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H1B

H-1B Fee Hike Pushes Indians Homeward, VDart CEO Says

A steep rise in H-1B visa fees—potentially a USD 100,000 annual charge—is pushing firms to staff more roles from India. VDart says this reduces reliance on U.S. sponsorship for about 65,000 hopefuls, boosting GCCs and career opportunities in cities like Bangalore, Hyderabad and Pune. Professionals should focus on leadership, AI and product skills.

Last updated: September 28, 2025 10:51 am
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Key takeaways
H-1B fees may include a USD 100,000 annual charge, dramatically raising employer sponsorship costs.
India’s GCCs and offshore teams are expanding in Bangalore, Hyderabad, Pune and tier-2 cities.
About 65,000 prospective applicants face narrowed chances, prompting many to build careers in India.

India’s tech workforce is rethinking the long-held “dream abroad” as H-1B visa fees spike under new U.S. policy changes that industry leaders say are reshaping both company hiring plans and personal career paths. Sidd Ahmed, CEO and Founder of VDart Group, said in an interview with ANI that the cost surge is pushing many professionals to see India as the place to build their future, not just a launchpad to the United States.

“It also impacts the 65,000 people who actually had the aspiration to go to the U.S. and build a dream there. … The dream is happening right here in India,” Ahmed said, noting a clear shift in mindset as global firms scale up in India through growing global capability centres (GCCs) and offshore delivery units.

H-1B Fee Hike Pushes Indians Homeward, VDart CEO Says
H-1B Fee Hike Pushes Indians Homeward, VDart CEO Says

How the economics changed

Ahmed traced that shift through the past two decades. In the early years, he recalled, H‑1B sponsorship costs were modest—about USD 110 for employers—while the program grew into a reliable tool for moving junior and mid‑level engineers to U.S. teams. That pipeline also drew criticism in some American mid‑level job markets.

Now the economics look very different. Under the latest policy approach, companies could face a USD 100,000 annual fee layered on top of standard processing and vetting expenses. That price tag is changing the basic math for assignments in the U.S., and with it the appetite to send talent overseas.

Impact on global delivery models

Industry watchers say this isn’t just about a higher bill. It’s about how companies design their global delivery models.

💡 Tip
Assess each US assignment’s ROI under the new $100,000 fee. If costs outweigh returns, say no and prioritize projects with solid domestic or GCC-backed plans.
  • Rising H-1B visa fees encourage firms to staff more projects from India, where teams can work directly with product and business leaders through strong remote setups and on‑the‑ground GCCs.
  • Analysis by VisaVerge.com indicates the fee shock will hit startups and mid‑sized U.S. employers hardest, while larger corporations may absorb costs or reposition work to offshore models already in place.

Ahmed expects a wave of “reverse ambition” among Indian professionals who once planned to depart for the U.S. but now see meaningful careers at home. Roles once tied to a U.S. location can now be executed in India by teams with similar skill depth and better time‑zone coverage for global operations.

Cities benefitting include:

  • Bangalore
  • Hyderabad
  • Pune
  • A widening ring of tier‑2 cities

These locations stand to gain as companies expand lab space, training centers, and leadership tracks to keep pace with rising domestic demand.

Political and historical context

The fee story also has political echoes. Over time, costs in the H‑1B program rose from the low hundreds to several thousand dollars in standard and supplemental charges. During the tenure of President Trump, a steep increase—cited by industry sources as a $100,000 annual fee—marked the sharpest jump in the program’s history.

While large U.S. employers may find workarounds, the mid‑market could pull back on sponsorships for roles that are practical to run offshore. That pullback could reduce new H‑1B entries and slow the traditional flow of Indian tech talent into the U.S., even as India’s IT services and product ecosystems keep growing with the support of GCCs.

⚠️ Important
Relying on H-1B sponsorship could shrink for mid-market firms; avoid assuming offshore work will always scale—verify which roles truly justify the cost and plan accordingly.

Advice for Indian professionals and companies

For Indian workers, the practical takeaway is clear: chase roles that reward depth and decision‑making rather than location alone. Ahmed urges professionals to:

  • Build leadership skills
  • Deepen domain knowledge
  • Push into AI and product development — areas that travel well across borders

For companies, every U.S. posting will need a return‑on‑investment check against the new fee structure. Some assignments will still make sense; many will not.

Regional benefits and corporate responses

Ahmed’s remarks underscore how regional tech hubs inside India benefit from the new reality. As more professionals choose India over the U.S., employers are doubling down on local growth. That means not only hiring but also investment in:

  • Infrastructure
  • Cross‑functional training
  • Executive pathways that used to require an onsite U.S. rotation

With that shift, the old model—get an H‑1B, move stateside, climb the ladder—is giving way to a more balanced plan where top‑tier careers can be built without leaving home.

Wider risks and the H‑1B cap

Policy watchers in the U.S. warn of another consequence: if sponsorship costs remain high, America could lose some edge in STEM by making it harder for smaller firms to bring in specialized talent. Some Silicon Valley leaders have voiced concern that sustained fee pressure could push more work abroad.

Ahmed’s comments suggest that process is already in motion, and that India is ready to receive it.

The program’s annual numerical cap also matters for expectations. Ahmed referenced the 65,000 figure—long familiar to Indian applicants—as a symbol of the lottery’s bottleneck and the hopes attached to it. When the path narrows further due to costs, many would‑be applicants are choosing not to enter the race at all. Instead, they’re seeking senior roles in India, applying to GCCs, and building careers that no longer depend on a U.S. relocation.

Official guidance and employer considerations

While employers and workers adjust, official rules continue to live on U.S. government pages. Readers can find the core framework of the H‑1B category, including eligibility basics and process steps, on the USCIS H‑1B overview.

🔔 Reminder
Develop leadership, AI, and product management skills now; these areas travel well and are less tied to a specific location.

Companies weighing petitions against the prospect of a $100,000 annual charge will stack those rules against their budgets and delivery plans, deciding which roles must be onsite and which can remain in India.

Five practical moves for the near term

Indian firms and employees are focusing on five practical moves:

  1. Evaluate the business case for each U.S. assignment under the new fee landscape, and say no when costs outweigh returns.
  2. Strengthen professional networks inside India’s fast‑growing tech scene rather than relying on a single dream abroad path.
  3. Upskill toward leadership, AI, and product management — the areas most protected from location‑based cuts.
  4. Explore the booming GCC market across India, where global brands are building long‑term platforms.
  5. Stay alert to shifts in visa policy and any legal challenges that could change timelines or implementation.

“India is not just a supplier of global tech talent anymore. It’s an end destination for high‑aspiration careers, with compensation, projects, and leadership scope to match.” — Sidd Ahmed, VDart

Ahmed’s broader message is that India is not just a supplier of global tech talent anymore. It’s an end destination for high‑aspiration careers, with compensation, projects, and leadership scope to match. That doesn’t close the door to the U.S. — instead, it opens more than one door and gives professionals leverage to choose the best one for their families and goals.

In that sense, the H‑1B fee spike is both a cost and a signal. It tells companies to think hard about where work gets done, and it tells Indian professionals that the path to impact — and to leadership — may be closer to home than they thought.

VisaVerge.com
Learn Today
H-1B visa → A U.S. nonimmigrant visa allowing employers to hire foreign workers in specialty occupations for temporary periods.
USD 100,000 annual fee → A proposed or referenced large supplemental charge some employers could face annually for each H-1B worker.
GCC (Global Capability Centre) → An onshore or offshore organizational unit where global firms centralize functions like R&D, product, or delivery.
Offshore delivery unit → A team or center located outside the client country that delivers services or engineering work remotely.
Cap (65,000) → The annual numerical limit—commonly cited as 65,000—on new H-1B visas subject to the lottery process.
Sponsor → An employer who files H-1B petitions and covers required fees to hire a foreign worker in the U.S.
VisaVerge.com → Industry analysis site cited for assessing the market impact and distributional effects of H-1B fee changes.

This Article in a Nutshell

New U.S. policy proposals and fee spikes for H-1B visas—potentially adding a USD 100,000 annual charge on top of standard costs—are prompting a strategic rethink among Indian tech workers and employers. VDart CEO Sidd Ahmed notes the added expense weakens the business case for many U.S. assignments, accelerating investments in India’s global capability centres and offshore delivery models. Cities such as Bangalore, Hyderabad and Pune are set to gain jobs, infrastructure, and leadership tracks as companies assign more work locally. The shift affects roughly 65,000 hopeful applicants under the H-1B cap and encourages professionals to upskill in leadership, AI, and product roles. While large firms might absorb costs or find workarounds, startups and mid-market employers will feel the strain most, potentially reducing new H-1B entries and reinforcing India as a destination for high-aspiration careers.

— VisaVerge.com
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Sai Sankar
BySai Sankar
Sai Sankar is a law postgraduate with over 30 years of extensive experience in various domains of taxation, including direct and indirect taxes. With a rich background spanning consultancy, litigation, and policy interpretation, he brings depth and clarity to complex legal matters. Now a contributing writer for Visa Verge, Sai Sankar leverages his legal acumen to simplify immigration and tax-related issues for a global audience.
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