Key Differences Between July 2025 vs June 2025 Visa Bulletins: Changes Explained

July 2025 Visa Bulletin vs. June 2025 Visa Bulletin

A detailed, side-by-side analysis of every meaningful change


1. What the Visa Bulletin charts mean (refresher)

TermMeaning
Final Action Date (Chart A)The cut-off a case must be earlier than to receive a visa or approve Adjustment of Status this month.
Date for Filing (Chart B)The cut-off a case must be earlier than so applicants can submit all documents now (even if the government cannot issue the green card yet).
C“Current” – everyone in that category may act immediately.
U“Unavailable” – no numbers can be issued.

(Sources: official July 2025 and June 2025 Visa Bulletins) (travel.state.gov, travel.state.gov)


2. Executive summary

AreaBiggest July movementHow much it movedWho benefits / impact
Family F2A (spouses & children of permanent residents)Worldwide Final Action Date jumped from 1 Jan 2022 → 1 Sep 2022+ 8 months (Mexico + 8 m 17 d)Thousands of married-to-green-card-holder families can now receive green cards.
Family F1 (adult sons/daughters of U.S. citizens)Worldwide Final Action Date advanced 1 month 7 days8 Jun 2016 → 15 Jul 2016Modest relief for this back-logged category.
Employment EB-3 WorldwideFinal Action advanced ≈ 1 month 24 days (8 Feb 23 → 1 Apr 23)Filing Date moved + 2 monthsEmployers filing new PERM-based cases get earlier AOS filing windows.
China EB-1Final Action advanced one week (8 Nov 22 → 15 Nov 22)+ 7 daysSenior Chinese researchers/executives gain slight relief.
India – most EB categoriesNo forward movementWait-times remain essentially unchanged for India EB-1/EB-2; small 7-day advances in EB-3/Other-Worker.
Diversity Visa (DV-2025)Africa, Asia, Europe cut-offs all rose about 2,500–7,500 rank numbersIncreases vary by regionMore selectees can schedule interviews before FY-end (30 Sep 2025).

Key Differences Between July 2025 vs June 2025 Visa Bulletins: Changes Explained
Key Differences Between July 2025 vs June 2025 Visa Bulletins: Changes Explained

3. Family-sponsored categories

3.1 Final Action Dates (Chart A) – June vs. July 2025 (Worldwide)

PreferenceJun 2025Jul 2025Movement
F-18 Jun 1615 Jul 16+ 1 mo 7 d
F-2A1 Jan 221 Sep 22+ 8 mo (largest jump)
F-2B22 Sep 1615 Oct 16+ 23 d
F-322 Jun 111 Aug 11+ 1 mo 10 d
F-41 Jan 081 Jan 08

Country-specific highlights

  • Mexico: Only F-3 and F-4 stayed flat; F-2A leapt to 1 Feb 22 (+ 8 m 17 d).
  • Philippines: Strongest move in F-4 (1 Jun 05 → 1 Jan 06, + 7 months).
  • China & India: Mirror worldwide numbers; F-2A eight-month advance is the key win.

3.2 Dates for Filing (Chart B)

PreferenceJun 2025Jul 2025Change
F-11 Sep 171 Sep 17
F-2A1 Feb 251 Mar 25+ 1 month
F-2B1 Jan 171 Jan 17
F-322 Jul 1222 Jul 12
F-41 Jun 088 Sep 08+ 3 m 7 d

Notable exceptions:

  • Mexico F-1 gained two months (1 Apr 06 → 1 Jun 06).
  • Mexico F-2B advanced a full year (1 Apr 07 → 1 Apr 08).
  • Philippines F-3 advanced to 1 Dec 04 (+ 2 m 9 d).

4. Employment-based categories

4.1 Final Action Dates (Chart A)

CategoryAreaJun 2025Jul 2025Movement
EB-1China8 Nov 2215 Nov 22+ 7 d
India15 Feb 2215 Feb 22
Rest of WorldCurrentCurrent
EB-2China1 Dec 2015 Dec 20+ 14 d
India1 Jan 131 Jan 13
ROW15 Oct 2315 Oct 23
EB-3ROW8 Feb 231 Apr 23+ 1 m 24 d
China22 Nov 201 Dec 20+ 9 d
India15 Apr 1322 Apr 13+ 7 d
Other WorkersROW22 Jun 218 Jul 21+ 16 d
China1 Apr 171 May 17+ 1 m
India15 Apr 1322 Apr 13+ 7 d
EB-4 & SRAllUU
EB-5 (Unreserved)China22 Jan 1422 Jan 14
India1 May 191 May 19
OthersCurrentCurrent

4.2 Dates for Filing (Chart B)

CategoryAreaJun 2025Jul 2025Movement
EB-1China1 Jan 231 Jan 23
India15 Apr 2215 Apr 22
EB-2ROW15 Nov 2315 Nov 23
EB-3ROW1 Mar 231 May 23+ 2 months
China22 Dec 2022 Dec 20
India8 Jun 138 Jun 13
All other EB categoriesunchanged

5. Diversity Visa program (DV-2025)

RegionJune cut-offJuly cut-offIncrease
Africa42,50045,000+ 2,500
Asia8,2509,000+ 750
Europe17,50019,000+ 1,500
Oceania1,5501,650+ 100
S. America/Caribbean2,3002,450+ 150
Bahamas2020

Cut-offs rose in every region, widening the interview window for late-rank selectees. Remember all DV-2025 numbers expire 30 Sep 2025. (travel.state.gov, travel.state.gov)


6. What did not change

  • EB-2 India (1 Jan 2013) – still the oldest date in the bulletin, reflecting the deepest backlog.
  • EB-1 India (15 Feb 2022) – unchanged for a seventh straight month.
  • EB-4 (religious workers & other special immigrants) – remains “U” across the board.
  • EB-5 set-aside categories (rural, high-unemployment, infrastructure) – all remain “Current,” offering the fastest immigrant visa path for investors able to meet the program rules.

7. Practical take-aways

StakeholderAction Items
Permanent residents sponsoring spouses/children (F-2A)If your priority date is on or before 1 Sep 2022 (worldwide) / 1 Feb 2022 (Mexico), you can file or expect adjudication now. Submit Form I-485/DS-260 promptly to capitalise on the eight-month advance.
Employers with pending EB-3 PERMsFor ROW cases with priority dates ≤ 1 Apr 2023, Adjustment of Status may be approved in July; new cases with PERM approved by 1 May 2023 can at least file AOS (Chart B) immediately.
Chinese EB-1 high-skilled workersA modest 7-day advance keeps the door open. Continue monitoring – late-summer retrogressions are historically possible if demand spikes.
Indian EB-2/EB-3 workersJuly offers only week-long progress in EB-3. Expect wait-times to remain lengthy; strategise on EB-1 upgrades, family-based alternatives, or employer sponsorship for EB-5 Rural/Infrastructure where feasible.
DV-2025 selecteesCheck your rank number vs. new cut-offs. Schedule the interview as soon as KCC emails you; numbers can exhaust before 30 Sept.

8. Looking ahead

Historically, the State Department tightens or retrogresses employment-based cut-offs in the September bulletin to ensure annual visa caps are met. Watch EB-3 Worldwide and China EB-1 for potential pull-backs. Family-based categories, especially F-2A, could continue forward movement if demand remains manageable, but sudden slow-downs are always possible late in the fiscal year.

For real-time updates monitor: travel.state.gov/visa-bulletin and the monthly YouTube live-streams from Charles Oppenheim’s successor at Visa Office. (travel.state.gov)


Prepared 9 June 2025. All dates and interpretations derived from the official July 2025 and June 2025 Visa Bulletins published by the U.S. Department of State.

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