VisaTracker

Updated May 2025 · USCIS quarterly data (2023)

Country Comparison · 2023

Brazil vs Jamaica

Brazil had 24K immigration applications (rank #8) compared to Jamaica with 16K (rank #11). Brazil has a 78% approval rate while Jamaica has 75%. Brazil sends about 1.5x more applications than Jamaica (24K versus 16K). Both countries sit in the medium volume tier, so the gap is meaningful but does not put them in different leagues of the U.S. immigration pipeline.

Verdict

Brazil had 24K immigration applications (rank #8) compared to Jamaica with 16K (rank #11). Brazil has a 78% approval rate while Jamaica has 75%.

Comparing Brazil and Jamaica on USCIS immigration data requires looking at three things: application volume, approval rate, and the mix of visa categories that applicants from each country tend to use. The per-country pages cover each axis in detail; the comparison below summarizes the highest-impact differences.

Country-specific quota dynamics, particularly for family-based and employment-based green cards, can produce very different actual timelines from the headline USCIS processing times. The State Department Visa Bulletin governs when an applicant from a backlogged country can move to the next stage; the headline USCIS processing-time data does not capture that priority-date wait.

Side-by-Side Snapshot

MetricBrazilJamaica
Total Applications24K16K
Approval Rate78%75%
Country Rank#8#11
Visa Categories55

How Brazil and Jamaica Compare on Volume

Brazil sends about 1.5x more applications than Jamaica (24K versus 16K). Both countries sit in the medium volume tier, so the gap is meaningful but does not put them in different leagues of the U.S. immigration pipeline.

Both countries sit close together in the overall U.S. application ranking — Brazil at #8 and Jamaica at #11 of 198 tracked countries — meaning they occupy comparable positions in the broader immigration pipeline. For broader context on long-run migration patterns by origin country, the DHS Yearbook of Immigration Statistics publishes annual flow data going back decades, and the U.S. Department of State publishes the monthly Visa Bulletin that governs visa availability under the per-country numerical caps in the Immigration and Nationality Act.

How They Compare on Approval Rate

Brazil has a moderately higher approval rate at 78% versus Jamaica at 75% — a 3-point spread. Differences this size usually reflect the visa-type mix: countries whose filings concentrate in higher-approval categories like family-sponsored petitions tend to score better than countries weighted toward lower-approval employment-based or asylum categories.

Approval rates are computed by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) as approved cases divided by completed cases, excluding still-pending applications. Cross-country gaps usually trace to one of three factors: the visa-type mix (family-sponsored petitions approve at higher rates than employment-based or humanitarian filings), documentation patterns common to filings from a given origin, or eligibility-criteria gaps surfaced during background checks. None of these are policy choices specific to a country — USCIS adjudication standards are uniform across origins.

Top Visa Types

Both countries' largest visa category is Family Spouse, accounting for 7.7K Brazil filings and 6.4K Jamaica filings. Shared dominant categories usually reflect a common driver — most often family reunification, employment-based migration in shared labor markets, or temporary worker programs that span both origins.

Brazil

Family Spouse7.7K
Employment 2nd Pref4.6K
Employment 3rd Pref3.4K
Employment 1st Pref2.6K
Family Parents2.0K

Jamaica

Family Spouse6.4K
Family Children2.8K
Family Parents2.3K
Family 2nd Pref1.6K
Family 1st Pref1.4K

How This Comparison Is Calculated

Application counts are aggregated from USCIS quarterly performance disclosures for fiscal year 2023, summing across all visa categories filed by beneficiaries from each country. Approval rate is computed as approved cases divided by completed cases (approvals plus denials), excluding still-pending applications. Country rank orders all 198 tracked sending countries by total applications, with #1 being the highest-volume origin. The DHS Yearbook of Immigration Statistics provides cross-checks against historical baselines. Read the full VisaTracker methodology for definitions, edge cases, and refresh cadence.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does Brazil have more applications than Jamaica?

Brazil sends about 1.5x more applications than Jamaica (24K versus 16K). Both countries sit in the medium volume tier, so the gap is meaningful but does not put them in different leagues of the U.S. immigration pipeline. Differences this size usually reflect population, diaspora networks, and historical migration patterns rather than any policy distinction in how the two countries are treated. The U.S. State Department and DHS Yearbook of Immigration Statistics publish historical context on the long-run drivers of country-by-country volume.

Why are approval rates different between Brazil and Jamaica?

Brazil has a moderately higher approval rate at 78% versus Jamaica at 75% — a 3-point spread. Differences this size usually reflect the visa-type mix: countries whose filings concentrate in higher-approval categories like family-sponsored petitions tend to score better than countries weighted toward lower-approval employment-based or asylum categories. The composition of visa-type filings is the largest single driver: countries weighted toward family-sponsored or diversity-visa categories typically post higher approval rates than countries weighted toward employment-based, asylum, or refugee filings, where eligibility analysis is heavier.

What types of visas dominate Brazil and Jamaica filings?

Both countries' largest visa category is Family Spouse, accounting for 7.7K Brazil filings and 6.4K Jamaica filings. Shared dominant categories usually reflect a common driver — most often family reunification, employment-based migration in shared labor markets, or temporary worker programs that span both origins. Reviewing each country's full visa-type distribution on its country profile gives a clearer picture of the underlying migration story.

Where does this comparison data come from?

Application counts and approval rates come from USCIS quarterly disclosure data, supplemented by the DHS Yearbook of Immigration Statistics published by the Office of Homeland Security Statistics. Both are public-domain U.S. government sources. This comparison aggregates filings by beneficiary country of birth or country of chargeability as reported in those datasets.

Is this comparison giving immigration advice?

No. This is general data analysis of public USCIS records, not legal advice. The comparison does not reflect individual case factors like beneficiary qualifications, priority dates, country-cap effects under the Immigration and Nationality Act, or the practical wait times specific to a particular visa category. For guidance on a specific case, consult an immigration attorney or an accredited representative recognized by the U.S. Department of Justice.

Explore More

Brazil profile|Jamaica profile|All country rankings|Methodology

Sources: U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) quarterly performance data for fiscal year 2023; DHS Office of Homeland Security Statistics, Yearbook of Immigration Statistics; U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Consular Affairs. All inputs are public-domain U.S. government data.

Cite as: "VisaTracker, Brazil vs Jamaica comparison, May 2025. Data: USCIS quarterly performance reports, fiscal year 2023."