01 Visa 2026

TL;DR: The O-1 visa is a U.S. work visa for people at the top of their field in science, business, education, athletics, or the arts. In 2026, it has become one of the most popular alternatives to the H-1B, especially for startup founders, AI researchers, and tech professionals because it has no annual cap, no lottery, and allows unlimited one-year extensions. To qualify, you need to meet at least 3 of 8 USCIS criteria (or have won a major international award like an Oscar or Nobel Prize). The evidence bar is high, but the category is broader than most people think.

Why O-1 Interest Has Exploded in 2026

The O-1 has quietly become the visa of the moment. A few things are driving the surge:

  • The H-1B lottery continues to reject the majority of registrants, with a weighted wage-based selection system taking effect for the FY 2027 cap season.
  • A September 2025 presidential proclamation added a significant surcharge on certain new H-1B petitions for beneficiaries located outside the U.S.
  • USCIS issued updated policy guidance in January 2025 that explicitly recognizes founder-owned companies as valid O-1 petitioners and expanded examples of qualifying evidence for professionals in AI, emerging tech, and STEM fields.

Put plainly: talented people are tired of waiting on a lottery that may never come through. The O-1 lets you file whenever you’re ready, year-round, and judges your case on merit rather than luck.

What the O-1 Visa Actually Is

The O-1 is a nonimmigrant work visa for individuals who possess “extraordinary ability.” It splits into two categories:

  • O-1A covers the sciences, education, business, and athletics.
  • O-1B covers the arts, motion pictures, and television.

Approved O-1 petitions are typically valid for up to three years, with unlimited one-year extensions as long as you’re continuing the same work. Your spouse and children under 21 can accompany you on O-3 visas.

One important note: you cannot self-petition. A U.S. employer, U.S. agent, or U.S. entity (which can be a company you own) must file Form I-129 on your behalf.

Who Qualifies as “Extraordinary Ability”?

USCIS defines extraordinary ability as being “one of the small percentage who have arisen to the very top of the field.” That sounds intimidating, and it should, the standard is genuinely high. But it does not mean you need a Nobel Prize.

There are two paths to qualification:

Path 1: A Major Internationally Recognized Award

Think Oscar, Emmy, Grammy, Olympic medal, Pulitzer, or Nobel Prize. If you have one, you’re done. Most applicants don’t fall into this bucket.

Path 2: Meet at Least 3 of 8 USCIS Criteria

For O-1A, the eight criteria are:

  1. Receipt of nationally or internationally recognized prizes or awards for excellence
  2. Membership in associations that require outstanding achievements (judged by recognized experts)
  3. Published material about you in professional or major trade publications or major media
  4. Participation as a judge of the work of others in your field
  5. Original scientific, scholarly, or business-related contributions of major significance
  6. Authorship of scholarly articles in professional journals or major media
  7. Employment in a critical or essential capacity at a distinguished organization
  8. Commanding a high salary or other high remuneration

You need solid evidence for at least three. Quality matters more than quantity, USCIS applies a “final merits determination” after counting criteria, so three weak buckets won’t carry the day.

Comparable Evidence for Non-Traditional Careers

USCIS allows “comparable evidence” when a criterion doesn’t fit your occupation. For example, if you’re an entrepreneur without a traditional salary, valuable equity holdings can substitute. If you’re an industry professional rather than an academic, a keynote at a major trade conference can stand in for scholarly articles. The January 2025 guidance explicitly recognizes digital publications, podcasts, and major online media as valid press coverage.

Real-World Examples of Who Qualifies

To make this concrete, here are the kinds of profiles we regularly see approved:

  • A biotech founder whose startup raised a Series A from a top-tier U.S. VC, was featured in TechCrunch, and won a selective industry innovation award.
  • An AI researcher with peer-reviewed publications, high citation counts, and invitations to review papers at major conferences.
  • A startup founder accepted to Y Combinator or Techstars. Selective accelerator acceptance can support multiple criteria at once (prize, membership, and critical role).
  • A senior engineer recruited into a critical role at a well-known tech company, with patents, internal awards, and trade press coverage.
  • A Canadian physician or researcher with published clinical work, conference presentations, and a high-compensation offer from a U.S. institution.
  • A seasoned executive with a track record of leading high-growth or internationally recognized business initiatives.

Documentation: What You Actually Need to Gather

O-1 petitions are evidence-heavy. A strong package typically includes:

  • The I-129 petition with a detailed petition letter mapping your accomplishments to the criteria
  • An advisory opinion from a relevant peer group, labor union, or industry expert
  • 5–8 recommendation letters from recognized experts who can speak to your specific contributions (generic letters are a red flag)
  • Evidence for each criterion like award certificates, selection committees’ materials, press clips, funding documentation, citation reports, contracts showing compensation
  • An itinerary or contract describing the work you’ll do in the U.S.
  • A copy of your passport and prior immigration history

Founders should also be prepared to document the company’s structure, funding, and (critically) the employer-employee relationship. USCIS wants to see genuine oversight, which often means a board of directors or similar governance structure.

O-1 vs. H-1B: The Honest Comparison

Feature O-1 H-1B
Annual cap / lottery None Yes, oversubscribed
Degree required No Yes (bachelor’s or equivalent)
Prevailing wage required No Yes
Validity Up to 3 years + unlimited 1-year extensions Up to 6 years total
Self-petition / founder-owned entity Allowed with proper structure Limited, with additional restrictions
Evidence burden High Moderate
Filing window Year-round Annual cap season

The O-1 wins on flexibility and timing. The H-1B wins on evidentiary simplicity if you qualify. For founders and top-tier talent who can document their record, the O-1 is often the better strategic fit.

Is the O-1 Right for You?

The O-1 isn’t easy, but it isn’t reserved for household names either. If you’ve built something notable, been recognized by peers, and can document a sustained record of achievement, it may be the most practical path to the U.S. in 2026, particularly if the H-1B lottery has closed the door.

The key is honest self-assessment and a well-built evidence package. At Berardi Immigration Law, we help individuals, founders, and companies evaluate O-1 eligibility and build petitions that hold up to USCIS scrutiny. If you’d like to discuss whether the O-1 makes sense for your situation, contact our team to schedule a consultation.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can a Startup Founder Really Sponsor Their Own O-1 Visa?

Yes. Under USCIS guidance updated in January 2025, a U.S. company owned by the founder can file an O-1 petition for the founder, provided the company has a genuine employer-employee relationship, typically shown through a board of directors or similar oversight structure. The founder still needs to independently meet the extraordinary ability standard.

How Long Does an O-1 Petition Take to Process?

Standard processing varies and can take several months. Premium processing guarantees a USCIS response within 15 business days for an additional fee (currently $2,965 as of March 1, 2026). Most clients opt for premium processing.

Does the O-1 Lead to a Green Card?

Not directly, but it pairs extremely well with the EB-1A (Extraordinary Ability) and EB-2 NIW (National Interest Waiver) green card categories, which allow self-petition. Because the evidence for an O-1A and an EB-1A overlaps significantly, many clients use the O-1 as a bridge to permanent residence.

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