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ROLE DEFINITIONS, DUTIES, AND WHAT USCIS LOOKS FOR IN APPROVALS
Contributor
Tukki
Reading time
8 mins read
Date published
Feb 20, 2026
The L-1A visa is an employment-based nonimmigrant visa for intracompany transferees who serve in managerial or executive roles. This does not mean that having a job title such as "Director" or "VP" in your LinkedIn or on your business card automatically makes you qualified. What matters most to USCIS is the substance of your daily work, not the job title at face value, and that is where many L-1A petitions run into trouble.
USCIS recognizes three categories of qualifying positions: personnel manager, function manager, and executive.
Each one carries its own definition under the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), its own evidence requirements, and its own set of pitfalls that can lead to a visa denial. Understanding these distinctions is important if you're an applicant preparing your case, an HR team building the petition, or an immigration attorney advising a client.
This guide breaks down all three categories in detail so you can evaluate if a role meets the standard and build the right supporting documents.
Under the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), a foreign national petitioned for an L-1A must be coming to the United States to serve in a managerial or executive capacity. USCIS interprets this only through three distinct role categories, which is why your petition needs to clearly establish which one applies, as well as provide evidence specific to that category.
Here's a quick comparison:
| Role type | Core requirement | Manages people? | Key evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personnel manager | Supervises professional, supervisory, or managerial staff | Yes, required | Org chart, subordinate qualifications, hiring/firing authority |
| Function manager | Manages an essential function at a senior level | Not necessarily | Function's importance to the org, seniority of the role, discretion exercised |
| Executive | Directs management of the organization or a major component | Indirectly, through other managers | Wide-latitude decision-making, policy-setting authority, limited oversight |
One critical point to keep in mind: both the foreign position (meaning the role you've held abroad) and the proposed U.S. position must qualify as managerial or executive. USCIS evaluates each position independently during adjudication, so you'll need to build evidence for both sides of the transfer.
The personnel manager category is usually the most straightforward path to L-1A classification. To qualify, you need to supervise and direct the work of other supervisory, professional, or managerial employees. You also need hiring and firing authority, or at least meaningful input in those decisions that the company actually relies on.
There’s one detail that often catches people off guard: your direct reports can’t all be entry-level staff. USCIS expects at least one subordinate to hold a supervisory, professional, or managerial role. If your entire team is made up of administrative assistants or junior employees without professional qualifications, an officer may view you as a first-line supervisor rather than a qualifying manager.
Qualifying personnel manager duties typically include:
If your day-to-day work looks more like this, USCIS may question your personnel manager claim:
But does this distinction really matters? Well yes because USCIS officers routinely assess what percentage of your time goes toward managerial duties versus hands-on operational work. If the balance tips toward non-qualifying tasks, your petition might be at risk of denial.
The L-1A functional manager category exists for individuals who manage an essential function of the organization rather than a team of people. This is where many petitions run into trouble, because USCIS applies heightened scrutiny to functional manager claims.
To qualify as an L-1A functional manager, you need to show 2 things.
The L-1A functional manager approval rate tends to be lower than for personnel managers or executives because the standard is harder to prove without direct reports. Without a team below you on the organizational chart, you need to convince the adjudicator that your role is genuinely senior and strategic rather than operational.
USCIS wants to see that you're directing the function, not performing it. A software engineer who builds the product isn't managing the product development function, even if they're the most senior engineer on the team. But a director of product development who sets the roadmap, makes resource allocation decisions, and has authority over how the function operates could qualify as a function manager.
Strong functional manager petitions typically demonstrate:
If your company has other employees or contractors who handle the operational work within the function while you oversee and direct their efforts, that strengthens your case. Even though you don't need to manage people directly, showing that someone else handles the hands-on work helps USCIS understand that your role is truly managerial in capacity.

The executive category is reserved for individuals at the top of the organizational hierarchy. An L-1A executive directs the management of the organization or a major component of it. They make wide-latitude decisions without much oversight, and they establish the goals and policies for the organization or their division.
Here's what qualifying executive duties typically look like in practice:
The key distinction is scope and autonomy. Executives don't just supervise people or manage functions. They direct the people who manage people, and they operate with broad decision-making authority that shapes the organization's direction.
The requirements for executive and managerial capacities are different.
If your organization is small, that line can be blur. For exmaple, a founder who is both CEO and lead developer may hold executive authority on paper, but if they're spending most of their time writing code rather than managing the team, USCIS will question if the role truly qualifies. Is is what you actually do and not your title on the organizational chart what matters for this visa.
The most frequent denial reason for L-1A petitions is that you are not really doing managerial or executive functions. If you as the beneficiary perform primarily operational or hands-on duties, your petition might be denied, since the substance of your daily work doesn't fit USCIS requirements.
Here are the problems that come up most often:
These issues apply equally to blanket and individual L-1 petitions, though the review process may differ. The USCIS Policy Manual, Volume 2, Part L covers L-1 adjudication standards in detail.
Here's a list of supporting documents USCIS expects for each role type.
Your org chart should clearly show where the beneficiary sits in the hierarchy, who reports to them, and who they report to.
A well-constructed chart tells the immigration officer how the company is structured at a glance.
We recommend you go beyond generic responsibility statements by describing specific duties, the percentage of time allocated to each and how those duties are managerial or executive in nature. For functional managers, you can explain the function in detail and why it's essential to the business. USCIS officers use these breakdowns to determine whether the role genuinely qualifies or if the beneficiary is spending most of their time on non-qualifying operational tasks.
If you're claiming personnel manager status, include evidence of your subordinates' professional qualifications: degrees, certifications, job descriptions, and their own reporting relationships. Like we stated previously, USCIS needs to see that your direct reports are themselves professional, supervisory or managerial employees.
Include documentation showing your hiring and firing authority, budget control, or policy-setting power. This might be internal approval records, signed offer letters or termination documents you authorized, or policy documents you authored. For executives, board resolutions or corporate governance documents that establish your decision-making latitude can strengthen the case.
It's worth noting that the EB-1C green card category uses the same managerial and executive definitions as the L-1A. If you're thinking about the L-1A to green card pathway, the evidence you build for your L-1A petition can lay the groundwork for your future employer sponsorship of an EB-1C application.
Your visa petition should clearly identify which of the three qualifying categories applies. Instead of trying to fit on all three category at once, focus on the category that best matches the beneficiary's actual role and build the strongest possible evidence around it.
For applicants coming from an L-1B specialized knowledge role, keep in mind that the transition to L-1A requires a genuine shift from performing specialized work to directing others or managing functions. Simply being promoted in title without a real change in duties won't satisfy USCIS visa eligibility standards.
For a complete overview of L-1A eligibility, processing time details, and how role qualification fits into the bigger picture, visit our L-1A visa guide.
WE CAN HELP
Need more clarity?
Find quick answers to frequent visa questions from our legal experts
Can I switch from an E-2 visa to an L-1A visa?
Yes, but you'll need to meet all the L-1A visa requirements independently.
That means you'd need a qualifying multinational employer, at least one year of qualifying employment abroad in a managerial or executive role within the past three years, and a U.S. entity with a qualifying relationship to the foreign employer.
Simply holding an E-2 doesn't give you any advantage in the L-1A petition process.
Are USCIS filing fees refundable if my petition is denied?
No. USCIS does not refund filing fees if your petition is denied, withdrawn, or revoked.
This means a denial can be especially costly since you will need to pay the full set of government fees again if you choose to refile.
The only exception is premium processing: if USCIS does not meet the 15 business day deadline, you can request a refund of the I-907 fee.
How long does it take to go from L-1A to green card?
The timeline depends on your country of birth. For most countries, EB-1 is current, so the main wait is I-140 processing (roughly 18 to 20.5 months at standard speed, or 15 days with premium processing).
For Indian nationals, add approximately 2.5 to 3 years of priority date backlog. For Chinese nationals, expect about a 2-year wait.
Concurrent filing of the I-140 and I-485 can shorten the process when your priority date is current.
Can I switch from L-1A to H-1B after my I-140 is approved?
Yes, but there are constraints.
You must make the switch before reaching the sixth year of combined H/L time, the H-1B lottery may apply, and there's no special conversion process for L-1A holders.
The advantage of switching is that H-1B holders with an approved I-140 can get three-year extensions beyond the normal six-year H-1B cap, a benefit that isn't available on the L-1A.
Does the L-1A visa require a specific degree or education?
No. The L-1A has no education requirement. USCIS evaluates whether you serve in a genuine managerial or executive capacity and whether you meet the one-year employment requirement with the qualifying foreign organization. Your L-1A visa eligibility depends on your role, responsibilities, and employment history, not your academic credentials.
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