New York, NY - Mar. 17, 2026 - Agudath Israel of America submitted a comment thanking the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (UCIS) for easing restrictions on religious workers through a newly issued Interim Final Rule (IFR). The rule removes limitations on religious worker visas (R-1), marking an important step in supporting faith-based institutions and the communities that rely on them.
Under prior regulations, non-citizens in the US serving in religious capacities on R-1 visas were required to leave the United States for a minimum of one year once their visa expired at the end of its five-year term before they could apply for and obtain a new R-1 visa. This requirement imposed significant hardships on religious workers as many of them serve in leadership positions such as rabbis and teachers causing serious disruptions for the institutions and schools they serve. The new rule eliminates this mandatory waiting period, allowing religious workers to apply for and receive a new R-1 visa without being forced to spend a fixed period of time outside the United States.
In the comment, Agudath Israel also urges UCIS to advocate for priority or preferred scheduling for R-1 visa applicants. Additionally, Agudath Israel asked UCIS to support reforms to help individuals with temporary R-1 visas attain permanent residence as current statutory limitations have resulted in backlogs so extreme that many religious workers who otherwise qualify for permanent residence are compelled to remain in temporary R-1 status for decades.
“Agudath Israel of America is deeply grateful to USCIS and the Administration for recognizing the real-world challenges faced by religious communities and for taking thoughtful action to address them. This rule will meaningfully strengthen the ability of Orthodox Jewish communities—and religious communities of all faiths—to exercise their religion freely and to serve the spiritual and social needs of their members,” said Mr. David Grunblatt, partner at Fragomen, Del Rey, Bernsen & Loewy, LLP and chair of Agudath Israel of America’s Immigration Committee.
Agudath Israel of America has long advocated for reforms to the R-1 visa program and continues to urge Congress to pass the bipartisan Religious Workforce Protection Act. That legislation would eliminate the need for individuals on an R-1 visa to leave the US at all while further strengthening protections for people of faith in the workforce