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Financial Analysts β€” United States Visa Sponsorship

Primary route: H-1B

Salary: $85,000 – $200,000
3 visa routes available
Active sponsor market

Why Financial Analysts matter in United States

Wall Street and finance employers are among the most consistent H-1B sponsors after tech. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley file hundreds of H-1B petitions annually for analyst, associate, and quantitative roles.

Visa rules overview

H-1B is the main route. Large banks often transition employees from H-1B to EB-2 permanent residence after 3-5 years. Master's degree (MBA, MFin) is nearly universal for mid-senior roles.

Available routes:

  • H-1B
  • L-1
  • O-1

Top US sponsors for Financial Analysts

  • JPMorgan Chase
  • Goldman Sachs
  • Morgan Stanley
  • Citigroup
  • Bank of America
  • Wells Fargo

Common hiring cities: New York, Charlotte, Chicago, San Francisco

US certification requirements

CFA designation often preferred; Series 7/63/79 for client-facing roles

Frequently asked questions

Can I get a United States visa as a Financial Analyst?

H-1B is the main route. Large banks often transition employees from H-1B to EB-2 permanent residence after 3-5 years. Master's degree (MBA, MFin) is nearly universal for mid-senior roles.

Which companies sponsor Financial Analysts?

JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, Bank of America, Wells Fargo β€” plus smaller and regional employers not listed.

What salary should I expect?

Typical range: $85,000 – $200,000 USD. Salaries trend higher at large-cap tech, finance, and consulting employers.

Do I need local certification?

CFA designation often preferred; Series 7/63/79 for client-facing roles

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