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Trump imposes $100,000 fee for H-1B visas
Los Angeles Times
|September 21, 2025
Rules favoring wealthiest foreign workers are a stark shift for U.S.
MOVIEGOERS attend a Vidiots screening at the Eagle Theater last week. The nonprofit video store relaunched with a cinema in 2023.
President Trump has taken his most extensive step yet toward overhauling the U.S. legal migration system, with a pair of proclamations that explicitly favor the wealthiest of the world’s prospective expat workers.
Trump on Friday imposed a $100,000 application fee on the widely used H-1B visa program, a move that would drastically increase the cost of visas heavily coveted by some of America’s largest companies — including in the Silicon Valley — seeking to bring in skilled workers from abroad.
California has the highest number of H-1B workers, with Apple and Google among the leading recipients in the country. Amazon is by far the top recipient.
The president also unveiled a “Trump Gold Card” visa program — under which, for the price of $1 million, immigrants could get U.S. residency. Businesses could buy residency permits for $2 million per employee, while a new “platinum” card set to be issued soon would cost $5 million and allow the holder to come to the U.S. for up to 270 days a year without being subject to U.S. taxes on non-U.S. income.
The restrictions and fees go into effect Sunday.
It all amounts to a plan for a new gilded age of immigration to America, where those with the resources to invest are welcomed along with their wallets — while at the same time new barriers the box office, even after the pandemic, which led to the demise of some well-known cinemas.
GUESTS make their way to the Eagle Theater's beer and wine bar before taking their seats for a screening.The famed Cinerama Dome and adjoining former ArcLight theater on Sunset Boulevard have still not reopened, despite popular demand.
This story is from the September 21, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
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