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H-1B reset: Students, entry-level talent may be the hardest hit
Business Standard
|December 25, 2025
The year 2025 is set to mark a turning point in the United States’ immigration regime, with the random H-1B visa lottery system, used for over three decades, giving way to a new weighted selection framework.
Adding to the shift, a US federal judge has upheld President Donald Trump’s proposal to impose a $100,000 fee on new H-1B visa applications. Together, these changes have injected fresh uncertainty into the global talent pipeline, particularly for international students and entry-level professionals, as employers recalibrate hiring strategies around wage thresholds and local talent availability.
Industry body Nasscom in a statement said the recent changes with regards to the wage-weighted selection mechanism for H-1B visas represents a significant departure from the longstanding neutral lottery system, and raises important legal, economic and operational concerns. "A sudden shift to a wage-weighted model would introduce uncertainty, increase compliance complexity, and disrupt long-established workforce planning, particularly for smaller and mid-sized firms that align recruitment with academic calendars, client delivery schedules, and product release cycles," said Nasscom.
The new system, according to experts, is likely to tilt early-career hiring in favour of domestic candidates. While this could benefit large technology companies with deeper pockets, smaller firms and startups that rely on global talent may face greater pressure.
Dit verhaal komt uit de December 25, 2025-editie van Business Standard.
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