El aumento de las solicitudes de pruebas adicionales (RFE en inglés) en 2026

Denice Flores • March 7, 2026

 Click here to read this article in English

Los datos recientes de 2026 muestran un fuerte aumento de las solicitudes de pruebas en todas las categorías de visados basados en el empleo, como EB-1, EB-2 NIW, O y H-1B. Las solicitudes de pruebas (RFE) ya no se reservan para los casos dudosos, sino que incluso las solicitudes sólidas para talentos de alto nivel se enfrentan a un escrutinio sin precedentes. 


La ampliación del Centro de Investigación del USCIS significa que las herramientas automatizadas están cotejando todas las solicitudes, lo que da lugar a RFE incluso por las más mínimas inconsistencias.


En el caso de las solicitudes EB-2 NIW, los adjudicadores cuestionan cada vez más la «importancia nacional» de la labor del candidato. Incluso para aquellos con credenciales impresionantes, el USCIS exige ahora pruebas de cómo su trabajo beneficia específicamente a los Estados Unidos de forma prospectiva.


En el caso de los visados O-1A y O-1B, los funcionarios están aplicando interpretaciones más restrictivas de los términos «distinción» y «capacidad extraordinaria», a menudo tergiversando las pruebas que ya figuran en el expediente.


Además, una tendencia preocupante para 2026 es la correlación entre el procesamiento premium y las solicitudes de información adicional (RFE). Para categorías discrecionales como EB-1A y EB-2 NIW, el procesamiento premium se ha convertido cada vez más en una «vía rápida» hacia una RFE mal fundamentada. Los informes indican que los adjudicadores, presionados por los plazos de 15 días hábiles, pueden estar confiando en herramientas de verificación asistidas por IA que activan RFE automatizadas con lenguaje general y estereotipado, en lugar de una revisión y un análisis exhaustivos de los documentos y pruebas justificativas presentados. 


Dado que el USCIS emplea una verificación más rigurosa basada en la inteligencia artificial y una interpretación más restrictiva de los criterios de visado, el margen de error ha desaparecido. Por lo tanto, asegúrese de consultar con un abogado de inmigración con experiencia antes de presentar una solicitud. 


Si tiene alguna pregunta, programe una consulta con uno de nuestros abogados con experiencia y estaremos encantados de ayudarle. 

Este blog no pretende ser una asesoría legal y nada aquí debe interpretarse como el establecimiento de una relación abogado-cliente. Programe una consulta con un abogado de inmigración antes de actuar sobre cualquier información que aquí lea.

Denice Flores


By Denice Flores March 6, 2026
Recent data in 2026 shows a sharp increase in Requests for Evidence across employment-based visa categories such as EB-1, EB-2 NIW, O, and H-1B. Requests for Evidence (RFEs) are no longer reserved for borderline cases; even robust petitions for high-level talent are facing unprecedented scrutiny. The expansion of the USCIS Vetting Center means automated tools are cross-referencing every petition, triggering RFEs for even the smallest inconsistencies. For EB-2 NIW petitions, adjudicators are increasingly questioning the "National Importance" of a candidate’s endeavor. Even for those with impressive credentials, USCIS now demands evidence of how their work specifically benefits the U.S. on a prospective basis. For O-1A and O-1B visas, officers are applying narrower interpretations of "distinction" and "extraordinary ability," often mischaracterizing evidence already present in the record. Additionally, a troubling 2026 trend is the correlation between Premium Processing and RFEs . For discretionary categories like EB-1A and EB-2 NIW, Premium Processing has increasingly become a "fast track" to a poorly reasoned RFE. Reports indicate that adjudicators, pressured by 15-business-day timelines, may be relying on AI-assisted vetting tools that trigger automated RFEs with general and boilerplate language, rather than a thorough review and analysis of supporting documents and evidence filed. With USCIS employing more rigorous AI-driven vetting and a narrower interpretation of visa criteria, the margin for error has disappeared . As such, ensure you consult with an experienced immigration attorney before filing a petition. ' If you have any questions, please schedule a consultation with one of our experienced attorneys, and we will be more than happy to assist you.
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