On January 15, 2025, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) published one of the most detailed policy updates on the EB-2 National Interest Waiver (NIW) in nearly a decade. The new guidance now controlling in Volume 6, Part F, Chapter 5 of the USCIS Policy Manual is effective immediately and applies to every NIW petition that was pending on January 15, 2025 or filed on or after that date.
This update does not change the fundamental three-prong test established in the landmark 2016 precedent Matter of Dhanasar, but it provides the clearest roadmap USCIS has ever given on how officers actually apply that test in practice. It also resolves years of uncertainty about threshold EB-2 eligibility in self-petitioned NIW cases.
1. Threshold EB-2 Eligibility Is Now Scrutinized More Explicitly Before even reaching the three Dhanasar prongs, USCIS will confirm that the petitioner actually qualifies for the underlying EB-2 category:
2. Prong 1 – Substantial Merit and National Importance The manual devotes several pages to explaining what rises (and what does not rise) to “national importance.”
3. Prong 2 – Well Positioned to Advance the Endeavor USCIS lists more than 15 types of evidence that can help prove this prong (degrees, patents, publications, citations, funding, accelerator acceptance, government grants, letters from interested U.S. agencies, progress already achieved, etc.). The manual stresses that business plans and expert letters are helpful but must be corroborated by independent objective evidence — vague predictions or unsupported endorsements carry little weight.
4. Prong 3 – Balancing Test The update reaffirms that STEM Ph.D.s working on critical and emerging technologies or national-security-related fields receive especially favorable consideration under Prong 3. Letters from U.S. government agencies or quasi-governmental entities explaining why the petitioner’s work is urgently needed can be almost decisive.
5. **Entrepreneurs & Start-Up Founders The guidance retains and expands the entrepreneur-friendly framework from 2022. Ownership interest + active central role + evidence of investment, accelerator participation, revenue growth, or job creation remain strong indicators. However, USCIS warns that “broad assertions about general economic benefits” are not enough — the specific start-up’s impact must be documented.
The bottom line: Well-prepared cases that clearly define a specific endeavor of substantial merit and national importance, tie the petitioner’s unique qualifications directly to that endeavor, and include strong independent corroborating evidence will continue to enjoy very high approval rates. Cases that are vague, overstate impact, or rely on boilerplate letters are far more likely to receive lengthy RFEs or denials under the clarified policy.
At the Law Offices of Thomas V. Allen, we prepare and file EB-2 NIW petitions in accordance with the latest USCIS guidance. Our services include comprehensive case analysis, drafting of petition materials, and assembling evidence that satisfies current adjudicatory standards. Contact us for a straightforward evaluation of your eligibility.
Access insight, news and updates from across the Thomas V. Allen
On February 12, 2018, the Texas Service Center (TSC) will begin processing certain Form I-129, Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker petitions for L nonimmigrant classification, also known as L visas. The TSC will share this workload with the California Service Center to balance workloads and to provide flexibility as USCIS works towards improving processing times […]
USCIS has just announced that they are now extending the suspension of CAP subject H-1B petitions all the way until February 19, 2019.
USCIS and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), in consultation with the Department of State, have published the list of countries whose nationals are eligible to receive H-2A and H‑2B visas in 2018 The notice listing the eligible countries was published on Jan. 18, 2018, in the Federal Register. For 2018, Secretary of Homeland Security […]