Framed as a measure to “protect American workers” from cheap foreign competition, the new rule is part of a broader strategy by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the White House to shrink the pool of foreign entrants, raise the financial stakes for employers, and alter the very attractiveness of the U.S. as a destination for global talent.

The new measure strikes at the heart of the Silicon Valley’s attempts at outsourcing cheap labour from India, China, and South Asia against hiring local labour which is expensive. The H-1B visa program was created to allow U.S. companies to employ foreign professionals in “specialty occupations,” primarily in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. Congress currently caps new H-1Bs at 65,000 per year, with an additional 20,000 reserved for applicants holding a U.S. master’s degree or higher. In practice, these caps are hit within days of the annual lottery opening, leaving the vast majority of applicants without a pathway.

Yet approvals for continuing employment and extensions mean the overall program is much larger. In recent years, close to 400,000 H-1B petitions (new and continuing) were approved annually. Most of these go to workers from India and China, with Indians accounting for a majority, particularly in the tech sector. Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Apple, IBM, and Tata Consultancy Services are consistently among the top petitioners.

By layering a $100,000 upfront fee onto the application process — which until now cost between $1,700 and $4,500 depending on speed of processing — the administration has effectively transformed the program from an expensive but manageable recruitment tool into a luxury option reserved for only the most critical hires. The administration insists that this is not a ban, but a filter: only the “best and brightest” should enter, and companies should pay dearly for that privilege. But in practice, the price tag alone will shrink the number of H-1B applications.

Large firms may absorb the cost for a handful of senior engineers or research scientists, but for startups and mid-sized businesses the surcharge is crippling. Even tech giants may balk at sponsoring thousands of workers at $100,000 each, especially when global competitors in Canada, the U.K., or the EU offer far easier pathways at a fraction of the cost. The result: a steep decline in applications, a smaller inflow of skilled foreign professionals, and a subtle redirection of jobs to overseas offices.

Although the policy is written in nationality-neutral terms, its impact is anything but. Indians, who make up the largest share of H-1B workers — especially in software development, IT consulting, and engineering — will bear the heaviest burden. Chinese applicants, particularly in research and advanced technology, are next in line. Applicants from South America, North America (particularly Canada and Mexico), and South Asia more broadly will also feel the pressure, but the disproportionate effect on Indian nationals makes this move appear, in practice, discriminatory even if it is not explicitly so.

This echoes past criticisms of the Trump administration’s immigration approach: facial neutrality masking targeted outcomes against specific communities most reliant on work visas, green cards, or naturalization.

The fee cannot be viewed in isolation. It comes atop: Denaturalization efforts, where the Justice Department has expanded attempts to revoke U.S. citizenship for naturalized immigrants based on past irregularities.

Moves against birthright citizenship, with executive orders seeking to reinterpret the 14th Amendment — though currently stalled in court.

Wage-floor proposals, which would force companies to pay H-1B workers salaries far above current market norms.

Together, these measures form a consistent pattern: reduce immigration at every entry point — work permits, citizenship, and family-based routes — while branding the effort as worker protection.

On paper, the $100,000 fee is meant to protect U.S. workers from being replaced by cheaper foreign hires. In reality, the underlying goals appear more political than economic:

Political Messaging: The administration can point to tough action on immigration heading into the 2026 midterms, energizing its base.

Structural Deterrence: By pricing out the majority of applicants, DHS achieves restriction without openly banning the program.

National Identity Politics: The administration continues to project a vision of America that is less reliant on immigrants, even in high-skill sectors where domestic supply remains insufficient. The economic risks — offshoring, slower innovation, reduced attractiveness of U.S. universities — are acknowledged by policy experts but discounted by the administration as secondary.

The durability of this move depends heavily on political outcomes. If Democrats seize the House in 2026, they could use appropriations and oversight powers to challenge or limit the policy, though undoing an executive order directly would require control of both chambers or the presidency. If a new president takes office in 2029, especially a Democrat, the $100,000 fee could be rescinded on Day One. Immigration policy set by executive order is inherently reversible.

Litigation: Lawsuits from industry groups, universities, and immigrant advocates could delay or even strike down the fee, particularly if courts find DHS lacks authority to impose a charge of this magnitude. Still, reversibility does not erase the damage. Companies that shift jobs overseas or foreign students who choose Canada over the U.S. will not instantly reverse course when policies change. The scars of uncertainty may last for years.

The $100,000 H-1B fee is not a revenue measure — it is a deterrent. By making work permits prohibitively expensive, the Trump administration has found a way to build a wall through price rather than bricks. The move disproportionately affects Indian and Chinese workers, threatens the competitiveness of U.S. tech and research sectors, and cements an ideological posture that views immigration as a liability rather than a driver of national strength.

Whether it survives depends on politics, courts, and the choices of global employers. But in the meantime, DHS has redefined the rules of entry: fewer people, higher prices, and a United States that looks less welcoming to the very talent it once sought to attract. (IPA Service)