H1B Startup Visa Guide
Starting a company on H1B is legally complex but not impossible. The employer-employee problem is real — but so are the structures, alternatives, and strategies that successful immigrant founders use to navigate it. Here is everything you need to know.
The Employer-Employee Problem: Why H1B and Startups Clash?
H1B nonimmigrant status requires a bona fide employer-employee relationship between the petitioning entity and the H1B worker. Under USCIS policy (rooted in Matter of Shamal and subsequent precedent decisions), this relationship requires that the employer has the right to hire, fire, pay, supervise, and control the day-to-day work of the H1B beneficiary.
When a founder attempts to be both the sole owner of a startup and the H1B beneficiary employed by that same startup, USCIS finds that no genuine employer-employee relationship exists. The founder controls the company; the company cannot meaningfully control the founder. This is the employer-employee problem — the central legal barrier to starting a company on H1B and working for it.
The critical distinction is between owning a company and working for a company. Ownership is a property right — perfectly legal on H1B, unrestricted as to amount or structure. Work is employment — restricted to the petitioning employer on H1B. This distinction determines everything about what founders can and cannot do.
The Classic Trap That Ends Immigration Cases
Many founders believe that simply registering a company and filing an H1B petition from that company solves the problem. It does not. If you are the 100% owner, CEO, and only employee of your startup, USCIS will deny the H1B petition because the company cannot genuinely exercise employer control over you. The denial will cite 8 C.F.R. § 214.2(h)(4)(ii) and absence of a bona fide employer-employee relationship. If you have already been working for such a company without H1B authorization, you may face unauthorized employment consequences on top of the denial.
What You CAN Do Right Now While on H1B?
The employer-employee restriction is narrower than most founders realize. The prohibition is on performing employment work for the startup without proper authorization — not on ownership, corporate formation, or fundraising. Here is what is fully permissible while maintaining H1B status with your current employer:
Own equity, shares, or membership interests in the company
Incorporate or register the company (LLC, C-Corp, etc.)
Open a business bank account as an officer of the company
Raise money from investors — take meetings, pitch decks, SAFEs
Sign contracts, NDAs, and agreements on behalf of the company as an owner
Recruit co-founders, advisors, and employees for the company
Apply for grants and government programs as the company's representative
File trademarks and patents as the company's designated officer
Sit on the board of advisors (unpaid — consult attorney for board of directors role)
Receive profit distributions as a passive equity holder
Build product nights and weekends without compensation (consult attorney on characterization)
The strategic window: While on H1B with your current employer, you can do almost everything needed to prepare your startup for launch — raise a seed round, hire a team through the startup, build product through contractors, sign customer contracts, and establish the entire legal and corporate infrastructure. Many successful immigrant founders build their complete MVP and raise their Series A before ever needing to transition their immigration status to actually work for the startup themselves.
What You CANNOT Do Without Separate Authorization?
These activities constitute unauthorized employment on H1B if performed for a company you own without a valid H1B petition from that company:
Write code, design, or perform any work tasks for the startup without a valid H1B from that startup
Receive any salary, wages, or compensation for services from the startup
Manage day-to-day operations as CEO, CTO, or any executive role without a valid H1B from the startup
Provide services to the startup's clients or customers on the company's behalf
Act as the startup's only functional employee while also being its sole owner
Sign employment contracts with yourself as both the employer and the employee-beneficiary
Use the startup as a vehicle to receive compensation for consulting or technical work
Corporate Structures That Can Enable H1B Founder Employment
Despite the employer-employee problem, certain startup structures can satisfy USCIS's requirements for a bona fide employer-employee relationship. Each structure has different risk levels and practical requirements:
VC/Angel-Backed Startup with Independent Board
If external investors hold majority voting control and a board of directors with independent members has the authority to hire, fire, and supervise the founder, USCIS may approve an H1B petition. The company must demonstrate it can exercise genuine control over the H1B beneficiary through documented board authority.
Risk: Medium — board structure must be legitimate and documented in operating/shareholder agreements
Y Combinator / Incubator-Sponsored Structure
YC and similar incubators create independent board structures and can sponsor H1B petitions for portfolio founders. The incubator's governance rights and the presence of outside investors help establish the employer-employee relationship. Some incubators have established H1B petition templates with strong approval track records.
Risk: Low-Medium — well-understood structure with legal precedent at major incubators
Co-Founder Arrangement with Majority-Control Co-Founder
If a co-founder holds majority voting control (51%+ or super-majority via voting agreements) and the company's governing documents give that co-founder authority to supervise and terminate the H1B beneficiary, USCIS may find a valid employer-employee relationship. Requires careful operating agreement drafting.
Risk: Medium — depends heavily on operating agreement structure and actual documented control
Professional Employer Organization (PEO)
A PEO co-employs the worker — technically making the PEO the employer of record for H1B purposes — while the startup directs the work. This can satisfy the employer-employee requirement while allowing the founder to work. Legal complexity is high; most immigration attorneys recommend this only with sophisticated startup-experienced counsel.
Risk: Medium — requires careful setup and a PEO with specific H1B sponsorship experience
Sole Owner / No Outside Investors
If you are the 100% owner, CEO, and only employee of your startup, USCIS will almost certainly deny the H1B petition on the grounds that no bona fide employer-employee relationship exists. The company cannot simultaneously be the employer and be entirely controlled by the beneficiary. This is the most common H1B startup denial scenario.
Risk: High — near-certain denial absent independent board control or outside investor governance
Path Comparison: H1B Startup vs. Founder-Friendly Alternatives
| Path | Employer Required | Cap / Lottery |
|---|---|---|
| H1B (company-sponsored) | Yes — independent board needed | Yes — lottery |
| O-1A (agent petition) | No — agent only | No |
| International Entrepreneur Rule (IER) | No | No |
| EB-2 NIW (self-petition) | No | Yes — priority dates |
| EB-1A (self-petition) | No | Yes (often current) |
| Wait for EB-2/EB-3 Green Card | Yes — employer sponsorship | Yes — 10–50+ year wait for India |
Alternatives for Entrepreneurially-Minded H1B Holders
O-1A Extraordinary Ability
No employer-employee requirement with agent petition. No cap or lottery. Must demonstrate extraordinary ability through 3+ of 8 USCIS criteria: prizes/awards, professional memberships, press coverage, judging others' work, original contributions, authored work, high salary, leading role in distinguished organizations. Founders with funded startups, product launches with significant user metrics, press coverage, or conference speaking invitations build strong O-1A cases.
Advantages
- No employer restriction with agent
- No lottery or cap
- File anytime — no April window
- 1 year + unlimited 1-year extensions
- Strong path for funded startup founders
Limitations
- High evidentiary bar — must demonstrate extraordinary achievement
- Does not independently lead to a green card
- Requires sustained documented achievement
EB-1A Self-Petition Then Start Company
EB-1A extraordinary ability green card self-petition. Once the I-485 adjustment of status application is pending (after priority date is current), you receive an EAD work authorization card allowing you to work for your startup or any employer. For Indian nationals, the EB-1A priority date is often current — making this the fastest employment-based green card path available for founders.
Advantages
- Permanent work authorization once I-485 filed
- No employer required for the petition
- Start your startup freely with EAD
- Spouse gets automatic work authorization via I-485 filing
Limitations
- High evidentiary bar for extraordinary ability
- India EB-1A can face wait times depending on priority dates
- Requires significant documented achievements before filing
EB-2 NIW Self-Petition
EB-2 National Interest Waiver self-petition under the post-Dhanasar framework. No employer required. Must show (1) substantial merit and national importance of the endeavor, (2) well-positioned to advance the endeavor, (3) national interest benefit exceeding employer sponsorship. Founders in healthcare AI, climate tech, critical infrastructure, and defense-adjacent fields have won strong NIW petitions.
Advantages
- Self-petition — no employer sponsorship required
- Pending I-485 provides EAD to work for the startup
- Faster than employer-sponsored EB-2 for some categories
Limitations
- India EB-2 priority date severely backlogged (decades in some categories)
- National importance standard is a high bar for most startups
- Slower green card path than EB-1A for most founders
International Entrepreneur Rule (IER)
Parole program allowing founders who raised $250,000+ from qualified US investors (or $100,000+ from government grants) to live and work in the US for 2.5 years, renewable once for up to 5 years total. No visa stamp — parole status. Can work specifically for the startup with no employer-employee constraint. Spouse automatically receives EAD.
Advantages
- No employer-employee problem whatsoever
- Work specifically for your own startup
- Relatively fast process compared to visa petitions
- Spouse gets EAD automatically
- No specialty occupation requirement
Limitations
- Parole, not a visa — deportability risk if program changes
- Political risk: Trump 2.0 reducing discretionary parole programs
- Must raise qualifying investment before filing
- Not a direct path to a green card by itself
International Entrepreneur Rule (IER): The Founder-Specific Option
The International Entrepreneur Rule, codified at 8 C.F.R. § 212.19, is a discretionary parole program specifically designed for startup founders. Unlike H1B, it has no employer-employee problem — you are paroled specifically to work for your own company. Official USCIS information is available at uscis.gov/international-entrepreneur.
Substantial Ownership
Must own at least 10% of the startup at time of initial application (reduced to 5% for renewal/re-parole)
Central and Active Role
Must have a central and active role in the startup — founder, CEO, CTO, or equivalent. Advisory-only roles do not qualify.
Qualifying Investment Raised
Startup received at least $250,000 from qualified US investors within 18 months prior to filing, OR $100,000+ in US government grants or awards
Significant Public Benefit
Must demonstrate the startup will provide significant public benefit — rapid job creation, significant revenue growth, or substantial continuing US investment
Recently Formed Entity
Company must have been incorporated or organized within 5 years prior to the initial IER application date
2026 Political Risk Note: IER is a discretionary parole program, and the Trump administration has sought to reduce discretionary parole programs broadly. As of May 2026, IER applications are still being accepted and processed by USCIS, but approval standards have tightened and processing times have lengthened. Consult an immigration attorney and monitor uscis.gov/international-entrepreneur for current program status before making business decisions based on IER approval.
The Strategic Playbook: What to Do NOW While Still on H1B?
The period while you are still employed on H1B and building your startup is not wasted time — it is the preparation phase that sets up a successful transition. Here is how to use it:
Build your product
Use contractors (properly paid by the company, not by you personally) or build as non-compensated personal project — consult attorney on characterization
Recruit your co-founding team
Identifying and signing co-founders is entirely legal. Structure equity agreements carefully with startup counsel.
Raise your seed or pre-seed round
You can take investor meetings, sign SAFEs and convertible notes, and close a funding round. This is not employment.
Establish board governance
Work with startup attorneys to create the independent board structure that will enable an H1B petition or support an IER application.
File patents and trademarks
IP filings made by the company on your behalf are fully permissible. Build your IP portfolio now.
Begin building your O-1A case
Start documenting achievements — press coverage, conference talks, awards, advisory roles — that will support an O-1A petition when you transition.
Immigration Attorneys Known for Founder Cases
Startup immigration is a specialized subspecialty. Not every immigration attorney understands the intersection of corporate governance structures, equity arrangements, and H1B employer-employee analysis. Below are firms known for founder-specific immigration work in the US tech ecosystem. This is not an endorsement — always verify credentials and interview multiple attorneys before retaining counsel.
| Firm / Attorney | Known For |
|---|---|
| Murthy Law Firm | H1B planning, entrepreneur visa strategy |
| Klasko Immigration Law Partners | EB-1A, NIW, O-1 for founders |
| Ogletree Deakins (Immigration Practice) | Corporate startup immigration structures |
| Fragomen, Del Rey, Bernsen & Loewy | Institutional and venture-backed startup immigration |
| Siskind Susser PC | Employment immigration, entrepreneur parole, IER |
| Berry Appleman & Leiden (BAL) | Venture-backed startup founder immigration |
| Jackson Lewis (Immigration) | H1B employer compliance, founder-sponsored petitions |
| Proskauer Rose (Immigration) | Tech founder immigration strategy and structuring |
| Stone Immigration Law | Startup-specific H1B, O-1A, IER filings |
| Greenberg Traurig (Global Mobility) | Cross-border founder and executive immigration |
Founder Immigration Timeline: Typical Scenarios
Fast Path: O-1A Agent Petition
6–12 months from filing to approved statusBuild extraordinary ability case over 3–6 months → File O-1A with agent → Premium processing (15 business days) → Change of status or consular → Start working for startup under O-1A
Funded Startup: IER Parole
3–6 months after raising qualifying investmentRaise $250k+ from qualified US investors → Collect investor and company documentation → File Form I-941 IER application → Biometrics → Parole approval → Begin working for your startup
Long-Term: EB-1A Self-Petition + Company Launch
18–36 months totalBuild EB-1A case while employed on H1B → File EB-1A I-140 self-petition → Wait for priority date (often current for EB-1A) → File I-485 adjustment → Receive EAD → Work for startup legally
VC-Backed H1B Startup (Most Complex Path)
12–24 months including fundraising and board setupRaise institutional round establishing independent board → Retain immigration counsel for startup H1B → File H1B in April lottery (if not cap-exempt) → Await approval → Begin work only after approval
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Guides
This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. H1B startup law is highly fact-specific and USCIS policy changes frequently. Always retain a licensed immigration attorney before making decisions about starting a company, changing your visa status, or performing any work activities outside your H1B authorization. See official USCIS guidance at uscis.gov/h-1b and uscis.gov/international-entrepreneur. Last updated May 2026.
Sumit Patel
SMIEEE · FBCS · FIETE | 16+ years data engineering | 30+ peer-reviewed papers
Sumit built H1BVisaJobs.com on 10 GB+ of DOL LCA disclosure data (FY2022–FY2025). All immigration data and analysis on this site comes from primary government sources. Read full bio →