Key Points

The White House has clarified that the new H-1B visa fee only applies to new petitions, not renewals. This one-time $100,000 fee will first be implemented in the next lottery cycle. The policy aims to discourage companies from overwhelming the system with multiple applications. President Trump stated this measure prioritizes hiring American workers while still allowing legitimate high-skilled immigration.

Key Points: White House Clarifies H-1B Visa Fee Only for New Petitions Not Renewals

  • New $100,000 fee targets companies spamming H-1B lottery system
  • Policy designed to protect American workers and raise wages
  • Fee applies starting next H-1B lottery cycle
  • Does not affect current visa holders or renewal applications
2 min read

H-1B Visa Fee only for new petitions, not renewals: White House (IANS Exclusive)

White House tells IANS the new $100,000 H-1B visa fee applies only to new petitions in the next lottery cycle, not renewals or current visa holders.

"This is a one-time fee that applies only to the petition. It ONLY applies to new visas, not renewals or current visa holders. - White House official"

Washington, Sep 20

A day after US President Donald Trump signed a proclamation to significantly curtail the H-1B visa programme, the White House issued a clarification to IANS on Saturday, saying that this is a “one-time fee” that applies only to new visas and not renewals or current visa holders.

“This is a one-time fee that applies only to the petition. It ONLY applies to new visas, not renewals or current visa holders. It will first apply in the next upcoming lottery cycle,” a White House official told IANS.

A White House Spokesperson also clarified to IANS that the policy would “discourage companies from spamming the system.”

“President Trump promised to put American workers first, and this common-sense action does just that by discouraging companies from spamming the system and driving down wages. It also gives certainty to American businesses who actually want to bring high-skilled workers to our great country but have been trampled on by abuses of the system,” said Taylor Rogers, the White House Spokeswoman.

Signing the proclamation at the White House on Friday, Trump said the “incentive is to hire American workers.”

“We need workers. We need great workers, and this pretty much ensures that,” Trump added.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick also defended the move, saying the policy would discourage companies from hiring foreign workers.

“So the whole idea is, no more will these big tech companies or other big companies train foreign workers. They have to pay the government $100,000, then they have to pay the employee. So, it's just not economic. You're going to train somebody. You're going to train one of the recent graduates from one of the great universities across our land, train Americans. Stop bringing in people to take our jobs. That's the policy here. $100,000 a year for H-1B visas,” he explained.

According to Pew Research data, India-born workers received around 73 per cent of the total approved H1-B visas in 2023, followed by China with 12 per cent, primarily due to a huge backlog in approvals and high number of skilled immigrants from India.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Rohit P
As someone who went through the H-1B lottery twice, I can say the system definitely needs reform. But $100k per visa? That's just pricing out smaller companies who genuinely need specialized talent. Big tech will still afford it while startups suffer.
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Arjun K
The timing couldn't be worse for fresh graduates from IITs and other Indian universities. Many have job offers contingent on H-1B. This basically shuts the door for new talent. Very disappointing for aspiring tech professionals. 🇮🇳
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Sarah B
While I understand protecting American jobs, the reality is that many tech companies rely on specialized skills that aren't always available locally. This seems like an extreme measure that might hurt innovation in the long run.
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Vikram M
️ 73% of H-1Bs going to Indians shows how much our talent is valued globally. Instead of feeling targeted, we should focus on creating more opportunities within India. Maybe this push will accelerate our own tech ecosystem development!
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Michael C
The "spamming the system" argument makes sense. I've heard of companies filing multiple applications for the same candidate. But the fee amount seems arbitrary and excessive rather than a thoughtful solution.
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Ananya R
This is going to push more companies to

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