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CPT and OPT work authorization guide for Sri Lankan STEM students in 2026

Understanding work authorization options while studying in the United States can feel overwhelming for Sri Lankan students, especially when navigating acronyms like CPT and OPT that determine when, where, and how long you can work legally. Curricular Practical Training (CPT) and Optional Practical Training (OPT) represent your primary pathways to gain valuable work experience during and after your studies, transforming your expensive U.S. education investment of US$50,000–100,000 (LKR 15.4–30.8 million at LKR 308/USD) into tangible career outcomes through hands-on professional experience. However, using these authorizations correctly requires understanding specific rules, timing requirements, and compliance obligations—mistakes can result in losing work authorization, being required to leave the United States, or facing difficulties with future visa applications.

For Sri Lankan STEM students specifically, these work authorization programs carry enormous financial significance because the 24-month STEM OPT extension enables you to work up to 36 months total (3 years) after graduation compared to just 12 months for non-STEM degrees—representing a difference of US$170,000–180,000 additional earnings (LKR 52.36–55.44 million) that makes completing your education loans feasible, enables substantial family remittances, and allows accumulation of savings before either returning to Sri Lanka or pursuing longer-term U.S. employment through H-1B sponsorship. But accessing this extended work authorization requires careful planning throughout your program, proper verification of your degree’s STEM designation, strategic use of CPT during studies to avoid inadvertently eliminating OPT eligibility, timely applications with correct documentation, and strict compliance with all program requirements.

This practical guide explains what CPT and OPT programs are and how they differ, when and how Sri Lankan students become eligible for each authorization type, what the application processes involve and critical deadlines you cannot miss, how STEM degree holders qualify for extended 24-month OPT beyond standard 12 months, what common violations jeopardize your work authorization and how to avoid them, and how to strategically plan your work authorization timeline from first semester through post-graduation employment for maximum career and financial benefit.

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Understanding Curricular Practical Training (CPT): Working while you study

Curricular Practical Training allows you to work in positions directly related to your field of study while you’re still enrolled in your program, integrating practical experience with your academic curriculum. This work authorization isn’t automatic—it must be “an integral part of an established curriculum” under U.S. government guidelines, typically meaning the work is either required by your program or earns degree credit toward your degree completion.

What qualifies as CPT-eligible employment

The connection between your coursework and job responsibilities needs to be clear and demonstrable to your university’s Designated School Official (DSO) who approves CPT requests. For Sri Lankan students in computer science, engineering, data science, or other technical fields, CPT typically covers:

  • Summer internships at technology companies, engineering firms, research institutions, or startups where you apply skills learned in coursework to real-world projects—these are the most common CPT usage for STEM students, providing intensive professional experience during breaks without conflicting with classes.
  • Co-op programs built into your degree requirements where you alternate academic terms with full-time work terms, common in engineering programs—some universities structure entire curricula around co-op experiences making CPT authorization straightforward.
  • Practicum or fieldwork requirements that your program mandates for degree completion, often found in specialized master’s programs requiring applied projects—your program handbook will specify whether practicum is required making CPT approval easier.
  • Research positions at companies or external labs that earn academic credit and directly relate to your thesis or capstone project—particularly relevant for research-focused graduate students in sciences or engineering.

What doesn’t qualify: General part-time jobs unrelated to your major (retail, food service, general labor), positions that don’t earn credit or aren’t required by program, work that happens to use some skills from your studies but isn’t directly in your field, or any employment before completing one full academic year (with narrow exceptions for programs requiring immediate practical training).

CPT eligibility requirements you must meet

Before applying for CPT authorization, verify you meet these baseline requirements:

  • Time requirement: Generally you must complete one full academic year (two semesters or three quarters) in valid F-1 status before CPT eligibility begins. Graduate students whose programs require immediate practical training as integral curricular component may be exempt from this one-year requirement—check your program handbook and consult your DSO if your program has built-in first-semester practicum or co-op requirements.
  • Enrollment requirement: You must be currently enrolled and in valid F-1 status, not on leave or having completed your program. CPT is for currently enrolled students, not graduates.
  • Curriculum integration: The proposed employment must be an integral part of your established curriculum—either required for degree, earning academic credit (typically 1–3 credits), or approved by academic department as essential experience. Your academic advisor or program coordinator must verify this curricular integration.
  • Field relation: Job duties must directly relate to your major field of study. A computer science major working as a software engineering intern clearly relates; a computer science major working as a marketing coordinator probably doesn’t relate sufficiently even if marketing uses technology. When in doubt, ask your DSO—they make the final determination.

Part-time versus full-time CPT: Critical distinction

Part-time CPT means working 20 hours or fewer per week during regular academic terms. This option allows you to gain practical experience while maintaining full-time enrollment status required for F-1 visa compliance. Many Sri Lankan students use part-time CPT for internships running concurrent with classes—working afternoons, evenings, or weekends around academic schedules, particularly common in the second year of two-year master’s programs when coursework becomes lighter.

Important advantage: Part-time CPT has NO negative impact on post-graduation OPT eligibility regardless of how long you use it. You could theoretically use part-time CPT for an entire two-year program without reducing your OPT availability.

Full-time CPT means employment exceeding 20 hours per week, typically used during summer breaks, semester breaks, or for required co-op programs involving dedicated full-time work periods. Students commonly use full-time CPT for 10–12 week summer internships between first and second year of master’s programs, earning US$4,000–10,000 monthly (LKR 1.23–3.08 million) depending on field and company—substantial income helping offset living expenses.

Critical limitation: Using 12 months or more of FULL-TIME CPT makes you completely INELIGIBLE for any post-completion OPT later. This is not a pro-rated reduction—12+ months full-time CPT eliminates ALL OPT including the valuable 24-month STEM extension, costing you up to 36 months work authorization worth US$200,000+ (LKR 61.6M+) in lost earnings.

Strategic planning essential: Most Sri Lankan STEM students limit full-time CPT to one summer (approximately 3 months) or maximum two summers (approximately 6 months total) during two-year programs, staying well below the dangerous 12-month threshold while still gaining valuable internship experience. If your program requires a year-long co-op, verify carefully how this affects OPT eligibility.

How to apply for CPT authorization step-by-step

  • Step 1 – Secure job offer: Obtain written offer letter from employer specifying position title, detailed job duties (showing relationship to your field), start and end dates, work location, and whether position is part-time (≤20 hours) or full-time (>20 hours).
  • Step 2 – Verify curricular connection: Ensure you’re enrolled in a course providing academic credit for the internship, or obtain a letter from your academic advisor/program coordinator explaining how this work experience is required by or integral to your curriculum. Some universities have formal CPT courses you register for; others require advisor letters.
  • Step 3 – Meet with your DSO: Schedule an appointment with the Designated School Official at your university’s international student office, presenting your job offer letter and documentation of curricular integration. DSO will review whether the position qualifies under CPT regulations.
  • Step 4 – Receive updated I-20: If approved, DSO will issue a new I-20 Form with CPT authorization details printed on page 2, including employer name, work dates, and whether authorization is part-time or full-time. This updated I-20 serves as your work authorization—no separate card issued for CPT.
  • Step 5 – Begin employment ONLY after authorization: You cannot begin working until your I-20 reflects approved CPT authorization. Working even one day before authorization appears on I-20 constitutes unauthorized employment violating your F-1 status—don’t let eager employers pressure you to start before proper authorization.

Timeline: CPT approval typically takes 1–2 weeks once you submit a complete application to your DSO, though processing times vary by university especially during peak periods (late spring for summer internships). Start CPT application process at least 3–4 weeks before desired employment start date.

“The team helped at every stage of the application. That support helped me secure both my loan and my visa approval to fulfill my dream.”

— Chippon Barua, Hofstra University, Bangladesh

Understanding Optional Practical Training (OPT): Your primary post-graduation work authorization

Optional Practical Training allows you to work in your field of study after completing your degree program—this represents the most critical work authorization for Sri Lankan students because it enables you to translate your education investment into professional experience and earnings sufficient to repay education loans before returning home or transitioning to longer-term U.S. employment.

Standard 12-month OPT available to all degree completers

Every F-1 student who completes a degree program (associate, bachelor’s, master’s, or doctorate) is eligible for 12 months of OPT employment directly related to their field of study. Unlike CPT, OPT doesn’t require that employment be part of curriculum or earn academic credit—the only requirement is that your work directly relates to your major field as determined by your DSO.

What “directly related” means: A software engineering position for a computer science graduate clearly qualifies; a data analyst role for a statistics graduate qualifies; a business operations position for an MBA graduate qualifies; a project coordinator role at a construction company for a civil engineering graduate qualifies. An administrative assistant position for an engineering graduate probably doesn’t qualify. When evaluating the relationship, consider whether the position uses knowledge, skills, and training you gained through your degree program.

Employment flexibility: OPT employment can be with a single employer for the entire 12 months, multiple sequential employers, multiple concurrent part-time positions totaling at least 20 hours weekly, freelance or contract work in your field, or self-employment providing goods/services directly related to your field—much more flexible than CPT which requires specific employer authorization.

STEM OPT extension: The game-changer for technical degrees

Students completing degrees in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics) fields qualify for a 24-month OPT extension beyond the initial 12 months, providing total 36 months (3 years) post-graduation work authorization. This extended timeline is absolutely critical for Sri Lankan STEM students:

  • Financial impact: 36 months working at US$75,000–95,000 annually (LKR 23.1–29.26M) for STEM roles generates approximately US$191,000–214,000 net after taxes (LKR 58.83–65.91M) over three years, compared to just US$56,000–64,000 net (LKR 17.25–19.71M) with standard 12-month OPT—a difference of US$135,000–150,000 (LKR 41.58–46.2M) enabling complete loan repayment, substantial family remittances, and significant savings accumulation.
  • Career development: Three years professional experience positions you much more competitively whether returning to Sri Lanka (commanding 2–4x salary premium at companies like WSO2, Virtusa, IFS) or pursuing H-1B sponsorship for longer-term U.S. employment (multiple H-1B lottery opportunities if not selected first year).
  • Qualifying STEM degrees: Computer science and software engineering, electrical and electronics engineering, mechanical and aerospace engineering, chemical and biomedical engineering, civil engineering and construction management, mathematics and statistics, data science and analytics, information technology and cybersecurity, physics and chemistry, biological sciences, and various other technical fields on the official STEM Designated Degree Program List maintained by the Department of Homeland Security.

Critical verification: ALWAYS verify your specific program’s STEM designation BEFORE enrolling by checking university’s published STEM degree list, confirming CIP (Classification of Instructional Programs) code with the admissions office, and verifying that code appears on the DHS STEM list—some concentrations within the same department have STEM designation while others don’t, so verify your exact program not just the department generally.

STEM OPT extension requirements and application

To qualify for the 24-month STEM extension, you must meet these requirements:

  • Employment requirement: You must be employed or have a job offer from an employer enrolled in E-Verify (federal employment verification system)—not all employers use E-Verify, so verify employer eligibility before accepting offers if STEM extension is critical to your plans. Employer must employ you at least 20 hours weekly.
  • Training plan requirement: Employer must complete Form I-983 (Training Plan for STEM OPT Students) documenting your learning objectives, how the position provides continued practical training in your STEM field, and how the employer will provide mentorship and evaluation. This creates slight administrative burden for employers, so discuss STEM OPT requirements with hiring managers early in the interview process.
  • Application timing: Apply for STEM extension BEFORE your initial 12-month OPT expires—application window opens 90 days before current OPT end date and closes on that end date. Missing this deadline means losing STEM extension eligibility entirely, so mark calendar clearly and start application process at least 60–90 days before expiration.
  • Reporting requirements: During STEM extension, you must report employment information, address changes, and supervisor changes to your DSO every six months, and employer must complete evaluation reports documenting your practical training progress—more frequent reporting than standard OPT.

OPT application process and critical deadlines

OPT application goes to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), not just your university, making it more complex than CPT:

  • Step 1 – Request OPT recommendation (90 days before to 60 days after completion): Meet with your DSO requesting OPT recommendation. DSO will issue new I-20 with OPT recommendation if you’re eligible. You can apply earliest 90 days before program completion date and latest 60 days after—applying within this window is absolutely critical because applying too early or too late results in automatic denial.
  • Step 2 – Complete Form I-765: Fill out Application for Employment Authorization (Form I-765) selecting “post-completion OPT” category. Form is available on USCIS website and must be completed carefully—errors cause delays or denials.
  • Step 3 – Prepare supporting documents: Gather copy of I-20 with OPT recommendation, copy of I-94 arrival/departure record, copy of F-1 visa stamp in passport, copy of any prior EAD cards if you’ve had OPT before, passport-style photos (2 required), and filing fee payment (check or money order payable to “U.S. Department of Homeland Security”).
  • Step 4 – Mail complete application package: Send all materials to appropriate USCIS lockbox address (address depends on whether you’re filing from within U.S. or abroad—check current USCIS instructions). Use a trackable mailing service so you have proof of delivery.
  • Step 5 – Attend biometrics appointment if required: USCIS may schedule you for a biometrics appointment at an Application Support Center where they’ll take fingerprints and photos—attend on scheduled date with appointment notice and valid identification.
  • Step 6 – Receive Employment Authorization Document (EAD): If approved, USCIS will mail your EAD card (looks like a credit card with your photo, name, and work authorization dates) to the address on file—processing typically takes 3–5 months though times vary. You cannot work until you physically receive the EAD card even if the OPT start date has arrived.

Critical timing strategy: Apply for OPT as early as possible within the 90-day window (ideally 85–90 days before completion) maximizing processing time and minimizing gap between graduation and work authorization arrival. Many Sri Lankan students who wait until after graduation miss optimal timing and face frustrating months waiting for EAD while unable to accept job offers.

Unemployment limitations during OPT periods

Standard 12-month OPT: You may accumulate up to 90 days of unemployment during the 12-month period. Student and Exchange Visitor Information System (SEVIS) counts any day where you haven’t reported employer information to your DSO as an unemployed day.

STEM extension: You get an additional 60 days unemployment allowance during the 24-month STEM extension period (total 150 days across both OPT periods combined, not 150 days during STEM extension alone).

Why this matters: Exceeding unemployment limits results in automatic termination of work authorization and F-1 status requiring you to leave the United States immediately—no exceptions or appeals. Track your unemployment days carefully using the SEVIS portal or a spreadsheet tracking employment start/end dates.

Practical implications: You need to actively job search and maintain employment throughout OPT periods. Brief gaps between jobs are acceptable (quit one job on Friday, start new job following Monday = 2 days unemployment), but you cannot remain unemployed for extended periods hoping the perfect opportunity emerges. If laid off, you must secure new employment quickly or risk exceeding limits.

Approved unemployment uses: Time actively searching for employment (attending interviews, sending applications, networking) counts as unemployment but is permitted within the 90-day limit. Voluntary gaps for personal reasons (traveling back to Sri Lanka to visit family, taking break before new job) also count as unemployment days—don’t assume personal reasons exempt you from limits.

Strategic planning: Maximizing CPT and OPT for career success

Coordinating CPT and OPT for optimal outcomes

Most successful Sri Lankan STEM students follow this strategic timeline:

During studies (Years 1–2 of two-year master’s program):

  • First semester: Focus on academics, adjust to U.S. education system, no work authorization needed yet
  • Second semester: Begin networking, attend career fairs, apply for summer internships
  • Summer after Year 1: Use full-time CPT for summer internship (10–12 weeks = ~3 months, well below 12-month danger zone)
  • Year 2 Fall/Spring: Consider part-time CPT if internship converts to part-time position, or focus on academics while continuing job search for post-graduation

Post-graduation (months immediately after degree completion):

  • Apply for 12-month OPT 85–90 days before graduation (December/January for May graduates)
  • EAD card arrives around graduation (April/May)
  • Begin full-time employment immediately on OPT (May/June) and work Year 1 on standard OPT

STEM extension (for STEM degree holders):

  • Apply for 24-month STEM extension 90 days before initial OPT expires (February/March of following year)
  • Continue employment on STEM extension approval (May/June)
  • Work Years 2–3 on STEM extension: complete loan repayment, accumulate savings, gain experience

Building toward H-1B sponsorship if staying longer-term

For Sri Lankan students interested in longer-term U.S. employment beyond OPT, typical pathway flows: F-1 student status → 12-month OPT → 24-month STEM extension → H-1B work visa. Companies often hire OPT workers intending to sponsor H-1B if the employment relationship proves successful.

H-1B lottery timing: Standard H-1B petitions are filed in March/April for October start dates. If you’re on STEM OPT during H-1B registration period (March), your employer can register you for the lottery. If selected, you transition from OPT to H-1B status maintaining continuous work authorization.

Multiple opportunities: The STEM extension’s 24 additional months provides up to three chances to participate in the H-1B lottery if not selected on the first attempt (March of Year 2, March of Year 3, March of Year 4 if extension timing aligns), dramatically improving odds compared to students with only 12-month OPT who get a single lottery opportunity.

Returning to Sri Lanka: Leveraging U.S. experience

Even if planning to return to Sri Lanka after OPT, using the full 36-month STEM extension provides maximum career benefit:

  • Complete financial independence: Three years U.S. earnings enables you to repay education loans fully without burdening family, send remittances supporting parents or siblings, and return with substantial savings (US$50,000–80,000 = LKR 15.4–24.64M) providing a down payment for a house or seed capital for a business.
  • Premium compensation: Returning to Colombo with U.S. MBA or MS plus 3 years experience at American companies positions you for senior roles earning LKR 300,000–500,000 monthly (LKR 3.6–6M annually = US$11,700–19,500) versus LKR 100,000–150,000 monthly (LKR 1.2–1.8M annually = US$3,900–5,840) without international experience—2–3x premium over entire career substantially exceeds education costs.
  • Career advantages: Three years developing professional skills in U.S. business environment, exposure to enterprise-scale systems and processes unavailable in smaller Sri Lankan market, and international network potentially valuable for business development all create lasting career benefits regardless of whether you ultimately stay abroad or return home.

Common CPT and OPT violations to avoid

Working without authorization

Never work without proper authorization approved on your I-20 (for CPT) or EAD card (for OPT). Even one day of unauthorized employment violates F-1 status and can result in: immediate termination of student status; requirement to leave the United States within 15 days; ineligibility for future visa benefits; and difficulty obtaining future U.S. visas.

Common mistakes:

  • Starting CPT internship before DSO issues updated I-20 with authorization
  • Working while waiting for OPT EAD card to arrive (must wait for physical card)
  • Continuing employment after OPT expires while waiting for STEM extension approval (gap requires stop work)
  • Accepting cash payment for small projects thinking informal work doesn’t count (it does count)

Exceeding authorized work hours during CPT

If your CPT is authorized for part-time only (≤20 hours weekly), exceeding 20 hours violates authorization terms even if your employer requests more hours. If you need to work more hours, request new CPT authorization from your DSO for full-time before increasing hours.

Working in unrelated field

Both CPT and OPT require employment to directly relate to your major field of study. Taking a position outside your field—even if better paid or more convenient—violates work authorization terms. The DSO makes the determination of whether a position relates sufficiently, so when in doubt, consult your DSO before accepting an offer.

Failing to report required information

During OPT, you must report: all employment (start dates, employer details, supervisor information), address changes (within 10 days of moving), employment terminations, employer changes, and legal name changes. For STEM extension, reporting frequency increases to every six months. Failing to report results in SEVIS termination and loss of work authorization.

Traveling without proper documentation

If you travel internationally during CPT or OPT, you need: valid passport (at least 6 months remaining validity), valid F-1 visa stamp (or be prepared to apply for new visa at a U.S. consulate abroad), current I-20 signed by DSO within past 12 months for travel, employment verification letter from employer (for CPT), and valid EAD card (for OPT). Missing any required documents risks being denied re-entry to the United States. Many Sri Lankan students avoid international travel during OPT to minimize complications, but travel is permitted with proper documentation.

MPOWER Financing: Supporting your education and career journey

Successfully navigating CPT and OPT requires first completing a strong degree program, which for many talented Sri Lankan students requires overcoming financial barriers when traditional education loans demand property collateral worth 1.5–2x loan amount—a requirement excluding 40–50% of qualified families who rent in Colombo, face inheritance disputes on ancestral land, have already-mortgaged property, or have multiple children exhausting available collateral.

MPOWER Financing provides no-cosigner, no-collateral education loans (US$2,001–100,000 = LKR 616K–30.8M) specifically designed for international students based on merit evaluation considering academic credentials (GCE A-Levels, university GPA, standardized test scores), university quality and program reputation, and field of study and career prospects, rather than family property ownership. This merit-based approach recognizes that a strong engineering graduate from University of Colombo or Moratuwa admitted to a reputable U.S. STEM program has excellent career prospects justifying education investment regardless of parents’ current asset holdings.

USD denomination eliminates currency risk particularly important during OPT employment when you’re earning U.S. dollars and repaying your loan—unlike LKR loans requiring monthly international wire transfers with fees (US$25–45 = LKR 7,700–13,860) and exchange rate uncertainty, USD loans create perfect alignment where your OPT salary and loan payment are in the same currency enabling straightforward automatic deductions from a U.S. bank account.

Path2Success career services provide additional support critical during CPT and OPT transitions including job search database focusing on employers who hire F-1 students, resume optimization for U.S. business culture, interview preparation strategies, networking guidance, and work authorization timeline planning—resources typically worth US$2,500–5,000 (LKR 770K–1.54M) if purchased separately, provided at no additional cost to MPOWER borrowers.

Scholarship opportunities including Women in STEM, Global Citizen, MBA Scholarship, and Monthly Scholarships ranging from US$2,000–10,000 (LKR 616K–3.08M) reduce borrowing needs—every US$5,000 scholarship saves approximately US$7,500 total loan cost (LKR 2.31M) including interest over a 10-year repayment period, making scholarship applications worthwhile even if individual awards seem modest.

Currency conversions are approximate and based on an exchange rate of LKR 310 per US$1 as of January 2026. Actual rates may vary.

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Frequently Asked Questions


What is the single most dangerous CPT mistake that Sri Lankan STEM students must avoid, and why is it so catastrophic?

Using 12 or more months of cumulative full-time CPT (more than 20 hours per week) permanently eliminates all post-completion OPT eligibility — including the 24-month STEM extension — with no exceptions or appeals. This isn’t a pro-rated reduction: one day beyond the 12-month threshold costs you the entire OPT program, worth US$135,000–150,000 (LKR 41.58–46.2 million) in additional net earnings over the STEM extension period. The recommended strategy for a two-year master’s program is one full-time summer internship of 10–12 weeks (approximately 3 months), staying well below the threshold, while using unlimited part-time CPT of 20 hours or less per week during academic semesters with zero impact on OPT eligibility.

When exactly should Sri Lankan students apply for OPT, and what happens if they miss the application window?

The OPT application window opens exactly 90 days before your program completion date and closes 60 days after — applying outside this window results in automatic denial with no exceptions. The optimal strategy is submitting 85–90 days before graduation since USCIS processing takes 3–5 months, and you cannot begin working until the physical EAD card arrives even if your OPT start date has passed. A May graduate should apply in February; waiting until after graduation means facing months of unemployed status that count toward your 90-day unemployment limit, burning precious OPT days before you’ve even started working.

How does the 90-day unemployment limit work during OPT, and what counts as an “unemployed day” for Sri Lankan students?

SEVIS counts every day where you have not reported an active employer to your DSO as an unemployed day — including weekends, holidays, and days spent traveling back to Sri Lanka to visit family. The standard 12-month OPT allows a maximum of 90 cumulative unemployed days; the 24-month STEM extension adds 60 more days for a combined total of 150 days across both periods. Exceeding these limits results in automatic F-1 status termination and a requirement to leave the U.S. within 15 days — no appeals — which is why starting your job search 9–12 months before graduation and applying for OPT 90 days before completion are both essential for avoiding this outcome.

What are the specific STEM OPT extension requirements that Sri Lankan students must confirm before accepting a job offer?

The employer must be enrolled in E-Verify — the federal employment verification system — which not all companies use, making this a critical screening question to ask during interviews before accepting any offer if STEM extension is part of your financial plan. The employer must also complete Form I-983 (Training Plan for STEM OPT Students) documenting learning objectives, mentorship structure, and how the position continues your STEM practical training — a modest administrative task but one worth discussing with hiring managers early rather than surprising them after an offer. You must apply for the extension within the 90-day window before your initial 12-month OPT expires, and during the extension period you must report employment status, address changes, and supervisor changes to your DSO every six months.

What documents do Sri Lankan students need to re-enter the U.S. during CPT or OPT after traveling home to Colombo?

You need five documents readily accessible: a valid passport with at least six months remaining validity, a valid F-1 visa stamp in your passport (or willingness to apply for a new one at a U.S. consulate abroad if your current stamp has expired), a current I-20 signed by your DSO within the past 12 months for travel purposes, an employment verification letter from your employer if traveling during CPT, and your valid EAD card if traveling during OPT. Missing any of these items risks denial of re-entry with no immediate recourse — which is why many Sri Lankan students minimize international travel during OPT periods, though travel is permitted with complete documentation in hand.

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