EB-1A MYTHS
2026 EDITION
EB-1A · 8 myths debunked

What are the biggest misconceptions about the EB-1A visa?

People reach out constantly after seeing an EB-1A approval, and most of them carry the same wrong assumptions. The myths keep qualified candidates from even trying. Here are the eight biggest EB-1A misconceptions, and what is actually true.

Team Jinee

Extraordinary Ability. Precisely Positioned.

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Updated May 2026

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6 min read

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Common myths debunked

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Criteria needed to qualify

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Job offers required

2-step

 USCIS evidence review

Extraordinary ability No Nobel needed No job offer Self-petition Premium processing Final merits 2026 Edition Extraordinary ability No Nobel needed No job offer Self-petition Premium processing Final merits 2026 Edition Extraordinary ability No Nobel needed No job offer Self-petition Premium processing Final merits 2026 Edition

On This Page

Only for Nobel winners

Only one field counts

You need a US job offer

You must have an attorney

Meeting the criteria means approval

FAQs

References

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There is a real lack of understanding around the EB-1A visa, and the myths do genuine damage. They convince qualified people that the visa is out of reach before they ever look into it.

The truth is more open than the reputation. The EB-1A does not require a Nobel Prize, a US job offer, an attorney, or a stack of journal publications. It requires evidence across at least three of ten criteria, and a case that holds together as a whole. Below, eight of the most common misconceptions, corrected.

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The most expensive EB-1A myth is the one that stops a qualified person from applying at all.

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Myth: The EB-1A is only for Nobel Prize winners

Many believe the EB-1A is reserved for people who have won major international awards. It is not. The visa has ten criteria, and meeting at least three of them is enough to be considered.

A major one-time award is one route, but it is far from the only one. Most successful applicants qualify through a combination of the other criteria, not a single famous prize.

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Myth: You need extraordinary achievement in only one field

Some think the EB-1A demands a narrow record in one specific field. In reality, the visa recognizes extraordinary ability across the sciences, arts, education, business, and athletics.

What matters is sustained acclaim and documented impact in your area of expertise, whatever that area is.

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Myth: You must have a US job offer

This is one of the most common misunderstandings. The EB-1A does not require a job offer from a US employer, and it does not require labor certification.

It is a self-petition category. You file on your own behalf, which is exactly what makes it valuable to professionals who do not want their immigration tied to a single employer.

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Myth: You cannot apply without an attorney

Having an attorney can be helpful, but it is not a legal requirement. Individuals can apply for the EB-1A themselves, provided they genuinely understand the criteria and the process.

The real question is not “attorney or not.” It is whether your case is built and presented well. Many applicants choose professional EB-1A profile-building support for that reason, not because the law forces it.

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Myth: The EB-1A always takes years

Many assume the process is endlessly long. It does not have to be. Standard processing varies, but premium processing can return a USCIS decision on the petition in a short, fixed window.

The build of the profile is what takes time. The adjudication itself, with premium processing, is fast.

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Myth: You need extensive publications

There is a belief that you must have many papers in prestigious journals. Publications can help, but they are just one of the ten criteria.

Applicants regularly qualify through other significant achievements, such as leading roles, original contributions, awards, judging, or industry impact. A thin publication record is not a disqualifier.

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Myth: It is only for established professionals

Some assume the EB-1A is reserved for people at the absolute peak of their careers. Emerging talents can qualify too, as long as they meet the required criteria and can show a record of achievement with continued potential.

The standard is extraordinary ability and acclaim, not seniority or age.

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Myth: Meeting the criteria guarantees approval

This is the most important correction. Meeting three of the ten criteria does not guarantee an approval. USCIS also weighs the overall strength of the case in a final merits determination, asking whether the evidence collectively shows you have risen to the top of your field.

A petition can satisfy the criteria on paper and still fall short as a whole. That is why how the case is built matters as much as what is in it.

Final note

Every profile is different, and a strong, organic profile takes time to build. There is no one-size-fits-all EB-1A path. The myths above keep capable people on the sidelines. Knowing the truth is the first step toward an honest look at where you actually stand.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to have won a major award for an EB-1A?

No. A major award is one criterion of ten. Meeting any three is enough to be considered.

Does the EB-1A require a US job offer?

No. It is a self-petition category with no job offer and no labor certification required.

Can I file an EB-1A without an attorney?

Yes. An attorney is not legally required, though many applicants use professional support to build and present a stronger case.

Do I need a long list of publications

No. Publications are one of ten criteria. Applicants regularly qualify through other achievements such as original contributions, leadership, awards, or judging.

If I meet three criteria, am I approved?

Not automatically. USCIS makes a final merits determination on the case as a whole, so the overall strength of the evidence still matters.

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References

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USCIS, “Employment-Based Immigration: First Preference EB-1” — uscis.gov

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8 CFR §204.5(h) — Regulatory criteria for extraordinary ability — ecfr.gov

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Kazarian v. USCIS, 596 F.3d 1115 (9th Cir. 2010) — the two-step EB-1A criteria and final merits analysis

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