FY2027 H-1B Visa Cap Reached; Filing for Selected Applicants Opens

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has received enough registrations to meet the fiscal year 2027 H-1B visa cap. Selected registrants can now file their petitions starting April 1, 2026, using a newly updated form. The process includes strict compliance checks and, for some petitions filed after September 2025, a potential additional fee of $100,000. USCIS has also implemented a new selection system that favors higher-skilled, higher-paid applicants.

Key Points: FY2027 H-1B Visa Cap Met, Filing Window Opens

  • Cap for FY2027 H-1B visas already met
  • Filing for selected registrations opens April 1, 2026
  • New $100,000 fee may apply for some petitions
  • New weighted selection system prioritizes higher-wage roles
3 min read

US Citizenship and Immigration Services hits FY2027 H-1B visa cap; filing opens today

USCIS announces the FY2027 H-1B visa cap is met. Selected applicants can now file petitions with new rules, forms, and a potential $100,000 fee.

"selected enough beneficiaries with properly submitted registrations to reach the H-1B cap - USCIS"

Washington, April 1

The US Citizenship and Immigration Services said that it has received enough electronic registrations to meet the fiscal year 2027 H-1B visa cap, including the advanced degree exemption, triggering the next phase of filings starting April 1.

The agency confirmed it has "selected enough beneficiaries with properly submitted registrations to reach the H-1B cap" and has notified petitioners whose beneficiaries were chosen. Only those with selected registrations are eligible to file H-1B cap-subject petitions for FY 2027.

Registrants can check their status through their online USCIS accounts, the agency said.

Petitions for selected beneficiaries may be filed beginning April 1, 2026. USCIS said the filing window will be at least 90 days, and petitions must include a copy of the relevant selection notice. Filings must be made at the correct location or online through the agency's portal.

The agency also introduced a compliance requirement tied to documentation. Each petition must match the identifying and position details submitted during registration. Petitioners must submit evidence of the beneficiary's valid passport or travel document used at registration, along with proof supporting the wage level declared.

USCIS said that from April 1, it will only accept the new edition of Form I-129 (dated 02/27/26) for all FY 2027 H-1B filings.

The announcement comes with an additional financial condition tied to a presidential proclamation. Certain H-1B petitions filed on or after September 21, 2025, must include an additional $100,000 payment as a condition of eligibility, the agency said.

USCIS stressed that selection in the registration process does not guarantee approval. Petitioners must still establish eligibility and submit all required evidence under Form I-129 instructions.

For 2027, USCIS has implemented a new weighted selection system according to which the system prioritises higher-skilled and higher-paid applicants based on Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) wage levels.

Congress has set the annual H-1B cap at 65,000 visas, with up to 6,800 reserved for the H-1B1 programme under US trade agreements with Chile and Singapore. An additional 20,000 visas are available for applicants with advanced degrees from US institutions.

Certain categories remain exempt from the cap. These include petitions filed by US higher education institutions and workers employed in Guam and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, provided filings are made before December 31, 2029.

The H-1B visa programme is widely used by US companies to hire foreign workers in specialised occupations, particularly in technology, engineering and research roles. Indian nationals account for a significant share of H-1B recipients each year.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
$100,000 additional payment from Sept 2025? That's insane! This will completely shut out startups and smaller companies from sponsoring talent. It feels like the door is being deliberately closed.
A
Aman W
My registration got selected! 🙏 Now the real paperwork battle begins. The compliance details are nerve-wracking—everything must match exactly. Fingers crossed for approval.
S
Sarah B
As someone who works in US immigration law, I appreciate the clarity from USCIS on the new Form I-129 and the 90-day window. The weighted selection is a significant policy shift that aims to prioritize specialized skills.
V
Vikram M
This annual lottery anxiety is too much. Every April, thousands of skilled Indian professionals are left in limbo. Maybe it's time for our own tech ecosystem to grow so we don't have to rely on this unpredictable system.
K
Karthik V
The cap is still only 65,000? With the demand from global tech, this number feels archaic. It doesn't reflect the actual need for skilled workers in the US economy. The process needs a fundamental rethink.

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