With budget negotiations stalled in Congress, the possibility of a federal government shutdown looms. Employers relying on timely immigration processes should be aware of how different agencies may be impacted if funding lapses. Below is a summary of what to expect based on prior shutdowns:

USCIS

Issue

Status During Shutdown

Notes

Core operations

Continue

USCIS is fee-funded and generally unaffected.

E-Verify

Suspended

Employers must maintain I-9 compliance even if E-Verify is unavailable. It is unclear whether the alternative inspection process allowed for E-Verify companies can be utilized when E-Verify is not available.

EB-5 Regional Center Program

Continues

Authorized through September 30, 2027.

Late I-129 filings

Accepted with justification

USCIS has excused late filings when delay caused by shutdown due to the inability to file LCAs

 

Bottom line: Most USCIS operations continue, but employers should prepare for E-Verify outages and program-specific suspensions.

Department of Labor (DOL)

Issue

Status During Shutdown

Notes

PERM, LCAs, prevailing wage requests

Halted

OFLC stops processing; FLAG system deactivated.

H-2B filings (Jan 1–3, 2026)

At risk

Employers should submit prevailing wage requests early.

Guidance

Possible

Flexibility may be announced after funding resumes.

 

Bottom line: DOL operations stop, so employers must file critical PERM and LCA applications immediately.

Department of State (DOS)

Issue

Status During Shutdown

Notes

Visa/passport services

Continue

Operations are fee-funded.

Consular operations

Possible scaling back

Limited to diplomatic visas and life-or-death emergencies if funds run short.

 

Bottom line: Visa services generally continue, but employers should anticipate possible delays abroad.

Customs and Border Protection (CBP)

Issue

Status During Shutdown

Notes

Ports of entry

Remain open

Inspection and law enforcement deemed “essential.”

Border-filed applications

Possible delays

Processing may slow.

 

Bottom line: Border inspections remain operational, though processing at entry points could be slower.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)

Issue

Status During Shutdown

Notes

Enforcement & Removal Operations (ERO)

Continue

Normal operations.

SEVP (Student/Exchange Visitor Program)

Unaffected

Program is fee-funded.

 

Bottom line: ICE enforcement continues, but employers should expect detained dockets to take priority.

Action Steps for Employers

  • Plan for delays: Anticipate disruptions in H-1B filings, PERM and Prevailing Wage Determinations, immigration court and potential slowdowns at some consulates and ports of entry.
  • Continue compliance: Employers must maintain I-9 compliance even if E-Verify is unavailable. It is unclear whether the alternative inspection process allowed for E-Verify companies can be utilized when E-Verify is not available.
  • Monitor developments: Stay in touch with legal counsel for updates as shutdown negotiations evolve.