For years, the H-1B visa symbolised possibility. Skilled professionals applied with hope. Employers registered their names and waited. A computer-generated lottery often decides life-altering outcomes. Talent and experience mattered, but chance mattered more.That foundation is now being dismantled. The United States is redesigning the H-1B programme to reflect a different priority. Wages will matter more than volume. Seniority will matter more than entry-level promise. For professionals planning a future in the US, this shift is not procedural. It is structural.
A system reset by design
The US Department of Homeland Security has announced a major overhaul of the H-1B visa programme. The random lottery system will be replaced. A wage-weighted selection model will take its place.Under the new framework, higher salaries will increase the probability of selection. Lower wage offers will carry less weight. The stated aim is to protect American wages, working conditions, and job opportunities.The change follows President Donald Trump’s proposal to impose a $100,000 entry fee on new H-1B applications. Taken together, the measures mark a sharp turn in immigration policy. The H-1B is being repositioned as a high-value visa.
What the $100,000 H-1B fee really means
The H-1B visa allows US employers to hire foreign professionals in specialised roles. Technology firms are the largest users. Healthcare and education also depend on the programme.Until now, total H-1B fees ranged between $2,000 and $5,000. The proposed $100,000 fee changes the cost structure entirely. Hiring a foreign professional will become a high-stakes investment.Employers will be cautious. Entry-level hiring will slow. Senior roles will dominate sponsorship decisions.
How the new selection model will work
The annual H-1B cap remains unchanged. There are 85,000 visas each year. This includes 65,000 under the regular cap and 20,000 for advanced degree holders. Demand continues to exceed supply. What changes is the method of selection.Under the new rule, visas will no longer be assigned by chance. Registrations will be ranked using wage levels set by the US Department of Labour.Higher wages will improve selection odds. Lower wages will reduce them. The rule takes effect on February 27, 2026. It will apply to the FY 2027 H-1B registration season.
Why the lottery was abandoned
US Citizenship and Immigration Services has defended the reform. The agency says the lottery system invited misuse. Some employers allegedly flooded the system with low-wage applications.USCIS says this practice harmed American workers. It claims wages were suppressed. It also says the programme drifted from its original purpose.Officials argue the wage-based model restores intent. It prioritises skill and experience. It discourages low-cost labour strategies.
A wider immigration crackdown
The H-1B changes are part of a broader tightening of immigration controls. From December 15, enhanced screening began for H-1B and H-4 applicants. Social media checks are now routine. Vetting has intensified.Visa interviews across India have been delayed. Many appointments have been pushed back by months. Several applicants who travelled for stamping remain stranded.The signal is clear. Entry into the US workforce will face closer scrutiny.
Pressure on Indian IT companies
Indian IT firms are expected to feel the impact. Companies such as Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys, and Cognizant rely heavily on H-1B visas.A Bloomberg News analysis suggests staffing-led firms are most exposed. These companies place professionals at US client sites. Higher fees and wage thresholds challenge this model.This year, Amazon received the highest number of H-1B approvals. It crossed 10,000 visas. TCS, Microsoft, Apple, and Google followed. California continues to host the largest H-1B workforce.
What this means for Indian professionals
Indian nationals dominate the H-1B pipeline. In the fiscal year ending September 2024, 57 percent of approvals went to Indians, according to USCIS data. That equals 80,449 of 1.41 lakh visas. The new system reshapes internal competition. Not all applicants face the same odds.Analysis by the National Foundation for American Policy shows a clear divide. Selection chances rise by 107 percent for Level IV wage earners. They fall by 48 percent for Level I workers.Early-career professionals face the greatest risk. Recent US graduates are vulnerable. Many of them are Indian students.
Who gains and who loses
Senior professionals gain ground. Higher salaries improve visibility. Experience becomes decisive. Younger professionals lose momentum. Lower wage offers weaken their chances. Sponsorship becomes harder to justify. For employers, the decision becomes strategic. For professionals, the stakes become personal.
The large economic question
Supporters say the reform protects American workers. They argue it restores discipline to the system. They believe it rewards genuine specialisation.Critics warn of unintended consequences. They cite shortages in healthcare and education. They fear innovation may slow. They also warn that work may move offshore.One reality is already clear. The H-1B is no longer a matter of luck. It is a measure of value. For professionals, preparation now matters more than chance.

