1. If you are traveling under advance parole, you are not required to have a H-1B stamp
A reader asks:
I scheduled an H-1B interview in mid-to-late August. My H-1B is expiring, and I can’t file for extension until early August. I plan to enter the US using advance parole. Do I need to get H-1B stamped abroad? If I get a NOID or am denied and then go abroad to get H-1B, will it be too late?
Alan Lee, Esq. answers,
If you are traveling under advance parole, that is separate from H-1B and you are not required to have a H-1B stamp in your passport to return. I do not understand why you would go abroad to get a H-1B stamp if you are denied or obtain a notice of intent to deny (NOID). Perhaps you are thinking that you will overcome the NOID and the denial will pertain to maintenance of status in the US rather than the merits of the H-1B petition itself. In that case, you would likely have to reschedule the appointment at the consulate as the timing would likely not work out and the DS- 160 used to schedule the appointment would no longer be accurate.
2. Why did I not receive a receipt for my filed application?
A reader asks:
I filed for expedited NIW processing two months ago and still haven’t received the receipt notice. I first submitted in December 2025, but it was returned in Feb due to an expired form. I corrected it and resent the same day. Until now, I still haven’t received anything, and the check hasn’t been cashed. I did it myself and was later had a lawyer review the package. The lawyer said it looked fine. What could be wrong?
Alan Lee, Esq. answers,
There are a number of reasons for which you may not yet have received the receipt notice after returning the package with the correct form following rejection. You have said that you had a lawyer review the package, but a lawyer who is not working on the case may not give as much attention to it as one on which he or she is actually doing the work. You may have sent the package to the wrong address or given the wrong amount of payment or made mistakes on the forms. We have also heard recently that USCIS has not been particularly speedy in working on resubmitted cases. Hope that you hear something soon.