EB2 NIW RFE, Dhanasar prongs, and response mapping

EB2 NIW RFE challenges all 3 prongs: build the response map before adding documents

When USCIS challenges substantial merit and national importance, well-positioned evidence, and waiver benefit at the same time, do not answer with one giant career story. Separate the objections into three proof jobs.

Published June 22, 2026 - ChatEB1 is not a law firm

Short answer: if the RFE challenges all three NIW prongs, make three separate response maps. One for proposed endeavor and national importance. One for why you are well positioned. One for why the United States should waive the job-offer and labor-certification requirement.
Where ChatEB1 fits: use the EB2 NIW Kit when the problem is Dhanasar structure, proposed-endeavor clarity, evidence mapping, or attorney handoff. Use the RFE Reconstruction Kit only when the live job is response row structure across an officer notice.

Why "all three prongs" feels worse than it is

An RFE that challenges all three prongs can feel like USCIS rejected the whole profile. Sometimes the profile is weak. But often the RFE is saying something narrower: the petition did not make each required NIW answer easy enough to verify.

That is a structure problem before it is a volume problem. More documents can still fail if they do not answer the correct prong.

First, do not merge the prongs

A common weak response answers all three prongs with one long biography. That usually makes the officer work too hard.

Prong Officer question Response job
Prong 1 What exactly is the proposed endeavor, and why does it have substantial merit and national importance? Narrow the endeavor and prove importance beyond one employer, lab, customer, or resume theme.
Prong 2 Why are you well positioned to advance that specific endeavor? Show prior progress, skills, record of success, implementation plan, and independent interest.
Prong 3 Why is it beneficial to waive the job offer and labor certification requirement? Explain the waiver logic in light of the endeavor, your positioning, urgency, impracticality, or U.S. benefit.

The response map

Build one row per officer sentence. Do not paraphrase from memory. Copy the sentence.

Column What belongs there
Officer sentence The exact RFE language.
Prong Prong 1, Prong 2, Prong 3, or overlap.
Already filed The exhibit and page that already answer it, if any.
Missing proof The evidence gap the response must close.
Response sentence The conclusion USCIS should be able to verify from the row.

If Prong 1 failed

Do not answer with "my field is important." Make the proposed endeavor specific enough to evaluate. Then show why that endeavor has prospective impact beyond a private job description.

The better evidence usually names the problem, affected population or market, public or industry importance, and why your work addresses that problem.

If Prong 2 failed

Do not answer with generic credentials. USCIS is asking whether you are well positioned to advance the proposed endeavor you named.

Useful proof can include prior work on the same problem, publications, citations, patents, deployed systems, grants, customers, collaborators, independent expert reliance, or a credible next-step plan.

If Prong 3 failed

Do not make Prong 3 sound like "I am employable." The waiver argument is different. It asks why, on balance, the United States benefits from waiving the job-offer and labor-certification requirement for this work.

The response should connect the endeavor, the applicant's positioning, and the U.S. benefit. If those first two prongs are still vague, Prong 3 will usually stay vague too.

When a refile is cleaner than a response

Sometimes the response can fix the record. Sometimes it cannot.

A response may be viable when the proof already existed but was poorly mapped. A refile may be cleaner when the proposed endeavor changes, the original packet used the wrong field, the evidence happened after filing, or the missing proof is too large to patch inside the current record.

That is a legal strategy decision for counsel. The evidence work is still the same: make the gap visible.

Official source to read

USCIS describes the EB2 NIW framework in its Policy Manual. It explains that the waiver analysis looks at the proposed endeavor, whether the person is well positioned, and whether the waiver is beneficial to the United States.

Bottom line: if an NIW RFE challenges all three prongs, do not answer with one louder narrative. Build three maps. Then add only the documents that make each map easier to verify.