
In a pre-dawn order on January 6 2026, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit granted the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s request to fast-track its challenge to President Trump’s new US $100,000 “H-1B Integrity Fee.” Oral arguments will now be heard in February—weeks before FY 2027 H-1B registration opens in March. ([reuters.com](https://www.reuters.com/legal/government/us-appeals-court-fast-tracks-100000-h-1b-visa-fee-dispute-2026-01-06/))
The six-figure surcharge, unveiled in September 2025, applies to every new cap-subject H-1B petition. A federal judge upheld the fee on December 24, prompting employer groups, universities and research consortia to appeal. Plaintiffs argue the charge is an “existential threat” to U.S. competitiveness, noting total government filing costs could exceed US $110,000 per worker once premium processing, anti-fraud and training fees are added.
For companies and foreign talent scrambling to adapt, a reliable visa partner can be a lifeline. VisaHQ’s dedicated U.S. portal (https://www.visahq.com/united-states/) tracks real-time policy shifts, clarifies evolving H-1B fee structures, and streamlines document preparation, helping employers avoid missteps while the litigation unfolds.
By expediting the timeline, the court acknowledged that employers need certainty before the annual lottery. If the fee remains in force, companies must decide whether to absorb the added cost, cancel foreign-talent searches or shift roles offshore. Immigration counsel are advising clients to prepare dual budgets and to flag C-suite leadership that litigation outcomes may swing within weeks of the registration window.
Whatever the verdict, the case illustrates how fee-based deterrence has replaced hard numerical cuts as the administration’s preferred tool. Observers predict a surge in congressional interest; legislators from tech-heavy districts have already signaled hearings on whether the surcharge violates WTO commitments on services trade.
The six-figure surcharge, unveiled in September 2025, applies to every new cap-subject H-1B petition. A federal judge upheld the fee on December 24, prompting employer groups, universities and research consortia to appeal. Plaintiffs argue the charge is an “existential threat” to U.S. competitiveness, noting total government filing costs could exceed US $110,000 per worker once premium processing, anti-fraud and training fees are added.
For companies and foreign talent scrambling to adapt, a reliable visa partner can be a lifeline. VisaHQ’s dedicated U.S. portal (https://www.visahq.com/united-states/) tracks real-time policy shifts, clarifies evolving H-1B fee structures, and streamlines document preparation, helping employers avoid missteps while the litigation unfolds.
By expediting the timeline, the court acknowledged that employers need certainty before the annual lottery. If the fee remains in force, companies must decide whether to absorb the added cost, cancel foreign-talent searches or shift roles offshore. Immigration counsel are advising clients to prepare dual budgets and to flag C-suite leadership that litigation outcomes may swing within weeks of the registration window.
Whatever the verdict, the case illustrates how fee-based deterrence has replaced hard numerical cuts as the administration’s preferred tool. Observers predict a surge in congressional interest; legislators from tech-heavy districts have already signaled hearings on whether the surcharge violates WTO commitments on services trade.








