Area of Practice

Employment Based
Immigration

Non-Immigrant Worker Visa

Immigrant Worker Green Cards

Helping You Live, Work, and Grow Your Career in the United States

The United States is a global hub for innovation, talent, and opportunity. Every year, thousands of foreign professionals, investors, and skilled workers come to the U.S. to build careers, grow businesses, and contribute to the economy. At Herman Legal Group, we help you seize these opportunities through strategic legal support tailored to your employment-based immigration journey.

Whether you’re an employer hiring international talent or a foreign national seeking to work or invest in the U.S., we offer the legal guidance, government compliance, and documentation precision necessary to ensure a smooth and successful immigration process.

What is Employment Based Immigration

Employment-based immigration refers to both temporary work visas and employment-based green cards that allow foreign nationals to work legally in the U.S. Some pathways offer permanent residency, while others allow work authorization for a fixed period.

We serve:

  • Skilled professionals and executives
  • Employers looking to sponsor foreign workers
  • Entrepreneurs and investors
  • Researchers, religious workers, and nonprofit staff

We provide tailored immigration solutions for each category, ensuring compliance with U.S. laws and maximizing approval chances. 

 

With deep expertise and personalized guidance, we help you achieve your immigration goals efficiently.

Temporary Work (Nonimmigrant Visas)

Temporary (nonimmigrant) visas are ideal for individuals coming to the U.S. for a specific job, project, or investment for a limited time. These visas often require sponsorship by a U.S. employer and are bound by visa-specific criteria.

Common Temporary Work Visa Categories

H-1B Visa – Specialty Occupations

For professionals in fields like IT, healthcare, engineering, and finance. Requires a bachelor’s degree or higher. Subject to annual caps and a lottery system.

L-1 Visa – Intra-Company Transfers

Allows multinational companies to transfer executives, managers, or specialized staff from foreign offices to U.S. branches.

O-1 Visa – Extraordinary Ability

For individuals with exceptional talent in science, education, athletics, or the arts. Requires national or international recognition.

TN Visa – Canadian and Mexican Professionals

A streamlined work visa available to professionals under the USMCA/NAFTA agreement.

E-2 Visa – Treaty Investor Visa

For nationals of treaty countries who invest a substantial amount in a U.S. business.

R-1 Visa – Religious Workers

For clergy and qualified religious workers affiliated with a U.S. religious nonprofit organization.

J-1 Visa – Exchange Visitors and Researchers

For scholars, interns, doctors, or trainees participating in approved U.S. exchange programs.

Permanent Employment & Green Cards

Employment-based green cards offer foreign workers lawful permanent residence in the United States. These are divided into five preference categories

EB-1: Priority Workers

For individuals with extraordinary ability (EB-1A), outstanding professors or researchers (EB-1B), or multinational executives (EB-1C). No labor certification is required. EB-1A applicants can self-petition.

EB-2: Advanced Degree Professionals and Exceptional Ability

For professionals with an advanced degree (or equivalent) or those with exceptional ability in science, business, or the arts. Most cases require a job offer and PERM labor certification. However, applicants can self-petition through a National Interest Waiver (NIW).

EB-3: Skilled, Professional, and Other Workers

For those with at least two years of experience (skilled workers), a bachelor’s degree (professionals), or other workers with less experience. Requires PERM labor certification and employer sponsorship.

EB-4: Special Immigrants

For religious workers, broadcasters, international organization employees, and others in unique categories.

EB-5: Immigrant Investor Visa

For investors who contribute $800,000–$1,050,000 to a U.S. business and create at least 10 full-time jobs. EB-5 is one of the fastest tracks to a green card for qualified investors.

Our Services for Employment Immigration

Our law firm handles every phase of the employment-based immigration process with accuracy and efficiency:

Corporate Immigration Services

We partner with employers to manage all aspects of workforce immigration, including:

  • Talent planning and workforce visa strategy
  • Short- and long-term immigration compliance
  • Assistance during USCIS site visits or audits
  • Guidance on I-9, E-Verify, and public access file requirements
  • Support for employee dependents

Whether you’re hiring one engineer or transferring a global team, we help ensure your immigration strategy aligns with your business objectives.

Why Herman Legal Group?

Proven Track Record

Tens of Thousands of Satisfied Clients

Multilingual Team

We Speak Over 12 Languages

Exceptional Value

Competitive Fees and Volume Discounts

Global Reach

Serving Clients in All 50 States and Worldwide

Proven Track Record

Tens of Thousands of Satisfied Clients

Multilingual Team

We Speak Over 12 Languages

Exceptional Value

Competitive Fees and Volume Discounts

Global Reach

Serving Clients in All 50 States and Worldwide

Book Your Consultation

Honest Advice. Multilingual Team. Decades of Experience. Get the Clarity and Support you Deserve.

Contact us

Head Office OH

408 West Saint Clair Avenue, Suite 230 Cleveland, OH 44113

Phone Number

+1-216-696-6170

Email Address

richardtmherman@gmail.com

FAQS

Help & Support FAQs

Our Help & Support FAQs section is designed to answer your most common questions quickly and clearly. You’ll find step-by-step guidance, useful tips, and solutions to common issues all in one place. It’s the fastest way to get the help you need without waiting for support. Explore the FAQs to save time and get back to what matters.

A temporary visa allows you to work in the U.S. for a set time. A green card gives you permanent residence, allowing long-term work and travel rights.

Processing times vary depending on the family relationship and whether the petitioner is a citizen or green card holder. It can range from several months to several years.

The PERM process can take 6–12 months or more, including recruitment, audit risks, and processing time by the Department of Labor.

NIW allows certain professionals to bypass employer sponsorship and PERM if their work benefits the U.S. broadly (e.g., medical researchers, climate scientists).