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  • Working Remotely Whilst EAD Pending

    I wanted to create a separate thread for this topic.

    I have adjusted my status due to marriage this month and am awaiting the EAD which can take anywhere up to 3 months, but is taking even longer it seems at the moment. My UK employer, upon learning of my intention to stay, has said i can continue to work remotely for them at the moment and they are going to look in to setting me up here. They have been keen to invest in the US and this is now just an easy gateway for them once my work permits are finalised.

    If I continued to work remotely for the UK office from the US, and continued to draw my salary for doing so, would I be violating the immigration laws here? In theory, i am a UK resident working for a UK company but from my home here that I share with my wife.

    Any advice appreciated.

  • #2
    Originally posted by DJarrett04 View Post
    I wanted to create a separate thread for this topic.

    I have adjusted my status due to marriage this month and am awaiting the EAD which can take anywhere up to 3 months, but is taking even longer it seems at the moment. My UK employer, upon learning of my intention to stay, has said i can continue to work remotely for them at the moment and they are going to look in to setting me up here. They have been keen to invest in the US and this is now just an easy gateway for them once my work permits are finalised.

    If I continued to work remotely for the UK office from the US, and continued to draw my salary for doing so, would I be violating the immigration laws here? In theory, i am a UK resident working for a UK company but from my home here that I share with my wife.

    Any advice appreciated.
    Yes you would be violating immigration laws. Since you don't have a permit to work. It doesn't matter that your company is in the UK, or you are a UK resident. You are on American soil, therefore need a permit to work.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by DJarrett04 View Post
      I wanted to create a separate thread for this topic.

      I have adjusted my status due to marriage this month and am awaiting the EAD which can take anywhere up to 3 months, but is taking even longer it seems at the moment. My UK employer, upon learning of my intention to stay, has said i can continue to work remotely for them at the moment and they are going to look in to setting me up here. They have been keen to invest in the US and this is now just an easy gateway for them once my work permits are finalised.

      If I continued to work remotely for the UK office from the US, and continued to draw my salary for doing so, would I be violating the immigration laws here? In theory, i am a UK resident working for a UK company but from my home here that I share with my wife.

      Any advice appreciated.
      It should not be a problem.

      - - - Updated - - -

      Originally posted by ewilliams View Post
      Yes you would be violating immigration laws. Since you don't have a permit to work. It doesn't matter that your company is in the UK, or you are a UK resident. You are on American soil, therefore need a permit to work.
      in correct

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by azblk View Post
        It should not be a problem.

        - - - Updated - - -



        in correct
        Perfect, thank you so much for clarifying. This ensures I can have some sort off income during my wait.

        i got a bank account set up last week with a US bank; would my UK company paying my income in to that be an issue or should i keep getting them to pay in to my UK account? I would save some money by not having to keep transferring it over to the US and having them pay it directly in to a USD account from their USD account.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by DJarrett04 View Post
          Perfect, thank you so much for clarifying. This ensures I can have some sort off income during my wait.

          i got a bank account set up last week with a US bank; would my UK company paying my income in to that be an issue or should i keep getting them to pay in to my UK account? I would save some money by not having to keep transferring it over to the US and having them pay it directly in to a USD account from their USD account.
          At this point it is a little too early to be worried worried about the details as you are technically still a resident of the UK on an extended vacation. When you receive your green card however there will be tax implications on the income earned abroad and you are best served reading up on income earned abroad or talking to a tax specialist.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by azblk View Post
            It should not be a problem.

            - - - Updated - - -



            in correct
            yes you are absolutely incorrect and are giving this man wrong information.
            Any work inside the US where you get paid for is illegal if not having a EAD

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by ewilliams View Post
              yes you are absolutely incorrect and are giving this man wrong information.
              Any work inside the US where you get paid for is illegal if not having a EAD
              I have emailed an immigration attorney who is a friend-of-a-friend and was giving me some free advice on Visas. I will let you know what he comes up with on here to settle the topic.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by ewilliams View Post
                yes you are absolutely incorrect and are giving this man wrong information.
                Any work inside the US where you get paid for is illegal if not having a EAD
                From the horses mouth:


                The UC Citizenship & Immigration Service says:

                You cannot draw any salary from a United States entity.
                It is permissible to conduct business activities on behalf of a foreign employer, but no salary may come from a U.S. source. In some cases, however, you may receive reimbursement from a U.S. source for reasonable incidental expenses incurred while in the United States. [That might be something like a free hotel room while you give a speech on behalf of your foreign employer]

                Generally speaking, you cannot engage in any activity or perform a service that would constitute local employment for hire within the United States. What constitutes local employment for hire will depend on the circumstances of each case, but generally speaking, any activity you perform in the United States must be directly connected with and part of your work abroad.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by azblk View Post
                  From the horses mouth:


                  The UC Citizenship & Immigration Service says:

                  You cannot draw any salary from a United States entity.
                  It is permissible to conduct business activities on behalf of a foreign employer, but no salary may come from a U.S. source. In some cases, however, you may receive reimbursement from a U.S. source for reasonable incidental expenses incurred while in the United States. [That might be something like a free hotel room while you give a speech on behalf of your foreign employer]

                  Generally speaking, you cannot engage in any activity or perform a service that would constitute local employment for hire within the United States. What constitutes local employment for hire will depend on the circumstances of each case, but generally speaking, any activity you perform in the United States must be directly connected with and part of your work abroad.
                  Perfect, that clarifies everything I needed to know and ensure i can have a sustained income of some sort at least. No one likes to be completely dependant on their partner!!!

                  Thank you for your help in clearing that up, so far this site has been incredibly helpful.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    "business activities" are very narrowly construed - think of B-1 eligible activities

                    any work that does not fit within that will be unauthorized employment

                    not that it matters - unauthorized employment is disregarded for applicants of adjustment of status as an immediate relative (eg on the basis of marriage to a US citizen)

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by inadmissible View Post
                      "business activities" are very narrowly construed - think of B-1 eligible activities

                      any work that does not fit within that will be unauthorized employment

                      not that it matters - unauthorized employment is disregarded for applicants of adjustment of status as an immediate relative (eg on the basis of marriage to a US citizen)
                      with the exception that it should stay under 180 days! If it's over 180 days there can be consequences.
                      This is my opinion, not legal advice!

                      AOS (c9) 2 USC 485/130/131/765
                      122017 - PD
                      012518 - Biometrics
                      033118 - EAD/AP Combo card delivered
                      062618 - "Case is Ready to Be Scheduled for An Interview"
                      082618 - "we scheduled an interview for your Form I-485"
                      090418 - 2nd we scheduled
                      091018 - first interview canceled
                      092118 - Request to reschedule int
                      102318 - Renewal filed EAD/AP
                      030819 - EAD/AP Card in hand
                      040219 - We canceled your int
                      040519 - Int sched
                      051419 - Interview
                      053119 - approved

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by boogiewoogie View Post
                        with the exception that it should stay under 180 days! If it's over 180 days there can be consequences.
                        You are thinking of employment based. There is no exception for family based but at the same time it is disregarded for immediate relatives.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by azblk View Post
                          You are thinking of employment based. There is no exception for family based but at the same time it is disregarded for immediate relatives.
                          Yup. You can have ten, twenty, whatever years of unauthorized employment and STILL adjust your status to permanent residency as an immediate relative of a United States citizen

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by azblk View Post
                            From the horses mouth:


                            The UC Citizenship & Immigration Service says:

                            You cannot draw any salary from a United States entity.
                            It is permissible to conduct business activities on behalf of a foreign employer, but no salary may come from a U.S. source. In some cases, however, you may receive reimbursement from a U.S. source for reasonable incidental expenses incurred while in the United States. [That might be something like a free hotel room while you give a speech on behalf of your foreign employer]

                            Generally speaking, you cannot engage in any activity or perform a service that would constitute local employment for hire within the United States. What constitutes local employment for hire will depend on the circumstances of each case, but generally speaking, any activity you perform in the United States must be directly connected with and part of your work abroad.
                            +++++

                            Hi,

                            I have the exact same situation / question and I was looking at the USCIS website for this text and I couldn't find anything ( Could you point me to the link if possible? I need to figure out the situation with my company based on this rule

                            Rgds

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Hello,

                              Anyone got answer to this question.. I am also looking to work remotely for a Canadian employer while my EAD is pending ?

                              Comment

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