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Employment Preference · July 2026

EB-3 · Mexico

Skilled workers (2+ years) and professionals with bachelor's degrees.

Final Action Dates (July 2026)

Aug 1, 2024

Approximately 1.8 years from today's date

Waiting

Final Action Date

Aug 1, 2024

When a green card can actually be issued

Dates for Filing

Current

When adjustment of status may be submitted

What this means for Mexico applicants

For July 2026, EB-3 for Mexico sits at Aug 1, 2024 under the Final Action Dates chart. That means only applicants whose priority date is earlier than Aug 1, 2024 may move forward this month. Based on today's cutoff, the effective backlog is approximately 1.8 years — though real-world waits depend on how quickly the chart advances month to month.

Check back monthly — priority date movement depends on how many people from this country file and how many immigrant visas are available under the global and per-country caps. Our monthly Visa Bulletin analysis covers movement in this category.

How to read this page

The Visa Bulletin publishes two charts each month. The Final Action Dates chart tells you when the U.S. government can actually issue a green card — your priority date must be earlier than the listed cutoff. The Dates for Filing chart is earlier and lets you file Form I-485 (adjustment of status) before your priority date is fully current, provided USCIS has chosen to accept filings against this chart for the month.

For July 2026, USCIS is accepting employment-based adjustment filings against the Final Action Dates chart. This can change month to month — always confirm against uscis.gov/visabulletininfo before filing.

Priority date basics

For EB-3, your priority date is the date the Department of Labor received your PERM application (or, if no PERM required, the date USCIS received your I-140). This is the date you use to measure progress against the Visa Bulletin every month.

EB-3 in other countries

Mexico in other employment categories

Not legal advice. Priority date movements are unpredictable. Cutoffs may retrogress without warning. For case-specific guidance, consult a licensed immigration attorney. Confirm against the official Visa Bulletin.