New York/Washington, Sep 20 (PTI) The H-1B visa fee of USD 100,000 would apply only to new applicants, a White House official clarified on Saturday.
The clarification came a day after President Donald Trump signed a proclamation raising the fee on the visas used by companies to hire workers from overseas, including from India, to live and work in the US.
"The H-1B fee is likely to face legal challenges. But if it survives, companies that hire skilled international workers would have to pay USD 100,000 each year for any employee working on the visa, for up to six years," the White House official was quoted as saying by the New York Times.
"The fee applies only to new applicants," the official added.
Trump's new USD 100,000 fee for high-skill visa holders only applies to new applicants — not current visa holders who may be travelling outside the US — according to a US official, granted anonymity to speak about the policy.
The US official said in a Politico report that current H-1B visa holders “do not need to be rushing back before Sunday”.
According to sources, the proclamation does not apply to those who hold such a visa, and it also "does not impact the ability of any current visa holder to travel to and from the US".
They said the proclamation applies only to future applicants who will be selected in the February lottery, who are currently outside the US. The new rule does not apply to those H-1B visa holders who participated in the 2025 lottery, they added.
In a sudden move that will hugely impact skilled Indian professionals in the US, Trump ordered a steep hike in the annual H-1B non-immigrant visa fee to USD 100,000.
As the Presidential proclamation that takes effect at 12.01 am EDT on September 21 sparked panic and outcry, immigration attorneys and companies asked the H-1B visa holders or their family members currently outside America for work or vacation to return within the next 24 hours or risk being stranded and denied entry into the US.
Many Indians in the US on H-1B visas cancelled their plans to travel to India hours after Trump's order.
While many cancelled plans to travel at the last minute while waiting to board flights to India, several others already in India are scrambling to return amid a lack of clarity, weeks before Indian professionals and their families travel to India for Diwali and other year-end holidays.
Individuals on H-1B visas, as well as those in the US tracking the news, spoke to PTI on condition of anonymity and stressed that the underlying emotion among H-1B visa holders and their families right now is that of “a crazy sense of panic” and “worry.” Currently, the H-1B visa fee that companies pay to sponsor H-1B applicants ranges from about USD 2,000 to USD 5,000, depending on employer size and other costs.
The H-1B visas, which are very popular among Indian tech professionals, are valid for three years and can be renewed for another three years. PTI YAS NSD NSD