Hiring H-1B visa workers may cost $100K more with Trump’s latest executive order
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President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Friday that would change the H1-B visa program.
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The order raises the H1-B visa application fee to $100,000.
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Tech companies use the H1-B visa program to hire skilled foreign workers.
It looks like hiring H1-B visa workers is about to get a whole lot more expensive.
President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Friday that includes changes to the H1-B visa program, which many tech companies use to hire thousands of skilled foreign workers every year.
The order includes imposing an H1-B application fee of $100,000. The executive order said the fee would need to be paid in order for applications to be considered.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, who spoke alongside Trump in the Oval Office, said it would be a yearly fee for companies that hire H1-B workers. Officials said the fee would help ensure the visa is used to bring in workers who are actually very highly skilled and not to replace American workers.
“Either the person is very valuable to the company and America, or they’re going to depart and the company is going to hire an American,” Lutnick said, adding the changes would encourage companies to train Americans instead of bringing in foreign workers.
He said the fee would apply to new visas as well as renewals.
The new fee requirement would take effect on September 21 and would expire after one year, pending extension, according to the executive order.
Some of the top tech companies sponsoring H1-B visas include Amazon, Microsoft, Google’s parent company, Alphabet, Meta, and Apple. Because companies are required to disclose to the government what they pay H1-B workers, the data has offered insights into Big Tech salaries.
Trump also signed an executive order on Friday establishing the “Gold Card” visa, an idea he floated earlier this year that would allow wealthy foreigners to obtain residency in the United States for a high cost.
The visa would allow wealthy individuals to pay $1 million for residency. Corporations can also sponsor individuals to get residency by paying a $2 million gift under the program, according to a new government website detailing the “Trump Gold Card.”
Do you have a story to share about H1-B visas? Contact this reporter at kvlamis@businessinsider.com.
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