New immigration bill proposes $20,000 option for applicants to skip the 10-year green card queue
A bipartisan bill, the Dignity Act of 2025, aims to tackle the US green card backlog by 2035. Spearheaded by Reps. Salazar and Escobar, it proposes a $20,000 premium for those waiting over a decade to expedite their applications. The bill also see...

The Dignity Act of 2025 is a revised version of a 2023 proposal and reflects growing bipartisan interest in immigration reform. Its full name stands for “Dignity for Immigrants while Guarding our Nation to Ignite and Deliver the American Dream”.
“This bill is not about left or right,” said Rep. Salazar. “It’s about solving a problem that’s been broken for decades. The American people are ready for a solution that is both tough and fair.”
The bill is expected to spark debate as Congress weighs options to modernize the US immigration system amid public support for reform.
Also Read | The Dignity Act of 2025: Faster green cards, dual-intent student visas proposed in bipartisan US bill
$20,000 premium route to permanent residency
Under the bill, eligible applicants from family or employment-based categories who have waited over a decade will have the option to pay a premium processing fee of $20,000 to receive their visa ahead of the standard queue. The proposal places a cap on maximum wait times and aims to clear long-standing green card backlogs within ten years.
Higher country caps to reduce visa wait times
The bill also raises the per-country cap from 7% to 15% for both employment-based and family-sponsored green cards. This change is intended to reduce delays for nationals from countries with high demand, such as India and China, and to address uneven wait times across nationalities.
Path to permanent status for documented dreamers
The legislation provides permanent residency options for documented dreamers—children of long-term visa holders—who may age out of legal status. Those who have lived lawfully in the US for at least ten cumulative years would qualify for lawful permanent resident (LPR) status under this provision.
Student and employment visa updates
The Dignity Act proposes a series of legal immigration reforms:
- F-1 student visas would become dual-intent, allowing international students to pursue permanent residency after graduation without proving an intent to return home. Students on Optional Practical Training (OPT) would be required to pay Social Security and Medicare taxes.
- Derivative family members (spouses and children) of visa applicants would be excluded from the annual visa count, increasing the number of primary beneficiaries without raising caps.
- O visa eligibility would expand to include a presumption of extraordinary ability for international doctoral graduates in STEM and medical fields.
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