Immigration lawyers predict that the full number of H-1B cap registrations for FY 2027 will additional drop to around 200k as many firms stayed away from registering for H-1B petitions due to the $100,000 payment. The wage-based choice course of, which is being applied for the primary time this year, will influence the choice however not the number of registrations a lot, immigration attorneys Rahul Reddy and Emily Neumann predicted of their weekly visa replace, pegging the number to be around 200k to 250k.In the final three years, the number of whole registrations fell sharply: 780, 884 in 2024; 479, 943 in 2025; 358,737 in 2026. The USCIS has not disclosed the precise number of registrations it acquired.
H-1B lottery replace: When are the outcomes anticipated?
The registration window was open from March 4 to March 19 for employers to submit digital registrations for candidates whom they need to rent on H-1B visas. This was not the petition; this was simply the registration for the candidates. If these candidates aren’t within the US, then the employer would have to shell out a $100,000 payment if they’re chosen. If these candidates are already within the US, on OPT, then the payment wouldn’t be relevant. The outcomes are anticipated by March 31. There is not any public record however the employers are knowledgeable straight by USCIS. The petition submitting window is from April 1 to June 30, and the sooner employment for the accepted H-1Bs will begin on October 1, within the new fiscal year. In the lottery, USCIS will choose 65,000 eligible candidates, and so the number of whole registrations provides candidates an thought of how a lot likelihood they’ve to get chosen.
Who has to pay $100,000 payment?
The employer has to pay $100,00 payment if a petition filed for an H-1B candidate entails consular notification, port of entry notification or pre-flight inspection — that means if the person is outdoors the US. the payment doesn’t apply when a visa applicant recordsdata to transfer from one kind of visa to one other, reminiscent of from an F-1 visa for non-US college students to H-1B standing.