Saudi senior professionals represent one of the most underserved segments in the Gulf immigration market. Saudi consultants at KAUST and KFUPM with international research credentials; Saudi C-suite executives at Aramco, SABIC, and STC; Saudi physicians at major hospitals across the Kingdom; Saudi senior banking and finance professionals at firms operating across Riyadh, Jeddah, and Dammam. Many hold credentials from King Saud University, KAUST, KFUPM, MIT, Stanford, Harvard, and other elite institutions β€” credentials that align cleanly with EB-1A extraordinary ability requirements.

For Saudi citizens, EB-1A is uniquely advantageous compared to most other Gulf nationalities. Saudi-born applicants face no Visa Bulletin backlog β€” typically current to 1-year wait from petition approval to Green Card. The Kingdom's emphasis on developing Saudi national talent through Vision 2030 has produced a generation of senior Saudi professionals with international credentials, leadership experience, and publication records that align well with EB-1A criteria.

Who this guide is for: Saudi citizens with senior professional credentials β€” academics, physicians, engineers, executives, researchers β€” considering US permanent residence through self-petitioned EB-1A. Pathway works whether you're currently in Saudi Arabia or based elsewhere in the Gulf or internationally.

The Core Numbers

Investment Required
$0
Premium Processing
45 days
Total Timeline (Saudi-born)
1–3 years

Why EB-1A Fits Saudi Profiles Well

  • No Visa Bulletin disadvantage. Saudi-born applicants face no country-specific backlog. EB-1A typically current to 1-year wait. Compare to India-born (~3 years) or even fellow non-India-born nationalities (1-3 years).
  • Strong international education base. Saudi government scholarship programs (KASP, Vision 2030 talent development) have produced a generation of Saudi professionals with US, UK, and European graduate degrees. WES credential evaluations are well-established for both Saudi institutions and international degrees held by Saudi citizens.
  • Career trajectories supporting strong narratives. Saudi senior professionals often have 15-25 years of trajectory through Aramco, SABIC, STC, major hospitals, or government institutions β€” the kind of progressive achievement EB-1A petitions build around.
  • Vision 2030 alignment. Saudi professionals working in sectors prioritized by Vision 2030 (technology, renewable energy, healthcare, finance, entertainment) often have leadership roles, international collaboration histories, and documented contributions that map naturally to EB-1A criteria.
  • Document chain simplified post-2024. Saudi Arabia joined the Hague Apostille Convention in 2024, streamlining authentication of Saudi-issued documents significantly compared to prior consular legalization requirements.

Eligibility Snapshot

  • Evidence base: Documented evidence meeting 3 of 10 USCIS evidentiary categories
  • Sustained recognition: Track record of acclaim, awards, achievements over time
  • Field continuation: Intent to continue work in your area of extraordinary ability
  • Substantial benefit: Reasoning your continued work will substantially benefit the US
  • No employer sponsor needed β€” self-petitioned
  • No minimum salary requirement
  • No investment required
  • No specific degree requirement β€” evidence matters, not credentials per se

The Saudi Reality β€” Key Considerations

Document chain via apostille (post-2024)

Saudi Arabia's 2024 accession to the Hague Apostille Convention dramatically simplified document authentication. Saudi educational credentials, professional licenses, and civil status records require apostille from the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs rather than the prior consular legalization chain. Plan 4-6 weeks for a complete document chain through Saudi MOFA apostille.

Recommendation letter strategy for Saudi profiles

EB-1A petitions typically include 5-8 recommendation letters from independent experts in your field. Saudi professionals often have strong letter potential from former Saudi university professors (many of whom hold international academic positions), international collaborators from research or business projects, and senior Saudi industry leaders who can attest to professional impact.

The strongest Saudi EB-1A petitions include letters from a mix of Saudi-based experts (demonstrating regional impact and recognition) and international experts (demonstrating cross-border influence). Saudi professional networks are increasingly globally distributed, making international expert letters more achievable than they were a decade ago.

Educational credential evaluation

For Saudi citizens with degrees from King Saud University, KAUST, KFUPM, KAU, Princess Nourah University, or other Saudi institutions, WES (World Education Services) maintains established evaluation pathways. For Saudi citizens with international degrees (US, UK, Canada, etc.), credential evaluation is typically simpler since the institutions are directly recognized.

The Vision 2030 angle for petition narratives

For Saudi professionals working in Vision 2030 priority sectors, the petition narrative can include the strategic context of Saudi development priorities and how the professional's work has contributed to specific Vision 2030 outcomes. USCIS adjudicators have shown receptivity to well-documented narratives around national-level strategic contributions.

Sustained recognition documentation

EB-1A requires evidence of "sustained" recognition β€” not a single high point. For Saudi senior professionals, this typically means showing recognition trajectory over 10-15+ years: early-career awards or scholarships, mid-career leadership appointments, current senior positions with documented impact. The longer the documented trajectory, the stronger the petition.

Strong Saudi EB-1A Profiles in Our Practice

  • Senior physicians and consultants at King Faisal Specialist Hospital, KFSH&RC, Aramco Medical, with international fellowship credentials (FRCP, FRCS, FACS), Saudi Medical Society leadership, and published research
  • Senior engineers and executives at Aramco, SABIC, Ma'aden, STC β€” particularly those with patents, technical leadership positions, and international publications
  • Faculty at KAUST, KFUPM, King Saud University with documented research grants, doctoral student supervision, editorial positions, and international collaborations
  • Senior banking and finance professionals at SAMA-regulated institutions, sovereign wealth funds, and major Saudi banks with thought leadership and industry recognition
  • Tech entrepreneurs and senior technology professionals in Saudi's growing tech sector with documented innovations, patents, or commercial outcomes
  • Healthcare administrators at major Saudi hospital networks with operational impact, published frameworks, and conference presentations
  • Senior consultants at major firms (McKinsey, BCG, Bain, PwC, EY, Deloitte) with thought leadership publications and industry recognition

Documents You Will Need

  1. Saudi passport β€” applicant and dependents
  2. National ID (Hawiya) β€” translated and apostilled
  3. Family card (Bitaqat al-Aila) β€” translated and apostilled
  4. Marriage certificate β€” if applicable, apostilled
  5. Birth certificates β€” applicant and dependents, apostilled
  6. Educational credentials β€” Saudi or international degrees, apostilled, evaluated via WES or ECE
  7. Professional certifications β€” Saudi medical licenses, Saudi Council of Engineers credentials, international certifications
  8. Employment records β€” detailed letters from current and previous employers
  9. Publications and patents β€” with citation records, impact metrics
  10. Recommendation letters β€” 5-8 from independent experts
  11. Police clearances β€” from Saudi Arabia, 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
Saudi document apostille$500-1,200
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.

Common Questions

Will I need to give up my Saudi citizenship to get a US Green Card? +
No. US permanent residence does not require renunciation of citizenship. Saudi Arabia's position on dual citizenship is officially restrictive but the practical impact of US Green Card status on Saudi citizenship varies case by case. Eventual US citizenship (typically 5 years after Green Card) raises more complex questions worth discussing with appropriate counsel.
My evidence is mostly in Arabic and from Saudi institutions β€” will USCIS accept it? +
Yes, with certified English translations. USCIS adjudicators are accustomed to evaluating credentials from international institutions. Saudi institutions are well-recognized particularly KAUST, KFUPM, and King Saud University. Your translator must be certified, and translations must be accompanied by translator's certificate of accuracy. Publications in Arabic-language journals can be supported by translated abstracts and citation evidence in English-language databases.
I work for Aramco/SABIC β€” does that strengthen or weaken my petition? +
Strengthens, when documented properly. Aramco, SABIC, and other major Saudi institutions are recognized internationally. Senior positions at these companies represent meaningful achievement. The petition needs to translate Aramco/SABIC roles into terms USCIS understands β€” typical role descriptions, scope of responsibility, comparable US benchmarks. Your senior role at Aramco is roughly equivalent to senior roles at ExxonMobil or Chevron, and the petition should frame it that way.
Should I file EB-1A alone or parallel with EB-2 NIW? +
For Saudi citizens, parallel filing is rarely necessary given the favorable Visa Bulletin position. Saudi-born EB-1A typically current means you don't face the years-long delays that drive parallel filing decisions for India-born applicants. However, if your EB-1A case is borderline, parallel EB-2 NIW filing provides backup. Discuss during free assessment based on your specific profile strength.
How long does the entire process take for a Saudi citizen? +
Realistic timeline: 18-36 months from engagement to Green Card landing. 4-8 months for petition preparation, 6-12 months USCIS processing without premium processing (45 days with premium processing add-on), then 6-12 months NVC processing and consular interview at US Consulate Dubai or US Embassy Riyadh. Saudi-born applicants don't face the Visa Bulletin delays that extend timelines for India-born or China-born applicants.

Next Steps

For Saudi senior professionals with strong credentials and documented achievement, EB-1A is the optimal US Green Card pathway. The combination of no investment required, no employer sponsor needed, no Visa Bulletin disadvantage for Saudi-born applicants, and post-2024 apostille simplification makes this genuinely accessible for the right profiles.

The honest threshold question is profile strength, not pathway eligibility. Most senior Saudi professionals at Aramco-tier institutions, KAUST/KFUPM-tier universities, major hospitals, or government leadership positions have profiles that genuinely qualify when properly assessed. The free Unican assessment maps your specific evidence against the 10 USCIS evidentiary categories and provides an honest read on petition viability.

Want a written assessment for your EB-1A profile?

We review your CV, credentials, publications, and recommendation letter potential β€” and give you an honest written read on whether EB-1A is your pathway. For Saudi citizens, this is often the fastest and most efficient US Green Card route. Free, no obligation, 2 business day turnaround.

Get My Free Assessment β†’