Trump Drops a Bombshell on H-1B Visas: $100,000 a Year Per Worker
International
oi-Gaurav Sharma
In a stunning move that has sent shockwaves through Silicon Valley and New Delhi alike, President Donald Trump has upended America's most sought-after work visa program. With a stroke of his pen, he has slapped a jaw-dropping $100,000 annual fee on every H-1B visa, threatening to choke off the pipeline of Indian tech talent that has long fueled America's innovation engine.
The Billion-Dollar Question
President Donald Trump imposed a $100,000 annual fee on H-1B visas, impacting Indian tech professionals and sparking debate in Silicon Valley about the US labor market and immigration. This move, announced by Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, faces legal challenges and is part of a broader tightening of US immigration policies.
US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick delivered the announcement with unflinching confidence: "A hundred thousand dollars a year for H-1B visas, and all of the big companies are on board. We've spoken to them." But behind the scenes, insiders whisper that even the richest tech giants are rattled.

For India, the impact is seismic. With seven out of every ten H-1B visas going to Indian professionals, the new rules risk slamming the door on the dreams of thousands of engineers, coders, and scientists who see the US as the ultimate career destination.
The Silicon Valley Dilemma
Trump insists that America's tech titans will cheer the change. "The technology sector will support this - they're going to be very happy," he boasted. Yet Apple, Google, Amazon, and Meta remain conspicuously silent. Their campuses in California, filled with H-1B workers, now face the prospect of soaring costs or shrinking talent pools.
"Hire Americans, Not Outsiders"
The proclamation is more than economics - it's political theater. Trump and Lutnick argue that it's time to put American graduates first. "Train Americans. Stop bringing in people to take our jobs," Lutnick thundered. But critics warn this rhetoric masks a dangerous attempt to wall off the US labor market from global talent.
Legal Storm Brewing
Immigration lawyers are preparing for battle. Aaron Reichlin-Melnick of the American Immigration Council blasted the move as unlawful: "Congress has only authorised the government to set fees to recover the cost of adjudicating an application." At $100,000 a year, the fee is far beyond mere paperwork.
A Crackdown With Global Ripples
This is no isolated measure. From requiring bonds of up to $15,000 on tourist visas to squeezing tech visas, Trump's administration is systematically tightening America's immigration gates.
The stakes are monumental. Will US companies pay up to keep foreign talent? Or will the world's brightest minds turn away from Silicon Valley, leaving America's tech supremacy vulnerable?
For Indian families, for global tech giants, and for the future of America's innovation economy, the message is clear: the H-1B dream just got a $100,000 price tag.
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