The H-2B visa is a federal program that allows U.S. employers to hire temporary, non-agricultural foreign workers when qualified domestic workers are not available for seasonal roles. Eligible industries include hospitality, landscaping, amusement parks, resorts, and food service. Employers seeking summer workers must begin the H-2B process by March to meet Memorial Day staffing targets, as processing, approvals, and travel logistics require significant lead time. H-2B workers are vetted, committed, and many return season after season, reducing retraining costs. The program is fully compliant with U.S. immigration law when managed through an experienced staffing partner.
Summer is weeks away. Your job postings are up. Your interviews are thin. And the roles you need to fill are still empty.
For operations managers and HR leaders running seasonal businesses, this is a familiar and expensive pattern. Understaffing strains your team, forces you to turn away customers, scale back hours, and absorb the reputational cost of a guest experience that falls short.
There is a federal visa program designed exactly for this problem. It's legal, repeatable, and underused by the very businesses that need it most. It's called the H-2B visa, and if you run a seasonal operation, March is your last chance to put it to work this summer.
Tight local labor markets aren't a temporary condition. They're the new baseline.
Seasonal roles are among the hardest to fill. Short duration, variable hours, and physically demanding work make them unattractive to domestic workers who prioritize year-round stability. A 90-day hospitality position or a summer landscaping contract can't compete with permanent employment for most local applicants.
The result is a widening gap between what your operation requires and what your local workforce can provide. Businesses respond by scaling back services, burning out existing staff, or quietly accepting a degraded customer experience.
This is a planning and strategy problem. And it has a solution.
The H-2B visa allows U.S. employers to bring in temporary, non-agricultural foreign workers for seasonal positions when qualified domestic workers aren't available to fill those roles.
That's it. No workaround. No gray area. It's a legitimate federal program built for seasonal employers.
Here's what it delivers in practice:
For operations that live or die by their peak season, these are not minor advantages. They are the difference between a summer that works and one that doesn't.
If your business runs on summer, the H-2B visa program was designed with you in mind.
The common thread: a defined seasonal peak, a need for dependable volume, and a local workforce that can't meet demand. The H-2B visa is built for exactly that operating model. Eligible roles must be temporary and tied to a seasonal need, but within that structure, the program offers genuine flexibility in the types of positions you can fill.
For employers who need dependable workers beyond the season, EB-3 Unskilled visas open a path to permanent staffing with the same rigor and legal footing.
The H-2B visa is not a last-minute fix. It requires lead time.
Employers who want workers onsite by Memorial Day weekend need to begin the process now. Filing windows exist. Government processing takes time. So does worker approval, visa issuance, and travel logistics. By the time everything clears, weeks have passed.
Missing the March window doesn't mean waiting a few extra days. It means starting summer short-staffed. Again.
March is the last responsible moment to evaluate whether H-2B fits your operation and begin moving forward. Urgency here isn't a scare tactic. It's a calendar reality.
Understanding the sequence helps you see why starting now matters. Here's how the path to a fully staffed summer unfolds.
March: Engage your H-2B visa partner and file. This is the action window. Your staffing partner works with you to document your workforce needs, complete required recruitment steps, and submit your petition. Government filing deadlines are fixed. Missing them pushes your start date into the season itself.
April: Processing and approvals. Federal agencies review and approve the petition. Workers receive their visa appointments and complete the consular process. This phase runs on government timelines, not yours, which is exactly why early filing creates breathing room.
Early to Mid-May: Travel and onboarding. Approved workers make travel arrangements and arrive at your location. You complete onboarding, orientation, and any site-specific training. With an experienced returning workforce, this phase moves quickly.
Memorial Day Weekend: Fully staffed and ready. Your seasonal operation opens at full capacity. Revenue is protected. Your team isn't stretched. Your guests get the experience you built your reputation on.
Each step depends on the one before it. Compressing the timeline doesn't speed things up. It creates risks.
If you're routinely understaffed every summer, you're not facing a hiring problem. You're facing a strategy gap, and the H-2B visa closes it.
Start by assessing your summer headcount:
Then connect with an experienced H-2B visa partner who can walk you through fit, feasibility, and timing.
The window is open. Contact Vanteo today and let's start building your solid seasonal staff for this summer.
About Vanteo
Vanteo serves as the parent company for a comprehensive family of brands specializing in workforce solutions, cultural exchange programs, and process management, each benefiting from our integrated approach.
Seasonal Workers
Arkansas Global Connect (AGC) serves as our H-2A and H-2B seasonal workforce specialist, providing expertise in agricultural and non-agricultural temporary worker programs. AGC is Clearview Certified for ethical recruitment and manages the seasonal talent pipeline for industries including agriculture, hospitality, landscaping, and manufacturing.
Vanteo is not a law firm, and this information should not be considered legal advice. Participation in U.S. visa programs is subject to eligibility, regulatory requirements, and government approval. Past performance does not guarantee future outcomes.