When applying for a U.S. work visa or green card, your foreign education must meet U.S. immigration standards. Whether you earned a bachelor’s degree overseas or have advanced international qualifications, USCIS requires proof that your degree is equivalent to a U.S. degree. Without proper recognition, your petition could face delays or even denials.
This is where credential evaluations come in. These reports, prepared by qualified evaluators, translate your foreign education into U.S. academic terms, helping USCIS verify that you meet eligibility requirements. Here’s what you need to know.
Why USCIS Requires Credential Evaluations
1. Why USCIS Requires Credential Evaluations
USCIS reviews petitions to ensure that applicants have the education necessary for the visa being requested. Since foreign education systems differ, a credential evaluation:
- Translates foreign transcripts and diplomas into U.S. academic equivalents
- Confirms whether a degree is comparable to a U.S. bachelor’s or master’s
- Provides documentation USCIS officers can rely on for decision-making
Impact: Without an evaluation, USCIS cannot verify your education, putting your petition at risk.
2. Which Visas Require Credential Evaluations
Most work-related immigration categories require proof of education, including:
- H-1B visas (specialty occupation roles)
- EB2 and EB3 green cards (employment-based immigration)
- O-1 visas (extraordinary ability, where education supports achievements)
- TN visas for Canadian and Mexican professionals
Impact: If your degree was earned outside the U.S., an evaluation is almost always required.
3. Course-by-Course vs. Document-by-Document Evaluations
Credential evaluations are tailored to USCIS requirements:
- Document-by-document reports confirm overall degree equivalency
- Course-by-course reports provide detailed credit hours, grades, and U.S. equivalents
Impact: Choosing the right type of evaluation ensures USCIS gets the exact details needed for your petition.
4. Work Experience Equivalency for Gaps
If your foreign degree doesn’t fully align with U.S. standards, work experience can help. USCIS allows professional experience to substitute for missing academic years—if verified properly.
Impact: Expert evaluators can combine education and work experience to create a compliant equivalency report.
5. Common USCIS Challenges and How to Avoid Them
Even with a degree, applicants often face:
- RFEs questioning whether the degree matches the specialty occupation
- Rejections when transcripts are incomplete or improperly translated
- Delays due to non-compliant evaluation agencies
Impact: Working with a trusted evaluator ensures your degree is recognized correctly the first time.
How International Evaluations Helps
At International Evaluations, we specialize in USCIS-compliant credential evaluations that keep your petition strong. Our services include:
- Degree equivalency reports (document or course-based)
- Work experience evaluations by academic experts
- Expert opinion letters tailored to H-1B, EB2, EB1, O-1, and more
- 48-hour rush processing for urgent deadlines
- Secure, digitally verifiable reports
Who Needs This Most?
- Immigration Attorneys managing H-1B, EB2, and RFE cases
- Employers sponsoring foreign talent for U.S. roles
- Applicants filing for work visas or green cards with foreign degrees
Make Your Foreign Degree Count in the U.S.
Your international education is valuable—but only if USCIS recognizes it correctly. With the right credential evaluation, you can avoid costly delays and strengthen your visa petition.
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