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Oct 22, 2025

USCIS issues detailed exemptions to $100,000 H-1B surcharge, easing fear for change-of-status cases

USCIS issues detailed exemptions to $100,000 H-1B surcharge, easing fear for change-of-status cases
Just two days after new H-1B filing fees shocked employers, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) published clarifying guidance that dramatically narrows who must pay. In a bulletin released 20 October—but summarized for universities and multinational HR teams on 22 October—USCIS confirmed that extensions, amendments, employer transfers and in-country changes of status are exempt from the $100,000 payment. Only petitions that request consular notification for beneficiaries outside the United States will trigger the fee.

The clarification calms widespread confusion that erupted after President Trump’s 19 September proclamation. International offices at universities such as UC Santa Cruz circulated the USCIS FAQs on 22 October, assuring faculty and post-docs that routine renewals and F-1 to H-1B conversions will proceed without six-figure costs. The guidance also states that beneficiaries who later travel abroad will not retroactively owe the fee so long as they already hold a valid H-1B visa.

For global mobility managers, the nuance is crucial. Companies can still onboard graduating STEM students or relocate existing H-1B staff internally without extra cost, but must budget heavily for hires made directly from overseas talent pools. Immigration lawyers predict an uptick in “change-of-status first, consular stamp later” filing strategies to avoid the surcharge.

USCIS left one door ajar: employers may seek a national-interest exemption in “extraordinarily rare circumstances,” but officials offered no examples or forms. Attorneys caution that requests will invite long adjudication delays. Meanwhile, lawmakers introduced a House bill on 22 October to cap any future visa surcharges at $25,000, though prospects remain uncertain.

Practically, the agency’s clarification means businesses can continue using H-1B portability to retain critical foreign talent already on U.S. soil, but new overseas recruitment will face a de-facto moratorium unless salaries justify the $100,000 outlay.
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