Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
International

US announces sweeping changes to H-1B selection process

Darpan News Desk IANS, 23 Dec, 2025 12:20 PM
  • US announces sweeping changes to H-1B selection process

The Trump Administration on Tuesday announced sweeping changes to the H-1B work visa selection process, replacing the long-standing random lottery with a weighted system that prioritises higher-skilled and higher-paid foreign workers.

The move, Department of Homeland Security said, is aimed at better protecting the wages, working conditions, and job opportunities of American workers, while strengthening the integrity of the H-1B nonimmigrant visa program.

“The existing random selection process of H-1B registrations was exploited and abused by U.S. employers who were primarily seeking to import foreign workers at lower wages than they would pay American workers,” U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services spokesman Matthew Tragesser said.

“The new weighted selection will better serve Congress’ intent for the H-1B program and strengthen America’s competitiveness by incentivising American employers to petition for higher-paid, higher-skilled foreign workers,” he said.

Under the new regulation, H-1B visas will no longer be awarded through a purely random draw, as has been the practice over the past two decades. Instead, registrations will be ranked and selected through a weighted process that increases the probability that visas go to higher-skilled and higher-paid foreign nationals, while still allowing employers to petition for workers across all wage levels, DHS said in a media release.

The change is intended to curb what they described as systemic abuse of the lottery system, in which some employers allegedly flooded the registration pool with lower-skilled, lower-wage applications, crowding out higher-value petitions and disadvantaging American workers, it said.

The annual number of H-1B visas remains capped at 65,000, with an additional 20,000 visas reserved for applicants holding advanced degrees from U.S. institutions. The new weighted selection rule will apply beginning with the fiscal year 2027 H-1B cap registration season, it said, adding that the final rule will take effect on February 27.

DHS said the reform is a key step in aligning the H-1B program more closely with congressional intent, while addressing long-standing concerns raised by labour advocates and policymakers about wage suppression and misuse of the visa category.

Officials stressed that the rule does not eliminate access to the H-1B program for employers offering lower wages, but shifts the balance toward petitions that reflect higher skill levels and compensation.

The change is part of a broader push by the Trump administration to overhaul the H-1B system, which has been a flashpoint in U.S. immigration and labour policy debates for years.

 

“It is another crucial step to strengthen the integrity of the H-1B nonimmigrant visa program,” DHS said, pointing to other recent measures aimed at discouraging misuse of the visa category.

Among those measures is a Presidential Proclamation that requires employers to pay an additional $100,000 per visa as a condition of eligibility, a move the administration says is designed to ensure that employers turn to foreign labour only when they genuinely need highly skilled workers.

“As part of the Trump Administration’s commitment to H-1B reform, we will continue to demand more from both employers and aliens so as not to undercut American workers and to put America first,” Tragesser said.

 

The H-1B visa program allows U.S. employers to temporarily hire foreign workers in speciality occupations that typically require at least a bachelor’s degree or equivalent expertise. The program is heavily used by the technology sector and has significant implications for skilled professionals from countries such as India.

For years, critics of the lottery-based system have argued that it failed to distinguish between high-value and low-value petitions, encouraging gaming of the system and eroding public confidence in the program.

Supporters of reform have said changes such as weighted selection are necessary to restore credibility to the H-1B program, even as business groups have warned that overly restrictive policies could hurt innovation and competitiveness in the U.S. economy.

The H-1B program has long been central to U.S. efforts to attract global talent, while also remaining one of the most politically contentious legal immigration pathways. 

Picture Courtesy: IANS 

MORE International ARTICLES

Slow-moving Pacific storm threatens to bring California flooding and mudslides

Slow-moving Pacific storm threatens to bring California flooding and mudslides
Heavy rains drenched parts of California on Wednesday, bringing the threat of flooding and mudslides as millions of people geared up for holiday travel, the National Weather Service said. The Pacific storm centered offshore was moving gradually southeastward, sending bands of rain ashore and hitting particularly hard on the central coast after sweeping through the San Francisco Bay Area. Flood watches were posted all the way south to San Diego.

Slow-moving Pacific storm threatens to bring California flooding and mudslides

Hamas leader Ismael Haniyeh in Cairo for ceasefire talks, hostage release

Hamas leader Ismael Haniyeh in Cairo for ceasefire talks, hostage release
Israel launched a ground offensive inside Gaza on October 27 after Hamas attacked Israel in a surprise attack on October 7 in which 1200 Israelis were killed and over 200 were taken hostage. Since the outbreak of hostilities between Hamas and Israel, over 19,667 Palestinians have been killed mostly being children and women.

Hamas leader Ismael Haniyeh in Cairo for ceasefire talks, hostage release

2 Indian-origin men jailed for 34 years in UK for drug smuggling

2 Indian-origin men jailed for 34 years in UK for drug smuggling
Two Indian-origin men have been sentenced to prison in the UK for smuggling cocaine, cannabis and cigarettes into the country hidden in shipments of perishable goods. Anand Tripathi (61) and Varun Bhardwaj (39) were both sentenced to 19 years and 15 years in jail, respectively, after they were convicted in November, following a 71-day trial at Isleworth Crown Court, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said.

2 Indian-origin men jailed for 34 years in UK for drug smuggling

New Covid strain JN.1 likely to be around in US through X-Mas holiday season

New Covid strain JN.1 likely to be around in US through X-Mas holiday season
A new Covid-19 virus, known in the medical community as, JN.1, close relative to BA.2.86, is the fastest growing variant in the US, according to estimates from the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). JN.1 was responsible for more than one in five new Coronavirus cases in recent weeks.

New Covid strain JN.1 likely to be around in US through X-Mas holiday season

Human rights NGO accuses Israel of deliberately starving Gaza people

Human rights NGO accuses Israel of deliberately starving Gaza people
Human Rights Watch (HRW), a nongovernmental organisation (NGO) with global foot print, has attacked Israel stating that it is deliberately creating starvation in the Gaza Strip as a means of war. In a statement issued on Monday, the HRW said that Israel is deliberately depriving the people in Gaza access to food, water and other basic necessities, and described this denial of basic amenities to the civilian population as a war crime.  

Human rights NGO accuses Israel of deliberately starving Gaza people

Indian national sentenced for assaulting three women in New Zealand

Indian national sentenced for assaulting three women in New Zealand
A 67-year-old Indian national, who assaulted three women on a beach in New Zealand on the pretext of taking photographs with them, was ordered to pay NZ$3,000 to his victims on Monday. Jawahar Singh had previously pleaded guilty to three charges of indecent assault and one charge of an indecent act, relating to three incidents at the Tahunanui beach in Nelson, news website Stuff.co.nz reported.

Indian national sentenced for assaulting three women in New Zealand