Trump’s $100,000 Visa Threatens Business of India IT Firms

Trump’s $100,000 Visa Threatens Business of India IT Firms

Trump’s $100,000 Visa Threatens Business of India IT Firms

<p>A recruiter speaks with an MBA student during an one-on-one interview as a part of a college recruitment event in Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India.</p>

A recruiter speaks with an MBA student during an one-on-one interview as a part of a college recruitment event in Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India.

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Donald Trump’s sticker shock on H-1B visas risks disrupting Indian tech firms’ US projects, and is forcing Prime Minister Narendra Modi to once again deal with the fallout from America First policies.

The US president’s order on Friday — which requires a $100,000 fee for H-1B applications — will hurt margins of Indian outsourcers who use the program to deploy engineers to client sites. That’s a blow to India’s $280 billion IT services sector, which is already grappling with sluggish growth as customers cut back on technology spending due to geopolitical tensions and Trump’s tariffs. Shares in Indian software exporters including Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. and Infosys Ltd. slid more than 3% on Monday.

The changes to the visa policy increase strains on the India-US relationship and come on the eve of the Indian team’s visit to Washington as they seek to make a breakthrough on trade talks. They also add to a wave of anti-immigration movements across the globe that have impacted the world’s most populous nation.

Trump’s move is a “geopolitical turf war,” said Chander Prakash Gurnani, the former chief executive officer of Tech Mahindra Ltd., who now runs an AI firm. “The messaging is — foreign students are not welcome, foreign workers are not welcome, we will impose whatever rules we want and we will not be consistent with them.”

The H-1B visa program is used heavily by Indian outsourcing firms as well as the US tech sector to bring in skilled workers from abroad. Finance companies and consulting firms also use the program, which makes tens of thousands of visas available via a lottery. The Trump administration cast the changes as part of a broader plan to bolster legitimate applications while weeding out abuses.

H-1B visas are awarded based on a system where employers file petitions by March for a lottery in April, with 65,000 visas available plus 20,000 for US master’s graduates. In 2025, over 470,000 applications were submitted. Many firms submit multiple registrations for the same workers to improve their odds at the lottery, a Bloomberg News investigation previously found.

The new $100,000 payment would be in addition to current fees, which are more modest. Fees directly tied to the H-1B visa application currently include a $215 fee to register for the lottery alongside various filing fees.