Big Tech rattled by Trump's H-IB fees
Los Angeles Times
|September 23, 2025
Companies will have to cough up $100,000 for every skilled foreign worker visa.
PRESIDENT TRUMP speaks before signing an executive order at the White House on Friday introducing the new H-1B visa fees.
(ANDREW HARNIK Getty Images)
President Trump’s new sky-high visa fees have shaken Silicon Valley's tech giants as they contemplate a surge in the cost of hiring global talent and a new tactic the White House can use to keep Silicon Valley in line.
The tech industry was already navigating an economy with higher and unpredictable tariffs, when last week the Trump administration threw another curveball aimed directly at its bottom line: a $100,000 fee for the visas used to hire certain skilled foreign workers. The industry relies heavily on the H-1B visa program to bring in a wide range of engineers, coders and other top talent to the United States.
The rollout has sparked confusion among businesses, immigration lawyers and current H-1B visa holders.
Over the weekend, the Trump administration clarified that the new fee will apply to new visas, isn’t annual and doesn’t prevent current H-1B visa holders from traveling in and outside of the country. Companies would have to pay the fee with any new H-1B visa petitions submitted after a specific time on Sunday, the White House said.
On Monday, the Trump administration also clarified that certain professions, such as doctors, may be exempt from the fee. Some observers are concerned that a selective application of the fee could be a way the White House can reward its friends and punish its detractors.
Meta, Apple, Google, Amazon and Microsoft have been strengthening their ties with the Trump administration by committing to invest hundreds of billions of dollars in the United States.
Still, immigration has long been a contentious issue between the Trump administration and tech executives, some of whom were on a H-1B visa before they co-founded or led some of the world’s largest tech firms.
This story is from the September 23, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
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