You know how they say "premium" is quicker? Not always-particularly when it comes to H1B visa processing in the U.S.
One of our users submitted their H1B under premium processing on March 24. It's April 16 now.
That's 16 business days and still-no update.
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What makes it more challenging is that the online status was changed to "actively being reviewed" only three days after it was filed. But since then, complete silence. No approval, no rejection, not even a request for additional evidence.
The individual's B2 status (which they had opted for after losing the H1B job) will be expiring in May. They already postponed their start date at the new job once-and now even that one is jeopardized.
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When they call USCIS, they're informed that only the employer is authorized to request information. And when the company lawyer is contacted? Just: "Please wait."
This is the catch-a premium processing should translate into 15 business days for a decision or an action. But in the real world, timelines feel fuzzy.
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This isn't an isolated incident. Several H1B aspirants are seeing the same pattern of delay-filed under premium, receipt notices arrive quick, online status checks early… and then, waiting.
It's not merely rules. It's about actual people waiting at the cusp-jobs delayed, paychecks suspended, visas nearing expiration, and immigration statuses suspended in limbo.
The irony is-people are paying $2,500 for premium, anticipating clarity. But what they're usually getting is confusion and silence.
Even when the delay exceeds 15 business days, there's no escalation route unless the employer initiates it. And let's be honest-most don't.
There's a bizarre feeling of helplessness here. You do everything right, take all the legal steps, pay extra for urgency-and still feel like your future is on hold.
And not having a clue why it's running behind? That's worse than the delay itself. Because when time-sensitive visas and job start dates are at stake, every day counts.
It's time USCIS took responsibility for premium timelines. Not just as a promise-but as a system people can actually rely on.

