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Oct 22, 2025

Universities grapple with new H-1B costs; Mississippi State outlines sponsorship rules

Universities grapple with new H-1B costs; Mississippi State outlines sponsorship rules
Higher-education HR offices moved quickly on 22 October to interpret USCIS guidance on the $100,000 H-1B fee. Mississippi State University’s Human Resources Management department circulated an internal memo clarifying that departments may still sponsor foreign faculty and researchers, but only if vice-presidential approval is obtained and budgeted funds cover the potential surcharge.

The memo reiterates the fee exemptions for extensions and changes of employer, but warns that consular-processing cases—common when professors are recruited directly from abroad—will now carry six-figure costs. MSU will consult with hiring units to confirm whether a petition falls under the fee before filing.

Across the country, similar policies are emerging as universities try to balance global-talent pipelines with fiscal responsibility. Some schools are exploring joint-appointment models or remote work from branch campuses abroad to avoid triggering the fee. Others are lobbying for a research-institution exemption, arguing that the surcharge undermines American scientific competitiveness.

For international scholars, the uncertainty means longer lead times and possible contract clauses that make employment contingent on visa cost outcomes. Graduate-student associations are urging universities to absorb any fees rather than pass them on to post-docs.

The MSU guidance illustrates how even mid-size public institutions must now treat immigration budgeting like capital-equipment purchasing—requiring executive sign-off and contingency planning.
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