QueueCheckofficial waits, shared dates
Application tracking dashboard with status dates

Application tracking

How to track your Green Card application

Track your Green Card case using official USCIS updates, Visa Bulletin movement, application milestones, and comparable reader submissions.

Official

US Green Card: check the current Visa Bulletin and USCIS case updates

Updated Jul 17, 2026

Shared by readers

Collecting data

0 reviewed submissions so far.

People who started same month

Pending

No same-month summary yet.

US Green Card queue signals in one view

Official movement, reader reports, and same-month context should be read separately.

Official + reader shares

Official wait

US Green Card: check the current Visa Bulletin and USCIS case updates

US Green Card: check the current Visa Bulletin and USCIS case updates

Updated Jul 17

Official waitUS Green Card: check the current Visa Bulletin and USCIS case updates
Shared by readersStill collecting
People who started same monthStill collecting

Check USCIS and the Visa Bulletin separately

For US Green Card, the official status page is still the best place for account updates, missing documents, decisions, and appointment notices. Use public wait data for context, but do not let it override a direct message from the agency.

Match your Green Card route before comparing

Use the calculator on the United States service page to enter your application date. That lets you compare with people who started in the same month, which is usually more useful than comparing with everyone at once.

Right now, this service has 0 reviewed submissions and a shared-wait status of Collecting data.

Share milestones only when your case actually moves

Reader submissions are reviewed before they affect public wait numbers. Sharing your wait helps future applicants see whether their wait is typical, early, or later than similar applications.

Help improve the wait data

Share your US Green Card application date

If you have already applied, add your application date so other readers can compare real timelines. It takes about a minute, and submissions are reviewed before they affect public wait numbers.

What you add1 date
Used forMonth comparison
Before publicReviewed

Before comparing a Green Card timeline

  • Identify your path first: family-based, employment-based, adjustment of status, consular processing, or another Green Card route.
  • Track the priority date, preference category, and country of chargeability before comparing your wait with anyone else.
  • Check the Visa Bulletin and USCIS filing guidance before assuming your case can move this month.
  • Record receipt, biometrics, interview, request-for-evidence, approval, and card-production dates separately.

Read Green Card sources without mixing them up

Green Card timing depends on more than USCIS processing speed: priority date, category, country of chargeability, and visa availability all matter.

Read the Visa Bulletin separately from USCIS case processing updates. A category can be current while an individual case still has normal processing steps.

When comparing with other applicants, match the route where possible: family-based, employment-based, adjustment of status, or consular processing.

Keep this as context, not legal advice

  • This guide is queue context, not immigration or legal advice.
  • Official agency messages and document requests should always override a public estimate.
  • Compare your case only with the same route, category, filing month, and case stage where possible.

Recent Green Card and Visa Bulletin updates

Green Card questions people actually ask

Can one Green Card estimate fit everyone?

No. Green Card waits depend heavily on category, country of chargeability, priority date, and whether the case is adjustment of status or consular processing.

Why does the Visa Bulletin matter?

It controls when many applicants can move forward based on priority date. A case can be otherwise ready but still wait for visa availability.