President Donald Trump’s latest immigration move has jolted the tech industry and sparked panic among thousands of skilled foreign workers. On Friday, Trump signed an executive order introducing a $100,000 application fee for new H-1B visas, marking a dramatic increase—up to 50 times higher than the current cost.
The announcement sent shockwaves through Silicon Valley. Companies advised employees not to leave the country. Immigration lawyers scrambled to interpret the executive order. International workers rushed to secure return flights, fearing they’d be locked out.
By Saturday, the White House sought to clarify the chaos, stating that the $100,000 fee would apply only to first-time applicants, and only as a one-time cost. But even with that update, the damage may already be done. The policy, if enforced, could all but freeze the H-1B pipeline that has long fueled U.S. innovation and helped countless Indians pursue the American dream.
Over the past three decades, the H-1B visa has been a lifeline for Indian professionals, transforming small-town engineers into global citizens. It boosted India’s middle class and supported industries ranging from aviation to luxury real estate.
For the U.S., the H-1B program meant more than just imported talent. It filled critical roles in tech firms, hospitals, universities, and startups. Indian immigrants now lead companies like Google, Microsoft, and IBM. In healthcare, they’re even more vital: Indian doctors account for roughly 6% of all U.S. physicians and 22% of all international medical graduates.
Indians dominate the H-1B system, receiving more than 70% of new visas in recent years. In tech roles, that figure climbs even higher—over 80% of H-1Bs for computer-related jobs have gone to Indian nationals.
But the new $100,000 fee could make hiring foreign talent economically unviable. In 2023, the median salary for new H-1B recipients was $94,000—less than the fee itself. That makes the program prohibitively expensive for both applicants and employers.
While the policy may aim to “protect American jobs,” critics warn it could drive talent elsewhere—particularly to Canada or Europe—and ultimately hurt U.S. competitiveness more than it impacts India.