With the first visa bulletin for Fiscal Year (FY) 2025, there was not much activity in family-based cases, but much for employment-based ones. For both family-based charts (final action dates and dates for filing), the dates were the same as in the September 2024 visa bulletin for Rest of World (ROW) cases. The final action dates chart changes were confined to Mexico and India; and the dates for filing chart changes were specifically for Mexico and the Philippines.
For employment-based cases, the final action dates chart showed EB-1 (ROW) remaining current with China moving up one week to 11/8/22 and India remaining at 2/1/22; EB-2 ROW staying at 3/15/23 with China remaining at 3/22/20 and India 7/15/12; EB-3 ROW advancing almost 2 years to 11/15/22 with China backlogging five months to 4/1/20 and India advancing one week to 11/1/12; EB-3W ROW remaining at 12/1/20 with China remaining at 1/1/17 and India moving up one week to 11/1/12; EB-4 worldwide remaining at 1/1/21 with non-minister certain religious workers becoming unavailable due to lack of extending legislation; EB-5 unreserved remained current with China advancing eight months to 7/15/16 and India one year one month to 1/1/22, and all the reserved EB-5 categories remained current.
For the EB dates for filing chart, EB-1 ROW remained current with China staying at 1/1/23 and India advancing two months one week to 4/15/22; EB-2 ROW advanced four months one week to 8/1/23 with China advancing four months to 10/1/20 and India six months one week to 1/1/13; EB-3 ROW moved up one month to 3/1/23 with China backlogging eight months two weeks to 11/15/20 and India advancing eight months one week to 6/8/13; EB-3W ROW advanced five months two weeks to 5/22/21 with China moving up one year to 1/1/18 and India six months to 6/1/13; EB-4 including certain religious workers worldwide remained at 2/1/21; EB-5 ROW remained current with China moving backwards three months to 10/1/16, India staying at 4/1/22, and all the reserved EB-5 categories remained current.
For adjustment of status, USCIS indicated that it would use the dates for filing chart during the month for both family-based and employment-based cases. This is the first time that USCIS has used the B chart for EB cases since February 2024.
Looking forward, we would all hope that the Department of State continues to use all efforts to make use of all visa numbers as it has been doing during this fiscal year and as evidenced by its closing of numerous employment-based categories and barring further issuance of immigrant visas in them for the balance of the FY 2024 fiscal year.