You've got questions about the E-3, and I've got answers. The E-3 is one of the most underrated tools available to Australians moving to the US, but it has nuances — and nearly every question I get is some version of one of these. Below is everything I get asked most, organised by topic.
Quick note before we dive in: I'm not a lawyer. The information here is based on my own experience and what I see across the community every day. For anything specific to your situation, please talk to a qualified US immigration attorney.
If you're looking for more general information about how to get an E-3, you can read everything about the E-3 visa here.
Eligibility and requirements
Yes. You need a written job offer from a US-based employer for a role that qualifies as a specialty occupation (one that requires at least a bachelor's degree in a specific field) before you can apply.
Yes. You can apply at any US Embassy or Consulate outside the United States that processes nonimmigrant visas. Many lawyers will recommend applying in Australia for your first E-3 because Australian posts are most familiar with the visa, but it's not a requirement. If you're applying outside Australia, contact the post in advance to confirm they will accept the application and ask about wait times.
Yes — 10,500 new E-3 visas can be issued each fiscal year. In practice, the cap has historically not been reached, with utilization typically running at less than 50%. Renewals and dependents (spouses and children) don't count toward the cap.
Technically no, but I'd recommend it. Many employers will insist on it anyway, and a good attorney will save you time and reduce risk — particularly on the LCA filing, which is where most things go wrong.
Yes. Part-time E-3s are permitted. You apply with an hourly wage that meets or exceeds the prevailing wage for your profession, rather than an annual salary.
No. The E-3 ties you to the specific employer named on your visa. You can only work for that company in that role. If you want to work for additional employers, each one needs its own concurrent E-3.
Cost
The E-3 application fee is $315 USD (around $481 AUD at current rates). Unlike many other US visa categories, there's no separate issuance fee, no I-129 petition fee for consular processing, and no cost to your employer for the LCA.
One change to be aware of: the $250 Visa Integrity Fee, signed into law in July 2025 under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, will eventually apply to most nonimmigrant visa issuances — including the E-3. As of April 2026, it isn't being collected yet (implementation requires cross-agency coordination per the Federal Register), but it's expected to come into effect within fiscal year 2026. Budget for it.
The application process
No — that's one of the biggest advantages of the E-3 over the H-1B. There's no USCIS petition required for consular processing. Your employer does need to obtain a certified Labor Condition Application (LCA) from the Department of Labor by filing ETA Form 9035, but there's no fee for that.
Use the Department of Labor's FLAG system at https://flag.dol.gov/case-status-search.
Yes. Print your certified LCA (it will say “Certified” in the bottom-left corner), have it signed by the person named in the document, and bring it to your interview. The consulate will keep it.
They can be the same person but don't have to be. The person signing the employer declaration must have the authority to enter into binding contracts on behalf of the company (an officer of the business). The point of contact is just the person the agency can communicate with about the application.
Yes — and many people do, because LCA processing can take a couple of weeks. You can file a DS-160 with the LCA field left blank, use that DS-160 confirmation to book your appointment, then file an updated DS-160 with the approved LCA number once it comes through. Contact the embassy you're applying to and ask them to update your application reference. Practices vary slightly by post, so confirm with yours.
Yes. Use the CBP I-94 lookup at https://i94.cbp.dhs.gov/I94/ to retrieve your travel history accurately. Always be honest — discrepancies are far worse than the inconvenience of listing them.
Travel and entry
Up to 10 days before your start date.
No. The E-3 is a multiple-entry visa. You can travel internationally and re-enter the US for the duration of the visa, provided you haven't changed employers or had a status change in the meantime.
There's no upper limit, but a condition of your visa is that you remain employed by your sponsoring employer. If you stop working, your visa status is no longer valid regardless of where you are.
Yes. As long as the visa itself is valid and undamaged, you can travel with both passports. Both passports must be from the same country and the same type. At the port of entry, the CBP officer will check the visa in your old passport and stamp the new one with an annotation reading “VIOPP” (visa in other passport).
Never try to remove the visa from the old passport — doing so invalidates it.
While you're in the US
Yes. E-3 holders can attend school part-time or full-time, provided study is incidental to your primary purpose of being in the US (which is your job). You must continue meeting all your E-3 requirements. The full guidance on what nonimmigrants can study is on the ICE website here.
Generally no. Maintaining your E-3 status requires that you continue to be paid the wage stated on your LCA. Limited exceptions exist for circumstances like parental leave, but extended unpaid leave puts your status at risk. Talk to an attorney before doing this.
This is one of the most common questions I get, and the answer is genuinely complicated. There are scenarios where it's possible — typically involving a separate US entity that meets specific control and bona fide employment requirements — but it's a question you must put to an immigration attorney before going down that path. Don't take a forum answer (including this one) as gospel.
File Form AR-11 — it's free and you can do it online at https://www.uscis.gov/ar-11. You're required to do this within 10 days of moving.
Yes — and this changed materially in 2022. Since 31 January 2022, E-3 spouses are automatically work-authorized incident to their status. If your spouse's I-94 shows the admission code “E-3S”, that I-94 is itself acceptable proof of work authorization under List C of Form I-9 — no separate EAD is required.
The catch: this only works if the I-94 actually has the “E-3S” annotation. Always check the I-94 online at https://i94.cbp.dhs.gov/I94/ after every entry. If your spouse was admitted as just “E-3” without the “S”, they will need to either re-enter (to get a corrected I-94), contact a CBP Deferred Inspection site for a correction, or file Form I-765 for an EAD the old-fashioned way. Children on E-3D status are not work-authorized.
Renewing and changing employers
In theory, yes. E-3s are issued in increments of up to two years, and there's no statutory limit on the number of renewals. That said, each renewal is at the discretion of the consular officer, and you must continue to demonstrate non-immigrant intent (that you don't intend to remain in the US permanently).
Yes, but the visa will only be valid for the duration of the contract.
Not necessarily. You have two options: file a change of employer petition with USCIS via Form I-129 (which lets you stay in the US during processing), or leave the country and apply for a new E-3 at a consulate. Each option has trade-offs around timing, premium processing availability, and travel flexibility. An attorney can help you decide which fits your situation.
If your employment ends before your I-94 expires, you have a 60-day grace period (or until your I-94 expires, whichever comes first) to either find a new E-3 employer, change to another status, or depart the US. Separately, at the natural end of your visa period, E-3 holders get a 10-day window to wind up their affairs and depart. The two are different — the 60 days applies mid-visa; the 10 days applies at the end.
Pathway to a Green Card
Yes, but carefully. The E-3 is a non-dual-intent visa, which means you can't enter the US with the intention of staying permanently. There are pathways from E-3 to permanent residency, typically through employment-based Green Card categories or family sponsorship, but the timing and approach matter — pursuing a Green Card can put your E-3 renewals at risk if not handled correctly. This is a conversation to have with an immigration attorney early.


















Hey Josh,
I’ve booked an appointment for an E3 VISA at the Melbourne consulate, but am hoping my wife can attend with me and apply for an E3D at the same time. I’m finding it hard to add a dependent to my application/interview on the new portal. Do you have any tips for contacting the embassy to update the appointment (is this even needed?)
I believe you can both go as long as your wife has an appointment some time (not the same time).
Two questions on travel after the initial entry on E3:
1) During the visa period, is there a restriction on the number of times a person can travel on visits outside US.
2) My wife is on E3D visa. We are both presently in the US. Can she travel on her own on visits outside US?
1. Nope
2. Yep!
Hi Josh,
I have been working in the U.S. on an E3 and have been offered a new job, so will be travelling back to Australia to get a new E3. Do you know if I’m eligible for an interview waiver? I meet all of the criteria but I can’t find clarity on whether applying for the same visa class but with a new employer counts as a “renewal” or not. Thanks!
Yep you likely will, you just go on to get an appointment and it will default you to a mail-in!
Hi Josh,
I am planning to enter a medical residency. What are the advantages and disadvantages of entering on an E-3 visa instead of a J-1 visa
Additionally, which visa is the best option for transitioning to an H-1B visa and obtaining a Green Card later?
Thanks
K
Hey Josh!
You and everything you do is wonderful! Thank you for providing such an amazing website!
I have a question regarding the E-3 visa and recent University graduates. I am about to graduate from a 4 year Bachelor’s degree in Australia in 2 months and would love to start my career in the US. Given my entry-level and junior positioning, what would my chances of successfully being hired in the US following completion of my Bachelor’s degree be?
Thank you so much!
Hey Josh, my partner received his e3 last week. I’m going for my e3d interview tomorrow. Do i need any additional documents to prove our relationship apart from the marriage certificate?
Hi Josh, thanks for the great resource!
I’m trying to find the best job title for my E3 that meets the relevant requirements.
This job here: https://www.onetonline.org/link/summary/27-4011.00 is under Job Zone 3 so technically no Bachelors degree required. But when I scrolled down it says that 43% of people say a Bachelors degree is required.
What’s your take on this? Does immigration view it as black&white or do you think I could argue my case here?
Hey Jackson! Sorry what do you mean Job Zone 3?
Hi Josh,
Very helpful website, you’re making everyone’s lives easier, thanks for everything you’re sharing here!
Question: I’m on E3 (I just got it 2 mos ago, and expires in 2yrs), my LCA is tied to a city, but i work fully remote. Am I able to leave US/go overseas for a period of time? like 1-2mos? i would still be working so it’s not an unpaid leave.
Hey Josh! I’m applying for an E3 in Australia with my appointment next week, but my start date is not until the middle of September. Given I have time to kill, I’d like to leave Australia once I have my E3 in my passport, and vacation in Mexico before heading to the states, but the most direct flights from Australia to Mexico go via the states. My question is: If I’ve been granted my E3, is there any reason why I can’t get an ESTA to transit via the USA before I officially enter on my E3?
It’s my understanding that you can’t get an ESTA if you have a valid visa. I would not do that, but I’m not 100% sure what you SHOULD do, sorry.
Hey Josh – What if you are made redundant while your are overseas, would you be able to re-enter the US with your E3 because of the 60 days? Or can you enter with an ESTA?
Hi M, you can’t re-enter within the 60 days because that is just a grace period of status, not a visa. But you can, in theory, enter on an ESTA.