
The H-2B Work Visa Solution For Hiring
Many growing companies and family-based employers exploring the H‑2B program for the first time quickly run into a wall of jargon: “cap,” “supplemental visas,” “returning workers,” “Northern Triangle set‑aside,” and more. It is no surprise to our U.S. immigration lawyers that small business owners, start-up companies and individual home-based employers come away confused about who can actually get a work visa; especially before embarking upon petitioning for a foreign national to fulfill seasonal positions in their home or business.
Who Is This For?
This resource is for U.S. families and household employers who depend on in-home support—such as au pairs, nannies, butlers, housekeepers, janitorial staff, and seasonal landscaping or property-maintenance workers—and who are seeking lawful options when a trusted caregiver or household worker is approaching the end of J-1 au pair status or is currently present in the United States in B-1/B-2 visitor status. It is also intended for U.S. employers and small, growing businesses that wish to hire foreign nationals for temporary or seasonal non-agricultural positions and need clarity on whether the H-2B visa program may be a viable path. In addition, this guidance is particularly relevant to foreign nationals from Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Haiti, Colombia, Ecuador, Costa Rica, and other designated countries, who may—depending on the fiscal year’s rules—be eligible for country-reserved supplemental H-2B visa numbers, including in some cases as first-time H-2B workers.
Below we answer the most common questions our immigration attorneys hear from our client employers about H‑2B work visas, hiring an H-2B worker for the first‑time, and returning workers.
1. Do some countries get more H‑2B visas?
In a sense, yes—but not because a worker from a particular country is more “entitled” to a visa. Certain countries benefit from reserved supplemental numbers resulting in extra visas allotted to foreign nationals. This provides a higher chance of the H-2B work petition being successfully approved. Each fiscal year, in addition to the core 66,000 H‑2B visas set by Congress, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) publishes a temporary rule that adds a block of “supplemental” H‑2B visas. A portion of those supplemental numbers is set aside for nationals of specific countries, including:
- Guatemala
- Honduras
- El Salvador
- Haiti
- Colombia
- Ecuador
- Costa Rica
These are sometimes called “Northern Triangle and other regional partner” countries.
Key points:
- This is a reserved pool of visas, not a different type of H‑2B classification.
- Employers who hire from these countries may have access to numbers that are not available to employers using workers from other countries.
- The worker still must qualify for H‑2B, and the employer must still complete the full DOL and USCIS process.
From the employer’s perspective hiring from a reserved‑country list can be a strategic way to improve the odds of obtaining workers in a year when the regular cap is tight.
2. Are supplemental H‑2B visas only for returning workers?
Not exactly—this is one of the biggest misconceptions. In recent years, DHS has generally divided the supplemental visas into different “buckets,” such as:
- A large portion for returning workers (workers who previously held H‑2B status in one of the last three fiscal years).
- A reserved portion for certain countries (like the ones listed above), usually open to both new and returning workers from those countries.
- Sometimes, a small tranche for certain late‑season start dates that can be used by any nationality, whether or not they are returning workers.
So, while most supplemental numbers are aimed at returning workers, there are important exceptions:
- A first‑time H‑2B worker from Guatemala, Honduras, or El Salvador may be able to use a country‑reserved supplemental visa number.
- A first‑time worker of any nationality might be able to use a supplemental number in a special late‑season tranche, depending on the year’s rule.
The exact breakdown changes from year to year, so it is important for immigration lawyers to look at the current fiscal year’s rule before planning your strategy.
3. What is a “returning worker,” and are they cap‑exempt?
“Returning worker” is a term that has meant different things at different times, which is why many employers (and even some practitioners) are confused.
What “returning worker” means now
In the current regulations, a returning worker is typically defined as:
- A worker who was issued an H‑2B visa or granted H‑2B status in any one of the previous three fiscal years.
DHS uses this definition mainly for eligibility to use supplemental numbers, especially in the large returning‑worker tranches. In other words, being a returning worker today mostly affects which pool of numbers that worker can be counted against.
Today, returning workers are not automatically exempt from the cap. Instead:
- The regular 66,000 cap still applies.
- DHS can temporarily increase that number with supplemental visas.
- Most of those supplemental visas are reserved for returning workers as a policy choice, not as a permanent, built‑in exemption.
4. Are any workers actually cap‑exempt now?
Yes. Current cap‑exempt situations include:
- Extensions of H‑2B status with the same employer (no new cap number is used).
- Certain changes of employer or terms where the time does not count as a new period subject to the cap.
- Specific statutory carve‑outs (for example, some fish‑roe workers or certain workers in Guam/CNMI), depending on the exact law and year.
These are narrow exceptions. Most brand‑new H‑2B petitions for new periods of employment require an available cap number—either from the regular cap or from one of the supplemental pools.
5. What does this mean for first‑time H‑2B workers?
If your business is hiring H‑2B workers for the first time, or if you are sponsoring individuals who have never held H‑2B status, here is the practical impact:
From non‑reserved countries
Your first‑time workers must fit into:
- The regular 66,000 cap; or
- A supplemental tranche that is open to all nationalities (if any is available for your season).
From reserved countries (e.g., Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador)
Your first‑time workers may benefit from:
- The regular 66,000 cap; and/or
- The country‑specific supplemental pool, which is generally open to both new and returning workers from those countries.
Because each fiscal year’s temporary rule is slightly different, a good H‑2B strategy now always starts with two questions:
1. What is your intended start date (and which half of the fiscal year does it fall in)?
2. What is the nationality and prior H‑2B history (if any) of your workers?
Those two details determine whether you should be aiming at the regular cap, a returning‑worker supplemental tranche, a country‑reserved pool, or some combination.
6. How an attorney can help you navigate the numbers
The H‑2B program is unforgiving: filing even a few days late can mean the cap is already gone, and missing the correct supplemental window can cost an entire season of labor.
An experienced immigration attorney can:
- Analyze whether your workforce qualifies for returning‑worker or country‑reserved supplemental numbers.
- Time your Department of Labor and USCIS filings to hit the relevant windows.
- Help you plan recruitment in specific countries that maximizes your chance of fitting into an available number pool.
- Monitor federal announcements for new supplemental tranches that might open unexpectedly during the year.
If you are considering H‑2B workers for the first time—or if you lost out on the cap in a prior year—our office can review your business needs, workforce, and timing to build an H‑2B strategy tailored to the current year’s rules.
We have successfully processed these U.S. immigration matters for over 28 years. To schedule a consultation, you may email us at info@becapitallaw.com or call / text (703) 966-0907. B&E Capital – Vassell Law Group, PC | http://www.vasselllaw.com | http://www.becapitallaw.com | Members of the American Immigration Lawyers (AILA).
