Syrian senior professionals make up a significant and often underappreciated segment of the Gulf's skilled workforce. Syrian physicians at major hospitals across the UAE and Saudi Arabia; Syrian engineers on landmark Gulf infrastructure projects; Syrian academics at universities across the region; Syrian senior banking, finance, and tech professionals at multinational firms. Many hold credentials from Damascus University, Aleppo University, Tishreen University, and other recognized Syrian institutions β€” credentials that align cleanly with EB-2 National Interest Waiver requirements.

For Syrian professionals based in Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Doha, Kuwait, or Riyadh, EB-2 NIW is one of the most viable US permanent residence pathways available. The unique advantage: Syria-born applicants face minimal Visa Bulletin backlog β€” typically 1-3 years from petition approval to actual Green Card. The structural disadvantage is the document chain, which requires careful planning given the situation in Syria.

Who this guide is for: Syrian citizens based in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, or wider GCC with a Master's degree (or Bachelor's + 5 years progressive experience), working in fields aligned with US national interest, considering US permanent residence.

The Core Numbers

Investment Required
$0
Premium Processing
45 days
Total Timeline (Syria-born)
2–4 years

Why NIW Works Well for Syrian Profiles

Syrian professional backgrounds align unusually well with EB-2 NIW criteria:

  • Strong international education base. Syrian applicants from Damascus University, Aleppo University, Tishreen University, and other recognized institutions typically produce profiles that meet or exceed NIW's educational threshold. Many additionally hold international graduate degrees (US, UK, France, Germany).
  • Multilingual professional history. Syrian senior professionals typically work in English-medium environments in the Gulf, often with French language proficiency from LycΓ©e education. WES evaluations of Syrian degrees are well-established for institutions still operating.
  • Fields aligned with US national interest. Syrian professionals in healthcare (cardiology, surgery, internal medicine), engineering (civil, electrical, mechanical), academia, finance, and tech work in domains the US explicitly identifies as nationally important.
  • Career trajectories supporting strong narratives. Syrian senior professionals in the Gulf typically have 15-25 years of regional experience, often with multinational employer history, and the kind of progressive achievement record NIW petitions can build strong cases around.
  • Visa Bulletin advantage. Syria-born applicants face minimal Visa Bulletin backlog β€” typically 1-3 years vs 5-10+ for India-born.

Eligibility Snapshot

  • Education: Master's degree or higher; OR Bachelor's + 5 years of progressive professional experience
  • Field alignment: Work that has substantial merit and national importance to the US (STEM, healthcare, education, infrastructure, public interest research)
  • Well-positioned: Evidence you can advance the proposed endeavour
  • National benefit: Reasoning why waiving labor certification serves US national interest
  • No employer sponsor needed: Self-petitioned
  • No minimum salary requirement
  • No investment required

The Syrian Reality β€” Key Considerations

Document chain β€” the most complex aspect

Syria is not a Hague Apostille signatory. The standard chain runs through Syrian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Syrian consular services in the UAE. For applicants who left Syria years ago and don't have access to original documents in Syria, this is the most challenging part of the application.

Practical document strategies for Syrian applicants:

  • Original Syrian documents accessible: Standard authentication chain via Syrian Embassy/Consulate in UAE works. Plan 8-14 weeks.
  • Documents need to be re-obtained from Syria: Use authorized agents in Damascus or Aleppo. Power of attorney typically required. Plan 12-20 weeks total.
  • Documents unavailable: USCIS accepts notarized affidavits explaining unavailability with supporting alternative evidence β€” university confirmations sent directly, professional society letters confirming credentials, sworn statements from former colleagues or supervisors.

Educational credential evaluation for Syrian degrees

WES (World Education Services) maintains evaluation pathways for major Syrian institutions. For Damascus University, Aleppo University, Tishreen University, and University of Damascus graduates β€” evaluations are typically completed within 4-8 weeks when transcripts can be obtained directly from the institution. For institutions affected by ongoing situations in Syria, alternative verification through professional bodies or peer attestation may be required.

Recommendation letter strategy for Syrian profiles

NIW petitions need 5-8 recommendation letters from independent experts. Syrian applicants often have strong letter potential from former Syrian university professors (many of whom now teach internationally), Syrian medical or engineering association members, current GCC employers, and international collaborators. Syrian academic and professional networks are remarkably globally distributed β€” Syrian professionals are scattered across the US, UK, Germany, France, Turkey, and Gulf β€” which makes finding qualified independent experts more achievable than for some other nationalities.

Filing strategy β€” when to also file EB-1A

For senior Syrian professionals with strong achievement records (department heads at major Gulf hospitals, faculty at recognized universities with publications, senior consultants with international recognition), parallel filing of EB-1A is often warranted. Syria-born EB-1A is typically current at Visa Bulletin, meaning EB-1A approval produces a Green Card 1-2 years faster than NIW. The same evidence base supports both petitions.

Strong Syrian NIW Profiles in Our Practice

  • Senior physicians at major Gulf hospitals β€” particularly cardiology, oncology, surgery, internal medicine specialists with Syrian Medical Association certifications, Royal College fellowships, leadership roles, published research
  • Faculty at Khalifa University, NYU Abu Dhabi, AUS, KAUST, KFUPM with Syrian doctoral training and ongoing research programs
  • Senior civil and structural engineers with experience on major Gulf infrastructure projects plus Syrian engineering syndicate credentials
  • Senior banking and finance professionals at multinational firms with documented exceptional contributions
  • Tech professionals and AI researchers at multinational technology companies with patents or publications
  • Healthcare technology specialists with biotech, medical device, or healthcare AI experience

Documents You Will Need

  1. Syrian passport β€” applicant and dependents
  2. Syrian National ID β€” translated and authenticated
  3. Civil status records (Daftar Aili equivalent) β€” translated and authenticated
  4. Marriage certificate β€” if applicable, authenticated
  5. Birth certificates β€” applicant and dependents, authenticated
  6. Educational credentials β€” Syrian degrees authenticated, transcripts, evaluated via WES or ECE
  7. Professional certifications β€” Syrian Medical Association, Engineering Syndicate, Bar Association memberships as relevant
  8. Employment records β€” letters from current and previous employers detailing role, scope, achievements
  9. Publications and patents β€” with citation records and impact metrics
  10. Recommendation letters β€” 5-8 from independent experts
  11. Police clearances β€” from Syria where obtainable, UAE if 6+ months residence, other countries

Costs β€” Public/Government Portion

Cost ItemAmount (USD)
I-140 Application Fee (USCIS)$715
Asylum Program Fee (mandatory)$300
Premium Processing (optional)$2,805
NVC Fee (post-approval)$400
Green Card Application Fee (per person)$220
Medical exam (per family member)$400-600
Credential evaluation (WES/ECE)$200-400
Syrian document authentication$1,500-3,500 (complex chain)
Translations$1,500-3,000
Police clearances$200-500

Above does not include professional services. Request a free assessment for Unican's investment in your specific case, including realistic document chain strategy for your particular situation.

Common Questions

What if I can't get my original documents from Syria? +
USCIS accepts notarized affidavits explaining inability to obtain documents along with available alternative evidence β€” university confirmation letters sent directly to USCIS, professional society memberships, sworn statements from former colleagues, and peer attestations. This is more common than people realize and well-established procedurally. The key is documenting genuine attempts to obtain originals before relying on alternatives.
Should I file EB-1A AND EB-2 NIW given my profile? +
For Syrian applicants whose profile genuinely supports EB-1A, parallel filing makes sense. Syria-born EB-1A is typically current at Visa Bulletin, so EB-1A approval produces a Green Card 1-2 years faster than NIW. The same evidence base supports both. Higher upfront cost (30-40% more than filing one) but potentially years faster Green Card if EB-1A approves. We assess both during the free assessment.
Will my Syrian Bachelor's + 8 years experience qualify, or do I need a Master's? +
EB-2 accepts Bachelor's + 5 years of progressive experience as Master's equivalent. Many Syrian professionals with strong career trajectories qualify on this basis. The credential evaluation determines US equivalency. Damascus University, Aleppo University, Tishreen, and other major Syrian engineering and medical schools are well-recognized internationally.
Can I file from Dubai without traveling to Syria? +
Yes. EB-2 NIW is filed from your country of residence (UAE for Dubai-based Syrians). The petition can be processed entirely from Dubai. Document authentication for Syrian documents typically goes through the Syrian consular services in the UAE, with agents in Syria handling in-country steps via power of attorney when needed. Once approved and priority date is current, you complete consular processing at the US consulate in Dubai or Abu Dhabi.
How long is the actual Visa Bulletin wait for Syria-born applicants? +
Typically 1-3 years for EB-2 NIW from I-140 approval to priority date current. Significantly shorter than Pakistan-born (2-4 years) or India-born (5-10+ years). Syria-born EB-2 has been at or near current for recent monthly bulletins, dramatically shortening the actual wait for some applicants. The trajectory depends on State Department visa allocation each year.

Next Steps

For Syrian professionals with strong credentials and work in nationally important fields, EB-2 NIW remains one of the most viable US permanent residence pathways available. The combination of no investment required, no employer sponsor needed, self-petition simplicity, and the favorable Visa Bulletin position for Syria-born applicants makes it accessible to the right profiles.

The honest challenge is the document chain β€” which requires careful planning given the situation in Syria. For Syrian senior professionals with stronger achievement records, parallel filing of EB-1A is often warranted given Syria's favorable Visa Bulletin position. The strategic question is profile-specific and is exactly what the free assessment is designed to answer.

Want a written assessment for your NIW profile?

We review your CV, credentials, field alignment, and document situation β€” and give you an honest written read on whether NIW alone, EB-1A parallel filing, or both serves your situation best. Free, no obligation, 2 business day turnaround.

Get My Free Assessment β†’