Meeting three EB-1A criteria is necessary, but it does not guarantee approval. USCIS applies a two-step analysis: first, a criteria check; then, a holistic “final merits determination” that evaluates whether the totality of evidence demonstrates sustained national or international acclaim. In 2026, a federal court ruling challenged the legal basis of this second step. This article explains how both steps work, what USCIS officers typically look for at the final merits stage, and how evidence is commonly organized to address both levels of review.
What Is the EB-1A Two-Step Analysis?
The EB-1A classification (Employment-Based First Preference, Extraordinary Ability) provides a path to permanent residency for individuals who can demonstrate extraordinary ability in the sciences, arts, education, business, or athletics. Unlike most employment-based categories, the EB-1A allows self-petition no employer sponsorship, job offer, or labor certification is required.
Since 2010, USCIS has applied a two-step evaluation framework:
Step One: Criteria Check
The officer determines whether the petitioner has submitted qualifying evidence for at least three of the ten regulatory criteria listed in 8 CFR §204.5(h)(3). Alternatively, a single major internationally recognized award (such as a Nobel Prize or Olympic medal) satisfies this step entirely. At Step One, the officer evaluates whether the evidence meets the plain language of the criteria, not whether the evidence is “strong enough.”
Step Two: Final Merits Determination
After confirming that at least three criteria are met, the officer conducts a holistic evaluation of the entire record. This is where many strong cases fail. On paper, everything looks correct, but the overall story doesn’t convince the officer. This step asks a broader question: Does the totality of evidence demonstrate that the petitioner has sustained national or international acclaim and is among the small percentage who have risen to the very top of the field?
At this stage, USCIS officers typically evaluate factors such as:
- Whether awards are genuinely nationally or internationally recognized vs. local or institutional
- Whether scholarly articles are cited and used by others in the field vs. generating no measurable response
- Whether original contributions have demonstrable, real-world impact vs. remaining theoretical
- Whether a high salary reflects extraordinary ability vs. geographic or employer-specific factors
- Whether recommendation letters describe specific, verifiable achievements vs. offering general praise
The Ten Regulatory Criteria: What USCIS Evaluates at Each Step
The following table summarizes the ten criteria and how USCIS typically evaluates them differently at Step One (criteria check) versus Step Two (final merits):
The January 2026 Federal Court Ruling: Mukherji v. Miller
On January 28, 2026, the U.S. District Court for the District of Nebraska issued a ruling in Mukherji v. Miller (No. 4:24-CV-3170) that directly challenged the legal basis of the final merits determination.
The case involved a petitioner who met five of the ten regulatory criteria — well above the minimum three. Despite this, USCIS denied the petition at Step Two, stating that the record did not establish sustained national or international acclaim. The court found that USCIS’s adoption of the two-step Kazarian framework as a binding adjudication standard was procedurally invalid because it was never subjected to the notice-and-comment rulemaking process required by the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). The court ordered USCIS to approve the petition.
What This Ruling Means in Practice
- The ruling is not binding nationwide. It applies to the specific case in the District of Nebraska. USCIS officers across the country are still expected to follow the USCIS Policy Manual, which continues to apply the two-step framework.
- The ruling is persuasive authority. It can be cited in RFE responses, appeals to the Administrative Appeals Office (AAO), and federal court challenges if a petition is denied at the final merits stage.
- Petitions in 2026 are still evaluated under both steps. Until a higher court intervenes or USCIS revises its policy, the practical standard remains unchanged. However, the legal ground supporting the final merits determination has been weakened.
Why Petitions Pass Step One but Fail at Final Merits
According to publicly available USCIS adjudication data, EB-1A denial rates have increased in recent fiscal years. A significant portion of denials occur at Step Two, where the officer acknowledges that the criteria are met but concludes that the overall record does not demonstrate sustained acclaim at the very top of the field.
Common patterns observed in Step Two denials include:
1. Evidence Without Context: The petition presents awards, publications, or citations without explaining their significance relative to field norms. For example, a publication in a peer-reviewed journal may satisfy Step One but at Step Two, the officer evaluates whether that journal is a top-tier outlet and whether the article has been cited or used by independent researchers. Without comparative context, the evidence may not convey distinction.
2. Nominal Criteria Compliance: The evidence technically meets the plain language of three criteria but does not reflect genuine top-tier standing. For instance, membership in an organization that accepts most applicants who pay a fee may satisfy Step One, but at Step Two, the officer may determine that the membership does not indicate extraordinary ability.
3. Lack of Independent Validation: The petition relies heavily on self-reported achievements or letters from direct colleagues rather than independent, third-party confirmation. Officers increasingly weigh evidence from sources outside the petitioner’s immediate professional circle independent citations, media coverage from outlets with no connection to the petitioner, or adoption of work by institutions that operate independently.
4. Recency Gap: The petition documents strong achievements from several years ago but provides limited evidence of continued activity, recognition, or impact in recent years. USCIS evaluates whether acclaim is “sustained”, meaning the petitioner has maintained a comparable level of recognition since the original accomplishments occurred. According to USCIS policy, there is no specific time frame, but officers do look for ongoing activity.
5. Disconnect Between Criteria and Overall Record: The petition presents three strong criteria but the supporting narrative does not tie them into a coherent picture of extraordinary ability. For example, strong citations on publications + a high salary + a leadership role at a startup may each satisfy individual criteria, but if the petition does not explain how these elements together demonstrate top-tier standing in a specific field, the final merits determination may not be favorable.
How Evidence Is Commonly Organized to Address Both Steps
The most effective EB-1A petitions based on publicly available approval data and USCIS policy guidance, are those where the evidence presented for the individual criteria simultaneously builds the case for the final merits determination. Rather than treating Step One and Step Two as separate exercises, the evidence package typically tells a single, consistent story.
Checklist: Evidence That Addresses Final Merits
☐ Comparative data for every claimed criterion: How does this award, salary, citation count, or membership compare to others in the same field? Context turns a fact into an indicator of distinction.
☐ Independent validation for each major claim: Third-party citations, independent media coverage, adoption by institutions with no financial connection to the petitioner. Officers tend to give more weight to what others say about the petitioner than what the petitioner says about themselves.
☐ Recency: At least some evidence of recent activity and recognition. A petition built entirely on achievements from 5+ years ago, with no evidence of continued activity, may raise questions about sustained acclaim.
☐ Consistent narrative across all documents: The petition brief, recommendation letters, and exhibit index all tell the same story. Inconsistencies in dates, job titles, or achievement descriptions can create friction at the final merits stage.
☐ Recommendation letters that reference documented exhibits: Letters are strongest when they cite specific, verifiable facts (e.g., “Dr. X’s algorithm, described in Exhibit 7, was adopted by three hospitals”) rather than offering general statements of admiration.
☐ Depth over breadth: In published case analyses, claiming 3–4 criteria with strong, well-documented evidence has been associated with higher approval rates than claiming 6–7 criteria with thin documentation across all of them.
Scenarios: How Final Merits Plays Out in Different Profiles
The following scenarios illustrate how the final merits determination typically applies to different professional profiles. Every case is unique, a licensed immigration attorney can advise on the specific approach for any individual situation.
When a Final Merits RFE or NOID Is Issued
USCIS may issue a Request for Evidence (RFE) or a Notice of Intent to Deny (NOID) at the final merits stage. According to USCIS data, EB-1A RFE rates have been estimated at 40–50% in recent fiscal years. A significant portion of these RFEs are issued not because the criteria were unmet, but because the officer was not satisfied that the overall record demonstrates sustained top-tier standing.
Common language in final merits RFEs and NOIDs includes:
- “The record does not establish that the petitioner has sustained national or international acclaim.”
- “The totality of the evidence does not sufficiently demonstrate that the petitioner is among the small percentage at the very top of the field.”
- “While the petitioner meets [X] criteria, the evidence does not rise to the level required under the final merits determination.”
A strong response to a final merits RFE typically does more than add documents. It repositions existing evidence by providing comparative context, independent validation, and a clearer connection between the individual criteria and the broader picture of extraordinary ability.
Source: 8 CFR §103.2(b)(8) (RFE procedures); USCIS Form I-140 RAPD Summary, FY2025.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the EB-1A final merits determination?
It is the second step of the two-step analysis USCIS applies to EB-1A petitions. After verifying that the petitioner meets at least three of the ten regulatory criteria (Step One), the officer evaluates whether the full evidentiary record demonstrates sustained national or international acclaim and that the petitioner is among the small percentage at the very top of the field. This framework originates from the 2010 Kazarian v. USCIS decision and is codified in the USCIS Policy Manual, Volume 6, Part F, Chapter 2.Can a petition be denied even if three or more criteria are met?
Yes. Meeting three criteria satisfies Step One but does not guarantee approval. At Step Two, the officer evaluates the totality of the evidence. If the overall record does not convey sustained distinction at the very top of the field, the petition may be denied or receive a Request for Evidence. This is one of the most common points of confusion in EB-1A adjudication.What does the January 2026 Mukherji v. Miller ruling means for EB-1A petitions?
In Mukherji v. Miller (D. Neb., Jan. 28, 2026), a federal court ruled that USCIS’s adoption of the two-step framework without notice-and-comment rulemaking violated the Administrative Procedure Act. The court ordered USCIS to approve the petition. This ruling is not binding nationwide, USCIS officers still follow the Policy Manual’s two-step process. However, it can be cited as persuasive authority in RFE responses, AAO appeals, and federal court challenges.Is it better to claim three strong criteria or six weaker ones?
In general, petitions that focus on 3–4 criteria with deep, well-documented evidence tend to perform better at the final merits stage than petitions that claim many criteria with thin documentation. Claiming criteria that are not well-supported can weaken the overall record and give the officer more points to question.How is “sustained acclaim” defined?
USCIS does not provide a fixed time frame. According to the Policy Manual, “sustained” means the petitioner has maintained a comparable level of acclaim since the original recognition occurred. There is no age limit, early-career individuals can demonstrate sustained acclaim if their recognition is ongoing. Officers typically look for evidence of recent activity, not just historical achievements.What is the difference between an RFE and a NOID at the final merits stage?
An RFE (Request for Evidence) asks for additional documentation. A NOID (Notice of Intent to Deny) indicates that the officer intends to deny the petition unless the petitioner provides evidence or arguments that overcome the stated concerns. NOIDs are more serious than RFEs and are more commonly associated with final merits issues. Both allow a response period, typically 84 days for an RFE and 30 days for a NOID.Does premium processing affect the final merits evaluation?
No. Premium processing ($2,965 effective March 2026) guarantees a USCIS response within 15 business days but does not change the evidentiary standard. The same two-step analysis applies. Some filing patterns suggest that premium processing cases may receive RFEs at comparable or higher rates, as officers working under tighter deadlines may issue an RFE rather than conducting a full review within the 15-day window.Can evidence gathering and document organization be done before working with an attorney?
Yes. Assembling documentation: publications, citation reports, award details, employment records, media coverage, salary comparisons is an administrative task that can be completed independently or with the support of a case management platform like PassRight. PassRight provides administrative coordination and evidence organization services for EB-1A petitions. The completed evidence package is then reviewed by an independent licensed immigration attorney who handles the petition narrative, legal brief, and filing with USCIS.
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