karna11 Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago 13 hours ago, csrcsr said: Why and how anna? Can you show me tge rule i want to see the rule also Define the time and activity if renting is illegal stock tradibg is illegal going to casino on vacation is illegal its investing he is not doing property mangement and taking monthly checque and doing maintainnce is not significant amount of his time i want to see the rule where it is published fake fake fake propaganda i cannot say more If i do my car oil changeby myself i spend some time is it illegal https://www.business-standard.com/immigration/h-1b-visa-holders-can-legally-buy-us-property-but-here-s-what-gets-tricky-125091600624_1.html Quote
csrcsr Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago 2 minutes ago, karna11 said: https://www.business-standard.com/immigration/h-1b-visa-holders-can-legally-buy-us-property-but-here-s-what-gets-tricky-125091600624_1.html Thats parikh a lawyer own assumption anna how does zillow listing and taking montly transfer on his second house significant work its same as giu buy stock on robbin hood and sell i am notvarguing dont go by rahull reddy parikh want to see uscis All they want is an employer profession full time secondary pqssive ncome can be tbrough rental oncome stocks gambming sports pqssive income Mee istam naaku no impact with this its just feaemonegering no rule from uscis its juts lawyers interpdetation 1 Quote
akkum_bakkum Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago 15 minutes ago, csrcsr said: Thats parikh a lawyer own assumption anna how does zillow listing and taking montly transfer on his second house significant work its same as giu buy stock on robbin hood and sell i am notvarguing dont go by rahull reddy parikh want to see uscis All they want is an employer profession full time secondary pqssive ncome can be tbrough rental oncome stocks gambming sports pqssive income Mee istam naaku no impact with this its just feaemonegering no rule from uscis its juts lawyers interpdetation anna....dont be emotional. whether fearmongering or not, the safest thing to do is handover to property management. You cannot control how DoS/DHS interprets these rules. You cannot argue the same points with a cbp or visa officer, can you? Back in 22 when I said, change to EAD, everyone was adamant to give up H1b status until gc is approved...in the name of "being on the safe side". Same thing applies here. Quote
csrcsr Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago 4 minutes ago, akkum_bakkum said: anna....dont be emotional. whether fearmongering or not, the safest thing to do is handover to property management. You cannot control how DoS/DHS interprets these rules. You cannot argue the same points with a cbp or visa officer, can you? Back in 22 when I said, change to EAD, everyone was adamant to give up H1b status until gc is approved...in the name of "being on the safe side". Same thing applies here. Not emotional it doesnt impacr me My question is dos dha not even single or case arised there is no reality bro ro that tweet ani cheptuna Same applies to stocks as well anna ans trade paymoney ro financial adviaor in fidelity or charles schwab and give him money he will manage Same applies to sports betting when you select a fantasy team and many more foe example monna oeaxle h1b employee played us cricket team in world cup i am not saying not be safe you can rent through property managment if that is the case all additional i comes come under scrutiny Quote
Coconut Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago 9 minutes ago, akkum_bakkum said: anna....dont be emotional. whether fearmongering or not, the safest thing to do is handover to property management. You cannot control how DoS/DHS interprets these rules. You cannot argue the same points with a cbp or visa officer, can you? Back in 22 when I said, change to EAD, everyone was adamant to give up H1b status until gc is approved...in the name of "being on the safe side". Same thing applies here. we can also argue how h1/h4 interpret the rules. Stop fear mongering anna Quote
bithrisathiiiii Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago 32 minutes ago, csrcsr said: Thats parikh a lawyer own assumption anna how does zillow listing and taking montly transfer on his second house significant work its same as giu buy stock on robbin hood and sell i am notvarguing dont go by rahull reddy parikh want to see uscis All they want is an employer profession full time secondary pqssive ncome can be tbrough rental oncome stocks gambming sports pqssive income Mee istam naaku no impact with this its just feaemonegering no rule from uscis its juts lawyers interpdetation chat gpt have this one: Here’s the key U.S. government language you can point to regarding H-1B work authorization and limitations — including how that applies to activities like managing property. 📌 1. USCIS Stipulates H-1B Work Authorization Is Limited On the official USCIS H-1B Specialty Occupations page, the agency states the central rule for H-1B status: H-1B classification allows a foreign national to come to the United States to perform services in a specialty occupation — that is, work for the employer who sponsored the H-1B petition, in the specific job role described in that petition. This implies that any employment or work performed outside that approved role is unauthorized, unless separately authorized. 📌 2. USCIS Policy Manual Defines Unauthorized Employment In the USCIS Policy Manual, “unauthorized employment” is defined broadly: Unauthorized employment is any service or labor performed for an employer in the United States by an alien who is not authorized by the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) or USCIS to accept employment or who exceeds the scope of that employment authorization. This covers any work, whether paid or unpaid, that is outside your H-1B job duties. 📌 3. What the Government Does Not Explicitly Spell Out — But Is Interpreted USCIS does not have a specific page that literally says “H-1B holders may not manage rental property.” However: The rule that you may only work in the position authorized by your H-1B has been consistently applied by immigration practitioners and on immigration forums. That interpretation means that active property management activities — like showing units, collecting rent, making repairs, screening tenants — can be viewed as unauthorized work, because they constitute services or labor outside your H-1B employment. This interpretation is endorsed by immigration attorneys and legal commentary. Several immigration law FAQs explain that for H-1B holders you may receive passive income, such as rent, so long as you do not personally engage in active work related to that income. So the relevant government rule you can cite is: 📌 “You may work only in the job described in your H-1B petition; other unauthorized work is prohibited.” This is found on the USCIS H-1B page: 👉 USCIS — H-1B Specialty Occupations: “This nonimmigrant classification applies to people who wish to perform services in a specialty occupation…” And the USCIS definition of unauthorized employment in the Policy Manual: 👉 USCIS Policy Manual — Unauthorized Employment: “Unauthorized employment is any service or labor performed … without authorization…” 📌 Conclusion — How This Applies to Managing Property Based on USCIS’s definitions: Owning property and receiving rental income is not prohibited because it doesn’t involve employment for someone else. (Passive investment.) Actively managing property — doing tasks people commonly associate with a job — can be interpreted by USCIS as unauthorized employment because it is labor performed by you outside your H-1B authorized job role. 🙋♂️ If You Need Links Here are direct USCIS sources you can review: 📄 USCIS H-1B Specialty Occupations (official overview) — outlines the scope of allowed work: https://www.uscis.gov/working-in-the-united-states/h-1b-specialty-occupations 📄 USCIS Policy Manual — Unauthorized Employment (definitions & scope) — explains what unauthorized employment means: https://www.uscis.gov/policy-manual/volume-7-part-b-chapter-6 Quote
vetri_psyconandamuri Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago 1 hour ago, akkum_bakkum said: Nuvvantundi mana @krishnaaa ne ga Lol pumpkin thief Quote
csrcsr Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago 1 minute ago, bithrisathiiiii said: chat gpt have this one: Here’s the key U.S. government language you can point to regarding H-1B work authorization and limitations — including how that applies to activities like managing property. 📌 1. USCIS Stipulates H-1B Work Authorization Is Limited On the official USCIS H-1B Specialty Occupations page, the agency states the central rule for H-1B status: H-1B classification allows a foreign national to come to the United States to perform services in a specialty occupation — that is, work for the employer who sponsored the H-1B petition, in the specific job role described in that petition. This implies that any employment or work performed outside that approved role is unauthorized, unless separately authorized. 📌 2. USCIS Policy Manual Defines Unauthorized Employment In the USCIS Policy Manual, “unauthorized employment” is defined broadly: Unauthorized employment is any service or labor performed for an employer in the United States by an alien who is not authorized by the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) or USCIS to accept employment or who exceeds the scope of that employment authorization. This covers any work, whether paid or unpaid, that is outside your H-1B job duties. 📌 3. What the Government Does Not Explicitly Spell Out — But Is Interpreted USCIS does not have a specific page that literally says “H-1B holders may not manage rental property.” However: The rule that you may only work in the position authorized by your H-1B has been consistently applied by immigration practitioners and on immigration forums. That interpretation means that active property management activities — like showing units, collecting rent, making repairs, screening tenants — can be viewed as unauthorized work, because they constitute services or labor outside your H-1B employment. This interpretation is endorsed by immigration attorneys and legal commentary. Several immigration law FAQs explain that for H-1B holders you may receive passive income, such as rent, so long as you do not personally engage in active work related to that income. So the relevant government rule you can cite is: 📌 “You may work only in the job described in your H-1B petition; other unauthorized work is prohibited.” This is found on the USCIS H-1B page: 👉 USCIS — H-1B Specialty Occupations: “This nonimmigrant classification applies to people who wish to perform services in a specialty occupation…” And the USCIS definition of unauthorized employment in the Policy Manual: 👉 USCIS Policy Manual — Unauthorized Employment: “Unauthorized employment is any service or labor performed … without authorization…” 📌 Conclusion — How This Applies to Managing Property Based on USCIS’s definitions: Owning property and receiving rental income is not prohibited because it doesn’t involve employment for someone else. (Passive investment.) Actively managing property — doing tasks people commonly associate with a job — can be interpreted by USCIS as unauthorized employment because it is labor performed by you outside your H-1B authorized job role. 🙋♂️ If You Need Links Here are direct USCIS sources you can review: 📄 USCIS H-1B Specialty Occupations (official overview) — outlines the scope of allowed work: https://www.uscis.gov/working-in-the-united-states/h-1b-specialty-occupations 📄 USCIS Policy Manual — Unauthorized Employment (definitions & scope) — explains what unauthorized employment means: https://www.uscis.gov/policy-manual/volume-7-part-b-chapter-6 Thatbsummarizes from reddy video parik post no one provides uscis law or a reference one has been rejectwd because he had had rental income not even one Quote
akkum_bakkum Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago 9 minutes ago, csrcsr said: Not emotional it doesnt impacr me My question is dos dha not even single or case arised there is no reality bro ro that tweet ani cheptuna Same applies to stocks as well anna ans trade paymoney ro financial adviaor in fidelity or charles schwab and give him money he will manage Same applies to sports betting when you select a fantasy team and many more foe example monna oeaxle h1b employee played us cricket team in world cup i am not saying not be safe you can rent through property managment if that is the case all additional i comes come under scrutiny Understood. It doesn't impact you and me for sure. This type of data collection has never happened before kada, take that into consideration. The only reason I say be cautious is coz of the ambiguity in what is considered active vs passive. Its open for interpretation and having this data available for agencies will enable them to catch easy targets. None of the lawyers I know have said, you can invest in rental properties without any asterisks. P.S.: pls type slowly anna...phone to spellings thadabadthunnai 1 Quote
bithrisathiiiii Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago 7 minutes ago, csrcsr said: Thatbsummarizes from reddy video parik post no one provides uscis law or a reference one has been rejectwd because he had had rental income not even one this is kinda grey area for sure, why before this impacts ante. 1 Quote
Coconut Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago 10 minutes ago, bithrisathiiiii said: chat gpt have this one: Here’s the key U.S. government language you can point to regarding H-1B work authorization and limitations — including how that applies to activities like managing property. 📌 1. USCIS Stipulates H-1B Work Authorization Is Limited On the official USCIS H-1B Specialty Occupations page, the agency states the central rule for H-1B status: H-1B classification allows a foreign national to come to the United States to perform services in a specialty occupation — that is, work for the employer who sponsored the H-1B petition, in the specific job role described in that petition. This implies that any employment or work performed outside that approved role is unauthorized, unless separately authorized. 📌 2. USCIS Policy Manual Defines Unauthorized Employment In the USCIS Policy Manual, “unauthorized employment” is defined broadly: Unauthorized employment is any service or labor performed for an employer in the United States by an alien who is not authorized by the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) or USCIS to accept employment or who exceeds the scope of that employment authorization. This covers any work, whether paid or unpaid, that is outside your H-1B job duties. 📌 3. What the Government Does Not Explicitly Spell Out — But Is Interpreted USCIS does not have a specific page that literally says “H-1B holders may not manage rental property.” However: The rule that you may only work in the position authorized by your H-1B has been consistently applied by immigration practitioners and on immigration forums. That interpretation means that active property management activities — like showing units, collecting rent, making repairs, screening tenants — can be viewed as unauthorized work, because they constitute services or labor outside your H-1B employment. This interpretation is endorsed by immigration attorneys and legal commentary. Several immigration law FAQs explain that for H-1B holders you may receive passive income, such as rent, so long as you do not personally engage in active work related to that income. So the relevant government rule you can cite is: 📌 “You may work only in the job described in your H-1B petition; other unauthorized work is prohibited.” This is found on the USCIS H-1B page: 👉 USCIS — H-1B Specialty Occupations: “This nonimmigrant classification applies to people who wish to perform services in a specialty occupation…” And the USCIS definition of unauthorized employment in the Policy Manual: 👉 USCIS Policy Manual — Unauthorized Employment: “Unauthorized employment is any service or labor performed … without authorization…” 📌 Conclusion — How This Applies to Managing Property Based on USCIS’s definitions: Owning property and receiving rental income is not prohibited because it doesn’t involve employment for someone else. (Passive investment.) Actively managing property — doing tasks people commonly associate with a job — can be interpreted by USCIS as unauthorized employment because it is labor performed by you outside your H-1B authorized job role. 🙋♂️ If You Need Links Here are direct USCIS sources you can review: 📄 USCIS H-1B Specialty Occupations (official overview) — outlines the scope of allowed work: https://www.uscis.gov/working-in-the-united-states/h-1b-specialty-occupations 📄 USCIS Policy Manual — Unauthorized Employment (definitions & scope) — explains what unauthorized employment means: https://www.uscis.gov/policy-manual/volume-7-part-b-chapter-6 USCIS uses Palantir model anna, so no issues on renting Quote
phatposts Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago rent collection is not illegal, but "spending time in managing the rental" is - for an H1B holder. For those who have rentals - hire a property management firm and put the right paperwork in place. That part should not be sidelined to save $$. Quote
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