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Inmigración basada en el empleo

Después de la aprobación H-1B: Fechas de inicio, sellado de visa y qué sigue

Form I-797 controls your start date, your travel plans, and your family's next steps. Here's what to do after H-1B approval.

Getting an H-1B approval is a major milestone, but it doesn't always mean you can start working immediately.

What happens next depends on how U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) approved the petition, whether you're inside or outside the United States, and whether you need visa stamping before entering or reentering the country.

In most cases, the answers can be found on your Form I-797 Approval Notice. This guide explains what happens after H-1B approval, including when you can start working, whether you need visa stamping, what travel restrictions may apply, and what H-4 family members need to do next.

Navigating next steps after H-1B approval can get complicated quickly. If you have questions about your start date, visa stamping, or dependent status, speak with a Boundless immigration attorney.

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What Happens After H-1B Approval

The first thing to determine after H-1B approval is whether USCIS approved a change of status or consular processing.

Approval notices are issued on Form I-797 and may include a new I-94 arrival/departure record at the bottom if USCIS granted a change of status or extension of stay inside the United States. If the notice does not include a new I-94 and indicates consular notification instead, the beneficiary typically needs visa stamping before entering the United States in H-1B status.

For cap-subject cases, the earliest employment start date is October 1 of the relevant fiscal year. A cap-subject petition may request an employment start date no earlier than that date. If you want the full sequence from registration through adjudication, see how the H-1B visa process works.

Most post-approval questions fall into five areas:

  1. Read the approval notice. Confirm whether USCIS approved change of status or consular processing.
  2. Check the validity dates. Identify the first day of authorized H-1B employment.
  3. Plan for travel. Determine whether international travel means you will need visa stamping before returning.
  4. Review dependent status. Confirm dependent approvals or prepare H-4 applications.
  5. Coordinate with your employer. Align on I-9 updates, onboarding timing, and payroll.

The First Documents to Check After H-1B Approval

The approval notice answers most post-approval questions if you know where to look. The document that matters is the original Form I-797 Approval Notice, not a screenshot from a case tracker.

Form I-797 approval notice

Form I-797 lists the petition classification, validity dates, petitioner, beneficiary, and whether USCIS issued a new I-94. Review these fields carefully:

  • Petitioner name. The sponsoring employer should match the employer that filed the petition.
  • Beneficiary name. Confirm the spelling matches the passport exactly.
  • Class. This should read H1B.
  • Validity dates. These establish the approved H-1B employment period.
  • I-94 at the bottom. If it appears, USCIS generally granted change of status or extension of stay inside the United States.

Form I-94 on the approval notice

A new I-94 attached to the approval notice typically means USCIS changed the person's status in the United States. Form I-94 records a noncitizen's class of admission and authorized period of stay.

This distinction matters: a worker with an H-1B approval and an attached I-94 can generally start employment on the effective date without going to a consulate. A worker approved for consular processing cannot. Employers should also update their records based on the new status validity dates, in line with their I-9 obligations under the USCIS Handbook for Employers (M-274).

Change of Status Vs. Consular Processing After Approval

The central post-approval question is whether USCIS granted change of status or consular processing. The answer affects the start date, travel plans, and the documents required.

Issue
Change of Status
Consular Processing
Inside the U.S. at approval
Usually yes
May be inside or outside the U.S.
New I-94 attached
Usually yes
Usually no
Can start work on validity start date
Usually yes
Usually no
Visa stamping required before entering in H-1B status
Usually for future travel
Yes
H-1B status granted by USCIS
Yes
No

An approved petition does not replace the visa required for admission. If the case was approved for consular processing, the person still needs visa issuance and admission before they are in H-1B status in the United States.

This is where most confusion starts. A petition can be approved for consular processing and the person still not be in H-1B status, which means they cannot begin H-1B employment in the United States. For a dedicated explanation of this distinction, see H-1B change of status vs. consular processing.

When You Can Start Working After H-1B Approval

Your lawful start date depends on your status and the petition validity dates, not the day USCIS updates its case tracker. Most cap-subject approvals carry an October 1 start date, but cap-exempt, amendment, transfer, and extension cases can have different dates.

Starting work after change of status approval

With change of status approval, the worker can generally start on the H-1B validity start date listed on the I-797. An F-1 student selected in the cap who receives an approval notice with an attached I-94 effective October 1 may begin H-1B employment on that date, provided the petitioning employer remains the employer of record.

Students relying on cap-gap should confirm that F-1 status and employment authorization were extended through the H-1B start date. Eligible F-1 students may receive cap-gap extensions when a timely filed cap-subject H-1B petition requests a change of status, which is one of the main situations where someone may remain work-authorized before October 1.

Starting work after consular processing approval

With consular processing approval, the worker cannot start in the United States until they receive an H-1B visa stamp and are admitted in H-1B status. Petition approval comes first, then visa issuance and admission. A case approved in September for consular processing may not lead to a workable October 1 start date if visa interview availability is limited at that consulate.

If timing is the main concern, see how long the H-1B visa process takes for the full timeline from selection through work start.

How to Get H-1B Visa Stamping After Approval

Visa stamping is the consular step most H-1B workers need before entering or reentering the United States in H-1B status. The approval notice on its own is not a travel document.

Applicants typically need a valid passport, the visa application confirmation, a fee receipt where required, and petition-related records including the I-797 approval notice. Exact requirements vary by embassy or consulate.

Most applicants should prepare:

  • Passport valid for the period required by the consulate
  • Form DS-160 confirmation page
  • Visa appointment confirmation
  • Original or copy of Form I-797 Approval Notice
  • Employer support letter and recent pay records, particularly for cases involving a change of employer
  • Labor Condition Application details and petition copy, if available

Interview wait times vary significantly by post and visa category. Post-approval planning should be tied to the specific consulate, not a national average. For a step-by-step walkthrough, see H-1B stamping after approval.

Travel After H-1B Approval

Travel after H-1B approval can leave the petition intact while still affecting status, reentry timing, or the need for visa stamping. The core question is not whether the petition was approved, but what status you will hold when returning to the United States.

Travel after change of status approval

A person approved for change of status inside the United States generally needs an H-1B visa stamp before returning from international travel, unless exempt from the visa requirement. H-1B status typically requires a valid H-1B visa stamp for reentry.

Example: an F-1 student receives H-1B change of status approval effective October 1, travels internationally in November, and does not yet have an H-1B visa stamp. That student will generally need consular stamping before returning in H-1B status.

Travel while change of status is pending or recently approved

Departure timing can affect whether a requested change of status is treated as abandoned. Travel outside the United States while a change of status request is pending may affect that request. Because the outcome depends on the specific filing posture and travel date, workers should get case-specific review before leaving close to an approval date.

In practice, post-approval travel is usually a document-sequencing issue. The petition may remain approved, but the person may still need stamping abroad to resume H-1B admission after travel.

What Happens to H-4 Dependents After H-1B Approval

H-4 dependents do not receive status automatically when the principal's H-1B petition is approved. Each dependent needs either USCIS approval of Form I-539, Application to Extend/Change Nonimmigrant Status, or an H-4 visa issued abroad followed by H-4 admission at the port of entry.

Spouse and children inside the United States

If the principal worker changes status in the United States, dependents typically file Form I-539 so their status aligns with the principal's H-1B period. Approval timing can differ, and dependent cases often trail the principal petition even when filed together.

A common issue after approval is a document mismatch: if the principal receives H-1B approval while the spouse's I-539 remains pending, the family may temporarily hold different statuses inside the United States.

H-4 employment authorization

H-4 status does not automatically include work authorization after the principal's H-1B approval. Employment authorization requires a separate filing, and H-4 employment authorization is available only to certain spouses, specifically those whose H-1B principals meet the statutory basis tied to the employment-based permanent residence process. Principal approval and dependent work authorization should be treated as separate timelines.

Post-Approval Checklist

Most post-approval problems come down to sequence, not eligibility.

  1. Read the I-797. Confirm the validity start and end dates on the original Form I-797 Approval Notice.
  2. Check for an I-94. If one is attached, USCIS generally granted change of status in the United States.
  3. Align with your employer. Confirm when payroll and onboarding will begin based on the approved start date.
  4. Plan for travel. Determine whether international travel will require H-1B visa stamping before return.
  5. Gather documents. Collect your passport, approval notice, petition copy, and employment records for any consular appointment.
  6. Track dependents separately. Review each dependent's status and file or monitor any H-4 application.
  7. Download your electronic I-94. Después de la admisión, recupera el registro actual del portal I-94 de la CBP.

Problemas comunes después de la aprobación y lo que significan

Post-approval issue
What it means in practice
Typical fix
I-797 shows consular processing, not change of status
Worker generally needs stamping and admission before starting H-1B employment in the U.S.
Schedule visa interview and plan entry timing
Approval arrives months before validity start date
Work cannot begin before the effective date unless another status separately authorizes it
Use the validity date, not the notice date, for onboarding
Dependent case still pending
Principal may hold H-1B while spouse or child remains in prior or pending status
Track Form I-539 separately; do not assume family status matches
No visa appointment available soon
Job start may be delayed even though the petition is approved
Check post-specific wait times and document requirements early
I-94 issued incorrectly at entry
Status end date or class may be wrong, affecting work authorization
Request correction through CBP deferred inspection

La aprobación de USCIS responde a la pregunta de la petición. No responde a todas las preguntas sobre admisión, viajes o el estatus de dependientes. La planificación posterior a la aprobación implica revisar tres documentos juntos: la notificación de aprobación I-797, el sello de la visa si se emitió uno, y el I-94 emitido en la admisión.

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Puntos clave

  • La aprobación de la petición H-1B no te autoriza automáticamente a empezar a trabajar. La fecha más temprana para empezar a trabajar legalmente es generalmente la fecha de inicio de validez en el Formulario I-797, a menudo el 1 de octubre para los casos sujetos a límite.
  • Si USCIS aprobó la petición como un cambio de estatus, el trabajador generalmente puede comenzar el empleo H-1B en la fecha de inicio de validez sin salir de Estados Unidos.
  • Si USCIS aprobó la petición para procesamiento consular, el trabajador debe obtener un sello de visa H-1B en el extranjero y ser admitido con estatus H-1B antes de comenzar a trabajar en Estados Unidos.
  • Los cónyuges e hijos H-4 necesitan su propia aprobación de estatus o sellado de visa. La aprobación principal del H-1B no se extiende a los dependientes automáticamente.
  • Antes de cualquier viaje internacional después de la aprobación, revisa la notificación de aprobación, el estatus actual, la validez de la visa y los documentos de reingreso.

Puntos clave

  • La aprobación de la petición H-1B no te autoriza automáticamente a empezar a trabajar. La fecha más temprana para empezar a trabajar legalmente es generalmente la fecha de inicio de validez en el Formulario I-797, a menudo el 1 de octubre para los casos sujetos a límite.
  • Si USCIS aprobó la petición como un cambio de estatus, el trabajador generalmente puede comenzar el empleo H-1B en la fecha de inicio de validez sin salir de Estados Unidos.
  • Si USCIS aprobó la petición para procesamiento consular, el trabajador debe obtener un sello de visa H-1B en el extranjero y ser admitido con estatus H-1B antes de comenzar a trabajar en Estados Unidos.
  • Los cónyuges e hijos H-4 necesitan su propia aprobación de estatus o sellado de visa. La aprobación principal del H-1B no se extiende a los dependientes automáticamente.
  • Antes de cualquier viaje internacional después de la aprobación, revisa la notificación de aprobación, el estatus actual, la validez de la visa y los documentos de reingreso.

Puntos clave

  • La aprobación de la petición H-1B no te autoriza automáticamente a empezar a trabajar. La fecha más temprana para empezar a trabajar legalmente es generalmente la fecha de inicio de validez en el Formulario I-797, a menudo el 1 de octubre para los casos sujetos a límite.
  • Si USCIS aprobó la petición como un cambio de estatus, el trabajador generalmente puede comenzar el empleo H-1B en la fecha de inicio de validez sin salir de Estados Unidos.
  • Si USCIS aprobó la petición para procesamiento consular, el trabajador debe obtener un sello de visa H-1B en el extranjero y ser admitido con estatus H-1B antes de comenzar a trabajar en Estados Unidos.
  • Los cónyuges e hijos H-4 necesitan su propia aprobación de estatus o sellado de visa. La aprobación principal del H-1B no se extiende a los dependientes automáticamente.
  • Antes de cualquier viaje internacional después de la aprobación, revisa la notificación de aprobación, el estatus actual, la validez de la visa y los documentos de reingreso.

Cada caso H-1B es diferente, y los detalles de tu Formulario I-797 determinan los siguientes pasos.

Si no estás seguro de tu fecha de inicio, necesitas planificar el sellado de la visa, o quieres asegurarte de que el estatus de tu familia se gestione correctamente, un abogado de inmigración de Boundless puede ayudarte.

Cada caso H-1B es diferente, y los detalles de tu Formulario I-797 determinan los siguientes pasos.

Si no estás seguro de tu fecha de inicio, necesitas planificar el sellado de la visa, o quieres asegurarte de que el estatus de tu familia se gestione correctamente, un abogado de inmigración de Boundless puede ayudarte.

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