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AC-21 Job Portability: Change Jobs Without Losing Your Green Card Progress

Waited 8 years for your priority date. Finally filed I-485. Now you want to change jobs. AC-21 is the law that lets you do it—if you follow the rules exactly.

By Sumit PatelUpdated May 202614 min read

The Problem AC-21 Solves

Before AC-21 was enacted in 2000, H-1B workers on the employment-based green card path were trapped. If you wanted to change employers, your entire green card case—years of PERM labor certification, I-140 approval, and waiting in the priority date queue—was at risk. Your new employer would need to start the process from scratch.

For Indian and Chinese nationals waiting 8–12+ years for their priority date to become current, this was an enormous disincentive to change jobs. Workers stayed in positions out of fear, even when better opportunities existed. Congress recognized this and enacted AC-21 to allow portability once the adjustment of status was well underway.

The 180-day threshold was chosen deliberately: once USCIS has spent 6 months processing your I-485, the investment is substantial enough that portability makes sense. The "same or similar" occupation requirement ensures you can't use portability to completely change careers at the expense of the PERM job market analysis.

The Three Requirements for AC-21 Portability

1

I-485 Pending 180+ Days

Your Form I-485 (adjustment of status) must have been pending with USCIS for at least 180 calendar days. Count from the I-485 receipt date on your USCIS receipt notice.

2

Approved I-140

Your Form I-140 (immigrant petition) must have been approved before or at the time you invoke portability. A pending I-140 does not satisfy this requirement.

3

Same or Similar Job

The new position must be in the same or similar occupational classification as the job described in the PERM/I-140 petition. Evaluated based on SOC codes and job duties.

How USCIS Evaluates 'Same or Similar' Occupation?

This is the most contested aspect of AC-21. USCIS uses a functional test based on DOL's SOC classification system. The evaluation considers:

  • SOC code comparison: Jobs in the same SOC major group (first 2 digits) are generally same or similar.
  • Job duties: The nature of the work—are the core duties substantially the same even if the title is different?
  • Educational requirements: Both positions should require the same general level and type of education.
  • Skills and experience: The skills used should overlap substantially.
Original PERM JobNew JobAC-21 Likely?
Software EngineerSenior Software Engineer✅ Yes
Software EngineerSoftware Architect✅ Yes
Software EngineerEngineering Manager⚠️ Borderline—depends on duties
Software EngineerProduct Manager❌ Unlikely—different SOC group
AccountantSenior Accountant✅ Yes
AccountantFinancial Analyst⚠️ Borderline—consult attorney
Civil EngineerSoftware Engineer❌ No—different field entirely
Database AdministratorData Engineer✅ Usually yes—same SOC family

The AC-21 Notification Letter: Should You File One?

USCIS does not require you to proactively notify them of a job change under AC-21. However, immigration attorneys almost universally recommend filing an AC-21 notification letter. Here's why:

Your I-485 may be pending for another 2–5 years after the job change. When USCIS eventually adjudicates your I-485, an officer may see that your original employer is no longer your employer and issue an RFE asking you to prove AC-21 portability. If you filed an AC-21 letter years earlier, you have contemporaneous documentation. If you didn't, you're relying on memory and documents that may be hard to reconstruct.

The notification letter should include: your name and A-number, I-485 and I-140 receipt numbers, a brief statement that your I-485 has been pending 180+ days, a description of the original and new positions showing they are same/similar, a letter from the new employer describing the position, and a copy of your new employment offer letter. File it as an I-485 inquiry package, not as a new form.

What Happens to Your I-140 When You Change Jobs?

If your original employer withdraws your I-140 after you invoke AC-21 portability, your I-485 is generally not affected as long as the I-140 was approved and the I-485 has been pending 180+ days. This is the "I-140 retention" provision under AC-21.

However, if USCIS revokes your I-140 for fraud or misrepresentation (not just employer withdrawal), portability does not protect your I-485. This distinction matters. A voluntary employer withdrawal is different from a finding that the original PERM or I-140 had substantive defects.

Your priority date is tied to the I-140 even after employer withdrawal—under the 2017 USCIS policy memorandum, approved I-140 priority dates are retained even if the petition is later withdrawn, allowing you to retain your place in the queue when filing with a new employer.

AC-21 FAQ

BI
Sumit Patel
Immigration Tech Researcher · H1B Visa Jobs

Sumit covers employment-based green card processes including PERM, I-140, I-485, and AC-21 portability, helping H-1B workers navigate the long path from visa to permanent residency.