published queue date with no movement, that's the cue for your attorney to investigate.

The 22-24 month figure assumes a clean, non-audited case. Plenty of things can stretch it.
No. PERM has no premium processing and no expedite path for routine cases. The I-140 (the next step) does have premium processing — $2,965 for a 15-business-day response — but PERM itself has no equivalent.
The closest thing to "faster" is avoiding extra delay: a clean, business-necessity-justified ETA-9089 with no recruitment errors, no recent layoffs in the occupation, and no tailored requirements is the best protection against an audit and the months it costs. If your priority date happens to be current when PERM approves, the I-140 and I-485 can be filed concurrently, which collapses several months off the back end.
PERM approval is not the end of the green card timeline — it's roughly the halfway point for many EB-2 and EB-3 cases, and only a small fraction of the journey for backlogged countries. Here's what comes next, as time:
For a current-priority-date country, the rough end-to-end picture from PERM filing to green card in hand is 2.5-3 years. For backlogged countries, it can be 5-15+ years.
Most PERM beneficiaries are on H-1B status, which has a hard 6-year cap. AC21 (the American Competitiveness in the 21st Century Act) provides two ways to extend beyond six years, and both depend on PERM.
| AC21 provision | Trigger | Extension |
|---|---|---|
| §106(a) | PERM (or I-140) was filed at least 365 days before the 6-year H-1B limit | 1-year H-1B extensions, renewable until the green card resolves |
| §104(c) | I-140 is approved but priority date is not current | 3-year H-1B extensions |
PERM has to be filed (not approved) at least 365 days before the 6-year H-1B mark to qualify for §106(a) extensions. That's why employers typically begin PERM 22-30 months before the cliff: the 365-day rule plus the 22-24 month processing time leaves no slack.
A few common scenarios:
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Need more clarity?
Find quick answers to frequent visa questions from our legal experts
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.
Can I extend my H-1B while PERM is pending?
Yes. If PERM is filed at least 365 days before your 6-year H-1B mark, AC21 §106(a) allows 1-year extensions until the case resolves.
Once your I-140 is approved, §104(c) allows 3-year extensions if your priority date is not current.
What is PERM?
A PERM (Program Electronic Review Management) is a labor certification issued by the U.S. Department of Labor. It does NOT give immigration status. Instead, it confirms that no qualified and willing U.S. worker is available for the job and that the employer will pay at least the prevailing wage. It is the first step toward most EB-2 and EB-3 green cards.
What does PERM stand for?
Program Electronic Review Management — the Department of Labor's labor certification process, filed on Form ETA-9089 through the FLAG system.
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