New US H-1B visa fee could disrupt Indian IT operations, says industry body


FILE PHOTO: A man walks during the Nasscom Technology and Leadership Forum 2025 in Mumbai, India February 25, 2025. REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas/File Photo

NEW DELHI (Reuters) -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)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

French regulator says some crypto firms unresponsive as EU licence deadline approaches
Meta mulls doubling output of Ray-Ban glasses by year end, Bloomberg News reports
Musk's X recovers after outage hits thousands globally
Apple rolls out Creator Studio to boost services push, adds AI features
Microsoft rolls out initiative to limit data-center power costs, water use impact
Polygon targets stablecoin payments with deals worth $250 million
Spain moves to curb AI deepfakes, tighten consent rules on images
Voice AI startup Deepgram raises $130 million at $1.3 billion valuation
US senators introduce long-awaited bill to define crypto market rules
Massive cyberattack on Polish power system in December failed, minister says

Others Also Read