Act Fast β€” 60 Days

H1B Layoff Survival Guide

You have 60 days from your last day of employment. Here's exactly what to do β€” and in what order.

Calculate Your 60-Day Deadline

Day 1–3

Get Termination Documentation

Critical

β†’Request written termination notice with your last day of employment

β†’Ask HR for a layoff letter (useful for new employer H1B transfer)

β†’Note your exact last day of authorized employment β€” this starts the 60-day clock

Day 1–7

Contact Immigration Attorney

Critical

β†’Call your immigration attorney immediately

β†’Review your current status, expiry, and all pending immigration filings

β†’Confirm the 60-day grace period window for your specific situation

Day 1–14

Start Job Search Immediately

β†’Target cap-exempt employers first (universities, hospitals, nonprofits β€” file anytime, no lottery)

β†’Target large tech/finance companies with in-house immigration teams

β†’Filter LinkedIn/Indeed for 'H1B sponsorship' explicitly

β†’Contact H1B-friendly recruiters and staffing agencies

Day 7–21

Understand Your Options

β†’H1B Transfer: New employer files I-129 transfer β€” you can work on receipt notice (portability)

β†’Change to H-4: If spouse has H-1B, you can change status (file I-539)

β†’Change to F-1: Get school acceptance + I-20, file I-539 before 60 days

β†’Change to B-1/B-2: Emergency extension of stay to buy more time β€” no work auth

β†’Depart US: If no options materialize within 60 days

Day 21–45

H1B Transfer Process

β†’Provide new employer: most recent I-797, all prior H1B approvals, I-94 travel history, layoff letter

β†’New employer gets LCA approved (5–7 business days at DOL)

β†’New employer files I-129 petition with USCIS β€” you can start working on receipt!

β†’Premium processing available for 15-day USCIS adjudication ($2,805)

Day 45–60

Final Decisions Before Deadline

Critical

β†’All status change petitions must be filed before day 60 β€” do not miss this

β†’If H1B transfer is pending and received, you can work under portability

β†’If no path found, depart the US in good standing before status expires

Your 5 Options During the 60 Days

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H1B Transfer (Best Option)

New employer files H1B transfer. No lottery. You can start working once USCIS receives the petition.

⏱ 2–4 weeks to receiptβœ“ Work: On filing receipt
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Cap-Exempt Employer H1B

Universities, hospitals, nonprofits can file H1B anytime β€” no lottery, no cap.

⏱ File any timeβœ“ Work: On approval
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Change to H-4

If spouse has H-1B, you can change to H-4. No independent work auth unless eligible for EAD.

⏱ File I-539 within 60 daysβœ“ Work: H-4 EAD if I-140 approved
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Change to F-1 Student

Enroll in a US school, get I-20, file I-539 to change to F-1.

⏱ Must file within 60 daysβœ“ Work: CPT during study, OPT after
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O-1 Extraordinary Ability

If you have extraordinary credentials, O-1 has no cap and no lottery.

⏱ 2–4 months standardβœ“ Work: On approval

What Happens to Your Visa Status After an H1B Layoff?

When your H1B employment ends β€” whether through a layoff, resignation, or termination β€” your H1B status does not immediately expire, but your authorization to work does. USCIS implemented a formal 60-day grace period under 8 CFR 214.1(l)(2), which became effective January 17, 2017. This regulation gives H1B workers exactly 60 consecutive calendar days from their last day of authorized employment to either find a new sponsor, change visa status, or depart the United States. According to USCIS official H1B guidance, the grace period applies to E-1, E-2, E-3, H-1B, H-1B1, L-1, O-1, and TN nonimmigrants β€” but it is discretionary, not automatic. USCIS adjudicators may evaluate whether the circumstances of your case warrant applying it.

The 60-day clock begins on your last day of employment β€” not on the date you received notice, not on the date your final paycheck was issued, and not on the date your company's severance package ends. If your employer places you on paid administrative leave before the official last day, that final day still governs. It is essential to obtain a clear, written termination notice stating your exact last day of authorized employment. This document will be required by every immigration attorney and every prospective new employer who will file your H1B transfer. Over 600,000 H1B workers were employed in the US as of fiscal year 2024, and layoffs in the tech sector in 2022–2024 affected an estimated 100,000+ H1B holders annually according to industry tracking data.

60-Day Grace Period: What You Can and Cannot Do?

The grace period is a period of authorized presence β€” not authorized work. This distinction matters enormously. Many H1B workers mistakenly believe they can freelance or consult during the grace period. They cannot. Any unauthorized employment during the grace period can permanently damage your immigration record and trigger visa ineligibility findings at future consular interviews.

Can DoCannot DoTime Limit
Remain in the United StatesWork for any employer60 calendar days
Search for a new job activelyFreelance or consult for pay60 calendar days
File I-539 to change statusReceive any US-source incomeBefore day 60
File H1B transfer with new sponsorStart work before petition is receivedBefore day 60
Travel outside the US (risky β€” re-entry not guaranteed)Re-enter without valid visa stampAny time
Attend interviews and networking eventsAccept contract or gig economy work60 calendar days
Apply to schools and obtain I-20Begin classes before I-539 is filedBefore day 60
Work on a spouse's H-4 EAD (if valid)Use a previously expired EADEAD expiry date

H1B Transfer After Layoff: Complete Employer Requirements Checklist

An H1B transfer is not a new cap-subject petition β€” it is a portability filing under AC21. Your new employer files an I-129 petition with USCIS. Once USCIS receives the petition (typically 1–2 weeks after filing), you may legally begin working for the new employer under portability rules β€” even before USCIS approves the petition. This is one of the most powerful and underused protections available to H1B workers. Here is every document your new employer will need from you:

1

Most Recent I-797 Approval Notice

The official USCIS approval from your most recent H1B petition. If you have multiple, include all. This proves you were in valid H1B status immediately before the layoff.

2

All Prior H1B Approval Notices (I-797)

Every I-797 from every H1B petition you have ever had. This establishes your full H1B history and helps the new employer's attorney build a clean petition.

3

Copy of Your Layoff / Termination Letter

Written documentation from your former employer stating your last day of employment. This is critical for proving when the 60-day grace period started.

4

Passport (All Pages)

Color copies of every page, including the bio page, all visa stamps, and entry/exit stamps. The new attorney needs this to verify your travel history and valid passport.

5

I-94 Travel History Printout

Download from cbp.dhs.gov. This shows your most recent entry date, port of entry, and authorized admit-until date. Required for every H1B petition.

6

Current Resume / CV

Must align perfectly with the specialty occupation being claimed. The attorney will use this to draft the support letter and establish your qualifications.

7

Educational Credentials (Degree + Transcripts)

Official or certified copies of your bachelor's degree or higher. If your degree is foreign, a credential evaluation (NACES member agency) may be required.

8

Offer Letter / Employment Agreement from New Employer

Signed offer letter stating your title, salary, start date, and work location. This is the foundation of the new LCA and I-129 petition.

Job Search Strategy for H1B Holders After Layoff

A standard job search timeline is 3–6 months. You have 60 days. This requires a fundamentally different strategy β€” one that prioritizes speed, employer familiarity with H1B sponsorship, and minimizing friction in the offer-to-petition pipeline. The following six strategies are specifically designed for H1B holders operating under the 60-day clock. According to DOL's H-1B program data, over 500 employers filed more than 1,000 H1B petitions each in fiscal year 2024 β€” start with these known sponsors.

🎯

Target LCA-Active Employers First

Search DOL's iCERT portal for companies that filed LCAs in your occupation in the last 90 days. These employers are actively hiring H1B workers and already understand the process β€” dramatically cutting your time-to-offer.

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Prioritize Cap-Exempt Employers

Hospitals, universities, nonprofits affiliated with higher education, and certain research organizations are cap-exempt. They can file your H1B transfer any day of the year, no lottery. Over 400,000 H1B workers are employed at cap-exempt entities.

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Insist on Premium Processing ($2,805)

When negotiating offers, push for the employer to pay premium processing. USCIS guarantees an action within 15 business days. For a worker with only 30–45 days remaining, this is non-negotiable β€” standard processing takes 3–5 months.

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Understand H1B Portability Rights

Under AC21 Section 105, once your transfer petition is received by USCIS, you may begin working for the new employer. You do not need to wait for approval. This means a receipt notice β€” often issued within 1–2 weeks β€” unlocks your work authorization.

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Leverage Your Professional Network

Studies show that 70–80% of positions are filled through referrals. Post your situation discreetly on LinkedIn. Reach out to former colleagues, managers, and classmates. Indian and Chinese professional networks on WhatsApp/Slack actively share H1B-friendly openings.

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Consider Staffing Agencies as a Bridge

H1B-friendly staffing firms (like Tata Consultancy, Wipro, Infosys BPO, and dozens of smaller shops) can sponsor an H1B transfer quickly. While rates may be lower than direct employment, a staffing agency job can buy you time to land a direct-hire role.

Understanding H1B Portability Under AC21

Section 105 of the American Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century Act (AC21) created the concept of H1B portability. If you have been in H1B status for at least 180 days (about 6 months) and your I-140 green card petition is approved (or pending), you have even broader portability rights β€” you can change employers as long as the new job is in the same or a similar occupational classification. Even without a pending I-140, you may begin working for a new employer the moment USCIS receives β€” not approves β€” the new I-129 transfer petition. Keep the USCIS receipt notice safe: it is your authorization to work during the pending period.

Frequently Asked Questions: H1B Layoff Grace Period

Official Government Resources

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Sumit Patel

SMIEEE Β· FBCS Β· 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 β†’