Posted by: kalopani January 31, 2011
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to read more please go to : http://www.uscis.gov/portal/site/uscis/menuitem.5af9bb95919f35e66f614176543f6d1a/?vgnextoid=ff791c491861a110VgnVCM1000004718190aRCRD&vgnextchannel=75bce2e261405110VgnVCM1000004718190aRCRD
Limits on Periods of Unemployment
What are the limits on periods of unemployment?
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Students on post-completion OPT may have up to 90 days of unemployment.
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Students who have OPT extended due to the cap gap provisions continue to be subject to the 90-day limitation on unemployment.
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Students who receive a 17-month STEM OPT extension are given an additional 30 days of unemployment for a total of 120 days over their entire post-completion OPT period.
Do the limits on unemployment apply to any periods of unemployment prior to April 8, 2008?
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No, the limits on unemployment do not apply retroactively.
Do the limits apply to students who had post-completion OPT approved before April 8, 2008?
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For students who started post-completion OPT prior to April 8, 2008, unemployment time will accrue only for time spent unemployed after April 8, 2008. Time unemployed prior to April 8, 2008, will not be counted.
Is a student who splits OPT between two degrees at the same level limited to a total of 90 days of unemployment?
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No, the student is not limited to a total of 90 days of unemployment in this case. For each new period of post-completion OPT, the student will have the full 90-day period of unemployment.
What counts as time unemployed?
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Each day during the period when OPT authorization begins and ends that the student does not have qualifying employment counts as a day of unemployment. The only exception is that periods of up to 10 days between the end of one job and the beginning of the next job will not be included in the calculation for time spent unemployed.
How does travel outside the United States impact the period of unemployment?
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If the student whose approved period of OPT has started travels outside of the United States while unemployed, the time spent outside the United States will count as unemployment against the 90/120-day limits.
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If a student travels while employed (either during a period of leave authorized by an employer or as part of their employment), the time spent outside the United States will not count as unemployment.