Updated 24 December 2025 at 16:46 IST

How the US Is Replacing the H-1B Visa Lottery and What It Means for Indian Applicants

The US has replaced the H-1B visa lottery with a wage-weighted selection system, favouring higher-paid roles. The move is set to reshape opportunities for Indian professionals, benefiting senior talent while making entry-level hiring more competitive and costly.

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H1B Visa
Representational Image | Image: ANI

The United States (US) has announced a major overhaul of the H-1B work visa selection process, scrapping the decades-old random lottery in favor of a weighted system that prioritizes higher-paid and higher-skilled workers. The change, finalized by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), takes effect for the fiscal 2027 H-1B cap registration season — with rules kicking in from February 27, 2026 and registrations expected in March 2026.

Under the traditional process, all eligible registrations were entered into a random draw, giving equal chances to applicants regardless of salary or job profile. The new model weights selections based on wage levels and skill metrics, meaning employers filing for higher-paying positions will have a significantly better chance of obtaining an H-1B slot. Lower-wage or entry-level positions remain eligible but with reduced odds of selection.

Why the change?

The administration argues the old system was susceptible to misuse, where employers repeatedly filed lower-wage registrations to secure visas instead of hiring American workers. Officials say the weighted process better aligns with congressional intent and protects U.S. wages and job opportunities.

Also Read: US Scraps Lottery System For H-1B Visa. Here's What It Means For Indian Professionals | Republic World

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Impact on Indians

Indian nationals constitute a large share of H-1B visa holders and first-time beneficiaries, especially in the technology and professional services sectors. With the lottery gone, applicants with mid-career or senior-level roles commanding higher salaries may fare better than fresh graduates or those in lower-tier roles. Smaller firms and consultancies that traditionally sponsor many Indian professionals could find it harder to compete with large tech companies that offer premium wages. 

Added policy shifts — including an imposed $100,000 fee on new H-1B petitions — further raise the cost of hiring foreign talent and could discourage volume hiring models that have been central to the Indian IT workforce’s U.S. expansion.

Current H-1B holders aren’t immediately affected, but the combined regulatory tightening signals a new era of selective, wage-driven immigration that could reshape Indian professionals’ mobility to the US.

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Published By : Avishek Banerjee

Published On: 24 December 2025 at 16:24 IST