New $100,000 H-1B Visa Fee Disrupts Indian IT Operations
By Reuters | 20 Sep, 2025
India's IT outsourcing industry says Trump's sudden imposition of an additional $100,000 visa fee for skilled foreign professionals is creating business uncertainty and disruptions across the US tech industry.
A man walks during the Nasscom Technology and Leadership Forum 2025 in Mumbai, India February 25, 2025. REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas/File Photo
Imposing a new $100,000 annual fee on H-1B visa applications could disrupt the global operations of Indian technology services companies that deploy skilled professionals to the United States, India’s IT industry body Nasscom said on Saturday.
The White House announced the new fee on Friday, prompting some major U.S. tech firms to advise visa holders to either remain in the country or return there quickly. The new fee marks Washington’s most high-profile attempt to overhaul the country's temporary employment visa system.
Nasscom, representing India’s $283 billion IT and business process outsourcing industry, said the abrupt rollout of the policy would impact Indian nationals and disrupt continuity of ongoing onshore projects for the country’s technology services firms.
The industry body said the one-day deadline for the new policy created "considerable uncertainty for businesses, professionals, and students across the world."
It also said the new policy could have "ripple effects" on the U.S. innovation ecosystem and on global job markets, pointing out that for companies, "additional cost will require adjustments".
Microsoft, JPMorgan and Amazon responded to the announcement by advising employees holding H-1B visas to remain in the United States, according to internal emails reviewed by Reuters.
Since taking office in January, President Donald Trump has launched a broad crackdown on immigration, including efforts to limit certain forms of legal immigration.
(Writing by Sarita Chaganti Singh; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
Articles
- Japan Sets February Record with 3.46 Million Foreign Visitors
- Microsoft Considers Suit Against Partner OpenAI Over $50-Billion Cloud Deal
- Samsung Union Approves Strike Plan to Worsen Global Memory Chip Shortage
- Japan Pressured to Violate Pacifist Constitution, Send Escort Ships
- Chinese Students Told to Fall in Love As Beijing Targets Births, Consumption
- Japan Exports Grew for 6th Straight Month on Strong Asia Demand
- China Grants Approval to Purchase Nvidia H200 GPUs
- Powerful New AI Model Appears on OpenRouter, DeepSeek Suspected
- Nvidia Sees $1 Trillion Chip Sales in 2027, Excluding Restart of H200 GPUs for China
- US Travel Demand Robust Despite Higher Fares on Rising Fuel Costs
