Try Interns

H vs J

Aspect J-1 Intern / Trainee H-1B Visa
Primary Purpose Cultural & educational exchange; provide structured training/internship experience Temporary employment in a specialty occupation requiring highly specialized knowledge
Intent Non-immigrant intent (expected to return home after program) Dual intent allowed (can pursue permanent residency/green card while on H-1B)
Eligibility Intern: Current student or recent graduate (within 12 months) of a foreign post-secondary institution. Trainee: Degree + 1 year experience or 5 years full-time work experience in the field. Bachelor’s degree or equivalent in a specific specialty + position qualifies as a “specialty occupation”
Duration Intern: Max 12 months total Trainee: Max 18 months total (some categories like hospitality limited to 12 months) Initial approval: up to 3 years Extendable to total of 6 years (with possible extensions beyond in certain cases). 
Annual Cap / Lottery No cap – available year-round Yes – ~85,000 per year (highly competitive lottery for most employers)
Sponsorship Process Must use a Department of State-designated sponsor who issues DS-2019. Host organization signs the DS-7002 Training/Internship Placement Plan. Employer files petition (I-129) directly with USCIS after obtaining Labor Condition Application (LCA) from DOL. No third-party sponsor needed. *This does mean a lot of extra work required by the host.
Key Required Document DS-2019 (from sponsor) + signed DS-7002 (detailed training plan) I-797 Approval Notice from USCIS + LCA
Work Nature Must be educational/training-focused, not ordinary employment. Full-time (min. 32–35 hrs/week). Cultural activities encouraged. Regular professional employment in the specific role. No training plan required.
Host Organization Role Provide supervision, structured training per DS-7002, safe environment, and evaluation. Direct employer – responsible for payroll, benefits, prevailing wage, and LCA compliance.
Costs Generally lower: Sponsor fees (~$1,200–$4,500), SEVIS fee, visa fee. No lottery or high USCIS petition fees. Significantly higher: USCIS filing fees, possible premium processing, legal costs, and in some cases over $100,000+ total (especially with recent changes). Employer pays most fees.
Two-Year Home Residency Requirement (212(e)) May apply (if government funding involved, skills list, or medical training). Prevents change to H-1B or green card until fulfilled or waived. Does not apply
Dependents J-2 spouse/children – may apply for work authorization H-4 spouse/children – work authorization available only in limited cases (e.g., when green card process is advanced)
Path to Green Card More difficult due to non-immigrant intent and possible 2-year bar Easier – dual intent supports sponsoring for permanent residency
Flexibility for Host Easier and faster to bring someone in; no cap or lottery. Good for trial/training periods. More complex and uncertain due to cap/lottery; better for long-term hires.
Compliance Focus Department of State regulations + SEVIS tracking. Emphasis on training plan and cultural exchange. USCIS + Department of Labor (prevailing wage, working conditions).