Legal & Compliance
US Immigration Law 101
A practical, plain-English primer to help you understand core U.S. immigration concepts, common pathways, and the compliance risks that derail timelines. Educational onlyโnot legal advice.
Foundation
How to Think About Immigration
Most confusion comes from mixing up status, visa, and work authorization. This page gives you a clean mental model so you can ask better questions and spot red flags early.
Visa vs status vs entry
Immigrant vs nonimmigrant
Eligibility vs strategy
Compliance-first mindset
Core concepts
Key Building Blocks
Use these as your baseline vocabulary. If a timeline or offer skips these details, slow down and validate assumptions.
Petitions vs applications
A petition asks the government to recognize eligibility (often filed by an employer or family sponsor). An application asks for a benefit like a visa, change/extension of status, or a green card.
Consular processing vs adjustment
Some people finish abroad through a U.S. consulate (consular processing). Others complete inside the U.S. through adjustment of status. The right route depends on your current location, status, and admissibility issues.
Priority dates and queues
Many categories have annual limits. Your priority date is your place in line. Movement depends on demand, country caps, and policy shiftsโso plan with buffers, not best-case assumptions.
RFEs, audits, and denials
Requests for Evidence (RFE) and audits are not automatic failures, but they add time and require clean documentation. Denials can trigger status problems if youโre in the U.S.โrisk management matters.
Pathways
Common Routes People Research
This is a high-level mapโnot a promise of eligibility. Each route has its own evidence standards, timing, and risk profile.