New US H-1B visa fee policy makes hiring international students easier and cheaper for employers: Here's how
A quiet but significant policy change in the US immigration system, announced on 20 October 2025, is sending a wave of relief and optimism through international student circles. Starting with the 2026 H-1B visa filing cycle, employers will face a new $100,000 fee when sponsoring workers from abroad. But there’s an important exception: Students already in the US on F-1 visas won’t have to pay it.
This new rule has enormous implications. For tens of thousands of international students who choose to study in the USA, it means the pathway from classroom to career just became smoother and far more appealing to employers. In light of this change, companies are likely to strategically prefer hiring F-1 students already in the United States rather than recruiting internationally and facing $100,000 H-1B sponsorship fees for candidates they haven’t worked with before.
The F-1 visa allows international students to study full-time at accredited US universities. After graduation, many transition into Optional Practical Training (OPT), a program that lets them work in their field for up to a year, or three years for STEM graduates.
In the past, many employers have hesitated to hire international graduates because of visa uncertainty and costs. The new fee structure flips that logic: Bringing someone from overseas now costs a small fortune, while hiring an international student who’s already here costs almost nothing extra.
For US companies, especially those in the tech and engineering sectors, the math has changed. Recruiting abroad now carries a $100,000 price tag per hire. Hiring from the pool of F-1 graduates who are already here and are legally authorised to work through OPT, is a much safer and cheaper bet.
Many employers are expected to adapt quickly, building stronger relationships with university career centers and internship programs that connect them with F-1 students.
During their OPT period, companies can test the fit, evaluate performance, and later decide whether to file for an H-1B visa once the employee has proven themselves, without ever paying that new fee.
The US has always been a highly-preferred study destination, owing to the fact that the country is home to more than 70% of the global top 100 universities and has arguably been the best place to enhance career prospects. With this new policy, international students now have an even greater incentive to study in the USA.
The policy also gives international students one more reason to choose US universities over competitors in Canada, the UK, or Australia. The combination of world-class education, three years of hands-on work experience for STEM fields, and now a clear cost advantage for employers makes the US job market more accessible than ever.
Thanks to the policy, the American system now looks far more attractive and seems to inadvertently encourage companies to hire talent that has been educated and trained in the United States rather than looking overseas. This approach helps retain skilled workers who are already familiar with the US market and workplace culture and strengthens the link between American higher education and the domestic job market.
For many international students who very recently viewed post-graduation work opportunities in the US as uncertain, the message is now clearer: Study here, stay here, and work here without the extra financial roadblock.Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!
A boost for homegrown international talent
The F-1 visa allows international students to study full-time at accredited US universities. After graduation, many transition into Optional Practical Training (OPT), a program that lets them work in their field for up to a year, or three years for STEM graduates.
In the past, many employers have hesitated to hire international graduates because of visa uncertainty and costs. The new fee structure flips that logic: Bringing someone from overseas now costs a small fortune, while hiring an international student who’s already here costs almost nothing extra.
A strategic shift for employers
For US companies, especially those in the tech and engineering sectors, the math has changed. Recruiting abroad now carries a $100,000 price tag per hire. Hiring from the pool of F-1 graduates who are already here and are legally authorised to work through OPT, is a much safer and cheaper bet.
During their OPT period, companies can test the fit, evaluate performance, and later decide whether to file for an H-1B visa once the employee has proven themselves, without ever paying that new fee.
More opportunities, more incentives to study in the US
The US has always been a highly-preferred study destination, owing to the fact that the country is home to more than 70% of the global top 100 universities and has arguably been the best place to enhance career prospects. With this new policy, international students now have an even greater incentive to study in the USA.
The policy also gives international students one more reason to choose US universities over competitors in Canada, the UK, or Australia. The combination of world-class education, three years of hands-on work experience for STEM fields, and now a clear cost advantage for employers makes the US job market more accessible than ever.
Thanks to the policy, the American system now looks far more attractive and seems to inadvertently encourage companies to hire talent that has been educated and trained in the United States rather than looking overseas. This approach helps retain skilled workers who are already familiar with the US market and workplace culture and strengthens the link between American higher education and the domestic job market.
For many international students who very recently viewed post-graduation work opportunities in the US as uncertain, the message is now clearer: Study here, stay here, and work here without the extra financial roadblock.Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!
Top Comment
u
urthebest
21 hours ago
This increases chance of promoting more cheap lobour than before. If fee applicable it should be for everyone.Read allPost comment
Popular from Education
- GSEB Gujarat Board 2026 timetable released for class 10, 12: Exams to begin February 26 onwards, check details
- New US H-1B visa fee policy makes hiring international students easier and cheaper for employers: Here's how
- ‘This is to torment us’: Muslim cleric urges parents to pull children out of schools over CM Yogi’s Vande Mataram order
- IIT grad who rejected Stanford to build a $61 million AI startup: A look at Varun Vummadi’s education and career
- Project Firewall explained: Why the US is investigating H-1B pay and job claims
end of article
Trending Stories
- Gujarat SET admit card 2025 released at gujaratset.ac.in: Check direct link to download hall ticket here
- UGC NET December 2025 correction window opens: Check list of editable fields and how to make corrections
- Kerala DHSE plus one and two equivalency improvement result 2025 released: Direct link to download here
- HBSE Class 10th admit card expected to be released soon: Check details here
- SSC revolutionizes exam process: Candidates to pick their own city and date for JE, SI 2025 recruitment drive
- HTET result 2025 declared at bseh.org: Direct link to download here
- New US H-1B visa fee policy makes hiring international students easier and cheaper for employers: Here's how
Featured in education
- When America’s H-1B tightens, China’s K-visa rises: Is the future of global talent shifting east?
- Who is Zara Rahim, the Florida graduate and strategist behind Zohran Mamdani’s historic New York City win?
- America’s paycheck pause: Why workers are choosing job security over raises
- As ICE arrests rise, Florida schools see measurable declines in student test performance, study finds
- America’s new work reality: Why more people are taking multiple jobs to stay afloat
- Michigan schools face tough choice as $321 million safety plan includes legal waiver condition
Photostories
- 5 largest snakes to have ever roamed the Earth
- How to identify real diamonds vs lab-grown ones: Expert identification guide
- Bollywood reunion tales of separation and rediscovery that touched every heart
- Bollywood battle stories that ignite patriotism and celebrate valour
- No gym needed: 7 effective home exercises to burn belly fat
- These 5 animals are the largest to have roamed the Earth (One is still lives today)
- From heated arguments with VJ Paaru to special moments with FJ: Evicted contestant Praveen Raj’s Bigg Boss Tamil 9 journey
- 4 foods to combine with Kiwi for a power-packed breakfast
- 4 reasons to use Kusha Grass in daily puja rituals
- Delhi Red Fort car blast: How a sudden explosion turned Delhi evening into chaos and fear
Up Next