Skip to content
Visa Atlas
DestinationsGuidesCompareCalculatorsDataUpdates
Find my route
Menu
DestinationsGuidesCompareCalculatorsDataUpdatesFind my route
Visa Atlas

A free, independent field guide to moving countries. Every figure links to its official government source.

Not legal advice. Visa Atlas is an encyclopedia, not an adviser. The authoritative source is always the government link on each page. For your specific case, consult a regulated professional.

Explore

All destinationsBest-of guidesCompare countriesRoutes by professionRoute comparisonsTopic guides

Plan

Find my routeProcessing timesGovernment feesCost to completeSettlement & citizenshipRoute deep-divesSalary thresholds

Trust

Editorial standardsReviewersOur methodologyCorrectionsOpen dataCitation packsCitation benchmarkSource benchmarkVisibility metricsFreshnessWidgetsAI agentsUse our dataFor journalists
© 2026 Visa AtlasReviewed continuously. Last sweep: 14 July 2026
  1. Home/
  2. Compare/
  3. State of Israel vs United States of America

🇮🇱 State of Israel vs 🇺🇸 United States of America

A neutral side-by-side of immigration systems, routes and regulators. Each row links to the underlying visa page with its primary government source.

Last reviewed: 1 June 2026

Source basis

This comparison combines State of Israel and United States of America government portals with the primary sources for each side's dominant skilled route. Every detailed figure links through to the underlying route or data page.

Reviewed 1 June 2026

Primary sources

  • Population and Immigration Authority

    Population and Immigration Authority (Israel) - verified 1 June 2026

  • USCIS — U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services

    U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services - verified 18 April 2026

  • Apply for a Temporary Residence Visa Type A/1 under the Right of Return - PIBA

    Population and Immigration Authority - verified 1 June 2026

  • USCIS — H-1B Specialty Occupations

    U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services - verified 1 June 2026

🇮🇱

State of Israel

Israel's immigration and visa system is run by the Population and Immigration Authority (PIBA), part of the Ministry of Interior. The headline routes are the B/1 expert work visa (employer-sponsored, for high-skill roles), Aliyah under the Law of Return (which grants citizenship to Jews and eligible relatives, administered with the Ministry of Aliyah and Integration), the A/2 student visa, and family/marriage-based status. Non-Aliyah work and study visas are temporary and do not lead to permanent residence.

Official portal
Population and Immigration Authority (Israel)
Languages
Hebrew
Currency
Israeli new shekel

🇺🇸

United States of America

The US issues nonimmigrant visas (H-1B, L-1, O-1, F-1, J-1) and immigrant visas (employment-based EB-1 through EB-5, family-based, diversity). Policy touchpoints span USCIS, DOS consulates, DOL (for PERM/LCA), and executive-branch proclamations that can shift overnight.

Official portal
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
Languages
English (de facto)
Currency
United States dollar

How State of Israel and United States of America differ

Dimension🇮🇱 State of Israel🇺🇸 United States of America
Total routes covered414
Routes without employer sponsor15
Routes leading to permanent residence26
Typical full settlement timeline—Arrival on H-1B (3 years) → PERM + I-140 (1-2 years) → I-485 / Green Card (current for most categories, 7-15+ years for India EB-2) → citizenship at PR+5 years.
Dominant skilled visaAliyah - Immigration under the Law of ReturnH-1B Specialty Occupation
Skilled visa salary minimum—US$62,000/year
Skilled visa processing time—H-1B I-129 petitions commonly take 2–8 months at USCIS service centers; Premium Processing ($2,965) resolves within 15 business days.
Skilled visa government fees—A single initial H-1B petition costs around $3,600 in USCIS filing fees for a standard employer, excluding premium processing and the separate consular visa fee.
Official languagesHebrewEnglish (de facto)
CurrencyIsraeli new shekelUnited States dollar
Primary regulatorIBAState bars
Policy changes (last 12 months)01

Skilled-route head-to-head

Comparing each country’s most-used skilled-migration route side by side.

🇮🇱 State of Israel

Aliyah - Immigration under the Law of Return

Salary minimum
—
Government fees
—
Processing time
—
Sponsor required
No
Leads to settlement
Yes

🇺🇸 United States of America

H-1B Specialty Occupation

Salary minimum
US$62,000/year
Government fees
A single initial H-1B petition costs around $3,600 in USCIS filing fees for a standard employer, excluding premium processing and the separate consular visa fee.
Processing time
H-1B I-129 petitions commonly take 2–8 months at USCIS service centers; Premium Processing ($2,965) resolves within 15 business days.
Sponsor required
Yes
Leads to settlement
No

Routes unique to State of Israel

  • Aliyah - Immigration under the Law of Return

    citizenship-by-descent

Routes unique to United States of America

  • L-1A Intracompany Transferee (Executive or Manager)

    intra-company

  • L-1B Intracompany Transferee (Specialised Knowledge)

    intra-company

  • EB-1A Extraordinary Ability (Immigrant)

    skilled-migration

  • EB-2 National Interest Waiver (NIW)

    skilled-migration

  • EB-3 Skilled, Professional, and Other Workers

    skilled-migration

Visa routes side by side

State of Israel (4)

  • B/1 Expert Work Visa

    Sponsor · Non-settlement · Issued for fixed periods (commonly up to one year), renewable subject to PIBA approval; verify current durations on the official page.

  • Aliyah - Immigration under the Law of Return

    No sponsor · Leads to settlement · Leads to Israeli citizenship; an A/1 temporary residence visa for eligible persons is issued for a multi-year period as an alternative pathway. Verify on the official page.

  • A/2 Student Visa

    Sponsor · Non-settlement · Up to one year, renewable for the duration of the course of study; verify on the official page.

  • Status through Marriage to an Israeli Citizen or Permanent Resident

    Sponsor · Leads to settlement · A graduated, multi-year process leading over time toward permanent residence or citizenship; exact duration depends on circumstances. Verify on the official page.

United States of America (14)

  • H-1B Specialty Occupation

    Sponsor · Non-settlement · Initial 3 years; extendable to 6 years (longer with approved I-140).

  • L-1A Intracompany Transferee (Executive or Manager)

    Sponsor · Non-settlement · Initial 3 years (1 year for new-office L-1A); extendable to 7 years total.

  • L-1B Intracompany Transferee (Specialised Knowledge)

    Sponsor · Non-settlement · Initial 3 years (1 year for new-office L-1B); extendable to 5 years total.

  • O-1 Individuals with Extraordinary Ability or Achievement

    Sponsor · Non-settlement · Up to 3 years initially; 1-year extensions available indefinitely.

  • EB-1A Extraordinary Ability (Immigrant)

    No sponsor · Leads to settlement · Permanent residence (green card).

  • EB-2 National Interest Waiver (NIW)

    No sponsor · Leads to settlement · Permanent residence.

  • EB-3 Skilled, Professional, and Other Workers

    Sponsor · Leads to settlement · Permanent residence.

  • EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program

    No sponsor · Leads to settlement · Conditional 2-year residence leading to unconditional permanent residence.

  • E-2 Treaty Investor

    No sponsor · Non-settlement · Initial up to 2 years at port of entry (5-year visa stamp for many nationalities); renewable indefinitely.

  • F-1 Student Visa (with OPT and STEM OPT)

    No sponsor · Non-settlement · Duration of study (D/S); OPT up to 12 months; STEM OPT extension up to 24 additional months.

  • J-1 Exchange Visitor

    Sponsor · Non-settlement · Program-dependent: from weeks (intern) to up to 5 years (research scholar).

  • TN USMCA Professionals (Canada & Mexico)

    Sponsor · Non-settlement · Up to 3 years; renewable indefinitely while activity continues.

  • K-1 Fiancé(e) of US Citizen

    Sponsor · Leads to settlement · Single-entry 6 months; must marry within 90 days of entry.

  • Spouse of US Citizen or Green Card Holder (IR1/CR1 & F2A)

    Sponsor · Leads to settlement · Permanent residence (conditional 2-year CR1 converts to 10-year card via I-751).

Frequently asked questions

Which country has an easier skilled-migration route, State of Israel or United States of America?+−

State of Israel’s Aliyah - Immigration under the Law of Return is the dominant skilled route; United States of America’s H-1B Specialty Occupation requires US$62,000/year. “Easier” depends on your salary, sponsor situation, and nationality — see each visa’s eligibility detail.

Does State of Israel or United States of America have more visa routes without an employer sponsor?+−

United States of America has more: 5 of its covered routes can be pursued without an employer sponsor, against 1 for State of Israel. No-sponsor routes — such as digital-nomad, self-employment, and points-based skilled migration — matter most if you do not yet have a job offer.

Cite or reuse this dataset

This comparison is free to reuse under CC BY 4.0. Cite the page for the compiled head-to-head table and use the country-comparisons JSON endpoint to retrieve the indexed pair, destination profiles and underlying source datasets.

Suggested citation

Visa Atlas, "State of Israel vs United States of America immigration comparison", https://visaatlas.org/compare/israel/vs/us. Last verified 1 June 2026.

Page
https://visaatlas.org/compare/israel/vs/us
JSON endpoint
https://visaatlas.org/api/public/country-comparisons

Underlying comparison sources (4)

  • Population and Immigration Authority
  • USCIS — U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
  • Apply for a Temporary Residence Visa Type A/1 under the Right of Return - PIBA
  • USCIS — H-1B Specialty Occupations

This is not legal advice

We publish neutral, sourced information about immigration routes. Rules and thresholds change often — always verify details on the official government source linked on this page and consult a regulated immigration advisor before applying.