USCIS Issues Guidance on New $100,000 H-1B Fee and Exemptions

by awbtravelsnews | October 22, 2025

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has released new guidance on President Trump’s September 19 H-1B proclamation, which adds a $100,000 fee for certain visa petitions. The update clarifies who’s affected, who’s exempt, and how employers must handle payments.

What Is the $100,000 H-1B Fee?

The $100,000 H-1B fee is a new charge introduced under President Donald Trump’s proclamation. It applies only to certain H-1B visa petitions processed through U.S. consulates, while extensions or status changes within the U.S. are exempt from this fee.

Who Must Pay the $100,000 H-1B Fee?

US H1B Visa

According to the USCIS, the new rule applies mainly to H-1B petitions filed after September 21 that request consular processing, meaning the foreign worker must get their visa stamped at a U.S. consulate abroad.

In short, employers must pay the $100,000 fee if:

However, petitions for extension, amendment, change of status, or change of employer are exempt, as long as the request is approved. If such petitions are denied and reclassified for consular processing, the fee would then apply.

Who’s Exempt from the $100,000 Fee

Foreign nationals already in the U.S. on valid H-1B visas are not affected, even if they travel abroad after their petition is approved. Similarly, petitions that request and receive extensions or changes of status are exempt.

National Interest Exceptions: Hard to Qualify

USCIS confirmed that national interest exemptions will be “extraordinarily rare.” Employers must prove:

Unlike earlier expectations, company-wide or industry-wide exemptions won’t be allowed, only case-by-case reviews.

Payment and Filing Process

Employers must pay the $100,000 fee via pay.gov before filing the petition and include proof of payment or a DHS-approved exception. Petitions missing this proof will likely be denied without further notice.

Ongoing Legal Challenges

Multiple lawsuits have already been filed against the proclamation, arguing it violates immigration law. While no injunctions have been issued yet, today’s guidance could push courts to act.

For now, only consular H-1B petitions filed after September 21 are subject to the $100,000 fee. Extensions, amendments, and in-country transfers remain safe, at least for now.


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