Premium Processing Fee Guidance on Refunds

USCIS’s policy is clear: stakeholders are entitled to a refund of the Premium Processing (PP) fee only if USCIS fails to take the required adjudicative action within the guaranteed processing window. Here are the specific circumstances and relevant guidance:


⏱️ 1. When does the refund apply?

Guaranteed timeframes by form type:

  • Form I‑129 / I‑140 (most cases): 15 calendar days, or the premium processing fee is refunded.  
  • Form I‑765 (OPT/STEM OPT): 30 calendar days.  
  • Form I‑539 (change to F‑1, F‑2, M‑1, M‑2, J‑1, J‑2): 30 calendar days.  
  • I‑140 EB‑1A / NIW: 45 calendar days.  

The timeframe begins when USCIS receives the Form I‑907 and fee (if filed separately, the clock starts upon receiving the I‑907).  


🧾 2. What triggers a refund?

Per Form I‑907 instructions:

“If we do not take action on the benefit request within the applicable processing timeframe, your Premium Processing Service fee will be refunded, but we will continue to process the case. However, we may retain the premium processing fee … if we open an investigation for fraud or misrepresentation.”  

Thus, a refund is automatic if USCIS misses the deadline unless there is an open fraud/misrepresentation investigation.


ℹ️ 3. Additional USCIS guidance

  • The Policy Manual confirms fees are generally non-refundable—but exception for PP when USCIS fails to adjudicate timely. ()
  • Reddit discussions report USCIS “will make every effort to automatically issue a refund in the cases where the premium processing clock expired prior to adjudication.”  “USCIS will make every effort to automatically issue a refund … If appropriate, a refund will be issued ONLY for the ‘Premium Processing’ fee…”  
  • If USCIS does not automatically refund, applicants may submit a formal refund request (e.g., with subject “ATTN: Refund Request”, including filing/payment date, decision date) and USCIS will verify and refund accordingly. ()

🔄 4. What if adjudicative action stops the clock?

If USCIS issues a Request for Evidence (RFE) or Notice of Intent to Deny/Intent to Deny (NOID/ID), the premium processing clock is paused—timelines resume once a response is received. A delay in issuing these notices is itself “action” and does not trigger a refund.  


✅ Summary Table

Form TypeTimeframeRefund TriggerExceptions
I‑129 / I‑14015 daysNo USCIS action by day 15 (e.g., approval, RFE, denial)Fraud/misrepresentation investigations
I‑765 / I‑53930 daysNo action by day 30Same as above
I‑140 NIW / EB‑1A45 daysNo action by day 45Same

📝 How to request a refund

  1. Wait for the full PP timeframe to elapse without adjudication.
  2. USCIS may refund automatically.
  3. If no refund:
    • File a written request to the USCIS office handling the case.
    • Use subject line: “ATTN: Refund Request”.
    • Include: PP filing date, fee payment date, and adjudication decision date.  
    • USCIS reviews and, if validated, issues refund of PP fee only.

⚠️ Key exceptions where fee 

may not

 be refunded

  • USCIS opens a fraud or misrepresentation investigation on the petition.
  • USCIS took some action (approval, denial, RFE, NOID) but missed the timeframe—action resets clock.
  • PP filing was improper, or the fee was not accepted.
  • Delay due to fraud inquiry, not adjudicative backlog.  

🧭 Practitioner tips

  • Track start and expiration dates carefully—especially when RFE is issued.
  • If the timeframe expires and no action, expect automatic refund, but be ready to file a formal request.
  • Monitor and document any fraud/misrepresentation inquiries, as fee refunds may be withheld in those scenarios.

In summary, a stakeholder is entitled to a refund of the Premium Processing fee when USCIS fails to adjudicate within the applicable guaranteed timeframe, unless a fraud/misrepresentation investigation is underway or USCIS has taken any qualifying action (including issuing RFE/NOID). The refund may be automatic or upon written request directed to the relevant USCIS office.

USCIS clearly defines Premium Processing timeframes in business days, not calendar days. Here’s the confirmation:


📅 1. Official USCIS Website

USCIS’s “How Do I Request Premium Processing?” page states the following guarantees:

  • 15 business days for most I‑129 and I‑140 petitions
  • 30 business days for I‑765 (OPT/STEM) and I‑539 (change of status)
  • 45 business days for I‑140 NIW / EB‑1A  

🛡️ 2. Policy Manual Verification

The USCIS Policy Manual defines “business day” as a day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, or federal holiday  .


📰 3. Guidance from Stakeholders & Legal Updates

  • As of April 1, 2024, USCIS formally switched from calendar days to business days under its new rule  .

✅ Summary Table of PP Timeframes

Form TypeTimeframeDefinition
I‑129 / I‑14015 business daysExcludes weekends + federal holidays
I‑76530 business daysSame as above
I‑53930 business daysSame as above
I‑140 NIW/EB‑1A45 business daysSame as above

✅ Conclusion

All Premium Processing time limits are counted in business days—excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and U.S. federal holidays. The guaranteed timeframe pauses on any of those days and the clock resumes on the next business day.

Revision Date: July 7, 2025.