I am finishing my master’s degree in computer science in the US on an F-1 visa. I want to work after graduation. I understand there is something called OPT and a STEM extension. Please explain how it works, the timelines, and what I need to do.
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Optional Practical Training (OPT) is a 12-month work authorization available to F-1 students to work in a job directly related to their field of study. You must apply through your DSO and file Form I-765 with USCIS — allow 3–5 months for processing, so apply no later than 3 months before your graduation date. STEM OPT is a 24-month extension for graduates in qualifying STEM fields (computer science qualifies) who are employed by an E-Verify participating employer. Combined, you receive up to 36 months of work authorization, which covers 3 H-1B lottery cycles — a strategic advantage for many international students.
My STEM OPT extension saved me during my second H-1B lottery miss. Here is what caught me off guard: your employer must be enrolled in E-Verify for you to get the STEM extension — this eliminated some smaller companies I was considering. Also, every 6 months you must submit a self-evaluation through your DSO confirming your job is still related to your STEM major. Miss this reporting requirement and your STEM OPT can be terminated. Set calendar reminders the day you get your STEM approval — it sounds minor but I know people who lost their status over missed check-ins.
OPT Timeline: Apply to DSO 90 days before graduation → DSO updates SEVIS and issues new I-20 → File I-765 with USCIS → Receive EAD card (3–5 months).
STEM OPT timeline: Must apply 90 days before your initial OPT expires → DSO confirms employer is E-Verify enrolled and signs Form I-983 training plan → File I-765 with USCIS → Get 24-month extension.
Important dates to track:
The OPT-to-H-1B pipeline has become the primary path for international students to stay in the US long-term, which means the system is under significant political pressure. There have been repeated legislative attempts to restrict OPT, especially STEM OPT. International students should honestly assess the statistical reality: even with 3 years of OPT and 3 lottery attempts at 18% selection each time, there is roughly a 57% cumulative chance of NOT being selected. Building parallel plans — Canadian PR, UK Graduate Route, or German job seeker visa — during your studies is not pessimistic, it is prudent.