Just Released
📅 November 2025

Visa Bulletin is Out!

Check your priority dates and filing information now

View Details →
Spanish
VisaVerge official logo in Light white color VisaVerge official logo in Light white color
  • Home
  • Airlines
  • H1B
  • Immigration
    • Knowledge
    • Questions
    • Documentation
  • News
  • Visa
    • Canada
    • F1Visa
    • Passport
    • Green Card
    • H1B
    • OPT
    • PERM
    • Travel
    • Travel Requirements
    • Visa Requirements
  • USCIS
  • Questions
    • Australia Immigration
    • Green Card
    • H1B
    • Immigration
    • Passport
    • PERM
    • UK Immigration
    • USCIS
    • Legal
    • India
    • NRI
  • Guides
    • Taxes
    • Legal
  • Tools
    • H-1B Maxout Calculator Online
    • REAL ID Requirements Checker tool
    • ROTH IRA Calculator Online
    • TSA Acceptable ID Checker Online Tool
    • H-1B Registration Checklist
    • Schengen Short-Stay Visa Calculator
    • H-1B Cost Calculator Online
    • USA Merit Based Points Calculator – Proposed
    • Canada Express Entry Points Calculator
    • New Zealand’s Skilled Migrant Points Calculator
    • Resources Hub
    • Visa Photo Requirements Checker Online
    • I-94 Expiration Calculator Online
    • CSPA Age-Out Calculator Online
    • OPT Timeline Calculator Online
    • B1/B2 Tourist Visa Stay Calculator online
  • Schengen
VisaVergeVisaVerge
Search
Follow US
  • Home
  • Airlines
  • H1B
  • Immigration
  • News
  • Visa
  • USCIS
  • Questions
  • Guides
  • Tools
  • Schengen
© 2025 VisaVerge Network. All Rights Reserved.
H1B

DHS Invites Public Comment on H-1B Weighted Selection Rule

DHS proposes a wage-weighted H-1B lottery giving more entries to higher wage levels (IV=4 to I=1), plus candidate-centric rules and integrity checks. Public comments run through October 24, 2025, and changes could affect the H-1B 2027 season.

Last updated: October 24, 2025 12:30 pm
SHARE
VisaVerge.com
📋
Key takeaways
DHS proposes a wage-based weighted H-1B lottery giving Wage Level IV four entries, Level III three, Level II two, Level I one.
Public comments open September 24–October 24, 2025; information-collection comments through November 24, 2025; impacts expected for H-1B 2027.
Candidate-centric rule treats each beneficiary uniquely and assigns the lowest wage level if multiple employers register the same person.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has proposed a shift to a salary-based, weighted lottery for the H-1B visa program, inviting public comments through October 24, 2025. The rule, published for notice and comment, would move the annual selection away from a purely random draw and toward a system that gives more entries to registrations offering higher wages. DHS says the goal is to reward higher-paid — and presumably higher-skilled — job offers while still allowing lower-wage positions a chance at selection.

Under the proposal, the weighted lottery would use the Department of Labor’s Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics to assign entries based on the offered wage level. Wage Level IV would receive four entries, Level III three entries, Level II two entries, and Level I one entry. In practice, a single registration at Wage Level IV would be placed in the pool four times, increasing its odds when U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services conducts the cap selection. DHS says the approach aims to reduce incentives to underpay foreign workers and to better align selection with the program’s statutory focus on specialty occupations.

DHS Invites Public Comment on H-1B Weighted Selection Rule
DHS Invites Public Comment on H-1B Weighted Selection Rule

DHS also outlines a candidate-centric process. Rather than selection based on the number of registrations filed for the same person, USCIS would treat each beneficiary as a unique candidate. If multiple employers submit registrations for one candidate, the beneficiary would be assigned the lowest wage level among those registrations for lottery weighting — a safeguard intended to limit gaming and maintain fairness. The rule also adds integrity checks to ensure registrations reflect bona fide job offers and consistent information across filings.

Policy changes — quick summary

  • Weighted entries by offered wage
    • Level IV: 4 entries
    • Level III: 3 entries
    • Level II: 2 entries
    • Level I: 1 entry
  • Candidate-focused selection
    • Each beneficiary is treated as a unique candidate, not a count of registrations.
  • Anti-abuse guardrails
    • Multiple registrations for the same person cause assignment to the lowest wage level among those filings.
  • Integrity checks
    • Verification steps to help ensure information matches across filings and that job offers are bona fide.

Important deadlines:
– Public comment period: September 24, 2025 – October 24, 2025
– Comments on associated information collections: through November 24, 2025
– Expected impact: changes are projected to affect the H-1B 2027 filing season

For official program details and the USCIS guidance page, see: USCIS’s H-1B specialty occupations page.

📝 Note
Note the October 24, 2025 deadline for public comments. Prepare a brief focused input on how wage weighting could affect your hiring plans and candidate pools.

Background on the H-1B program

The H-1B program allows U.S. employers to hire foreign workers in specialty occupations. Statutory caps limit new visas each fiscal year to 85,000, including 65,000 under the regular cap and 20,000 set aside for advanced degree holders.

DHS is responding to longstanding criticism that the current random system can favor volume-based registration tactics and does not always reflect the highest-skilled or best-compensated jobs.

Impact on applicants and employers

If finalized, the proposed selection method would likely shift incentives across the market:

  • Higher-wage offers gain better odds. Employers offering at higher wage levels would obtain more entries and therefore improved selection chances.
  • Potential employer responses
    • Some employers may raise offered pay to improve lottery odds.
    • Smaller companies and startups may face pressure to increase wages to stay competitive.
  • Access for lower-wage roles
    • Level I and II registrations still retain a path to selection (one or two entries), so lower-wage positions are not eliminated.
  • Candidate behavior
    • Candidates with competing offers might prefer roles with higher wage levels to boost their odds.
    • The candidate-centric rule — defaulting to the lowest wage level if multiple employers register the same person — reduces the benefit of multiple concurrent registrations and encourages clearer communication among candidates and employers.

Stakeholder views

  • Supporters argue the change:
    • Better aligns H-1B issuance with the program’s statutory intent.
    • Discourages practices that lead to perceived unfairness, such as mass duplicate registrations and underpayment.
  • Critics warn:
    • Early-stage firms and small regional employers might lose ground if they cannot match higher wage levels.
    • Potential impacts on innovation pipelines and local economies that rely on specialized talent.

DHS positions the candidate-centric approach and integrity checks as tools to reduce abuse and ensure fair competition based on job offer quality.

Integrity checks and administration

⚠️ Important
Warning: under the proposed system, small employers may face higher wage benchmarks to improve odds. If you’re a startup, plan for potential wage increases or adjust hiring timelines accordingly.

The proposed rule would add integrity checks intended to:

  • Ensure registration data matches across employer filings.
  • Confirm job offers are bona fide and that wage claims are not inflated or inconsistent.
  • Reduce the chance of inconsistent or inflated wage claims and the effects of duplicative registrations.

Details of these checks are in the proposed rule, but the overarching intent is to increase program trust and limit gaming.

What stakeholders should do now

  1. Note the comment deadlines:
    • Public rule comments: by October 24, 2025
    • Information-collection comments: by November 24, 2025
  2. Review the proposed rule and consider submitting feedback on:
    • Whether the wage-level weighting is calibrated appropriately.
    • How integrity checks should be implemented without undue burden.
    • Potential impacts on small employers, startups, and regional employers.
  3. Employers planning workforce needs multiple years ahead may want to:
    • Reassess compensation policies and budget planning.
    • Consider recruitment strategies under a wage-weighted environment.

Bottom line

If adopted, the H-1B selection would remain a lottery, but the odds would no longer be uniform. The wage-based weighting would tilt selection toward higher-paid roles, which DHS argues better serves the program’s purpose while retaining broader access. Employers, beneficiaries, trade groups, and labor organizations have a narrow window to comment on how the shift should be structured and how it will affect hiring and careers going forward.

VisaVerge.com
Learn Today
H-1B → A U.S. nonimmigrant visa program allowing employers to hire foreign workers in specialty occupations.
Weighted lottery → A selection method that gives multiple entries to certain registrations to increase their odds based on criteria like wages.
OEWS → Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics, a Department of Labor dataset used to determine wage levels.
Wage Level IV → The highest wage tier under OEWS; under the proposal, registrations at this level get four lottery entries.
Candidate-centric → An approach treating each beneficiary as a single candidate rather than counting multiple employer registrations separately.
Integrity checks → Verification steps intended to confirm that job offers are bona fide and that registration data is consistent.
Cap (statutory caps) → The annual limit on new H-1B visas: 85,000 total (65,000 regular, 20,000 for advanced-degree holders).

This Article in a Nutshell

DHS has proposed a salary-based, weighted H-1B lottery designed to favor higher-paid job offers while preserving access for lower-wage roles. Under the planned system, OEWS wage levels determine entries: Level IV gets four entries, Level III three, Level II two, and Level I one. A candidate-centric rule will treat each beneficiary uniquely and assign the lowest wage level if multiple employers submit registrations, reducing incentives to game the system. Additional integrity checks will verify bona fide job offers and consistent filing data. The public comment period runs from September 24 to October 24, 2025, with associated information-collection comments due by November 24, 2025. DHS expects the changes to affect the H-1B 2027 filing season, and stakeholders are urged to review the proposal and submit feedback on calibration, integrity measures, and impacts on small employers.

— VisaVerge.com
Share This Article
Facebook Pinterest Whatsapp Whatsapp Reddit Email Copy Link Print
What do you think?
Happy0
Sad0
Angry0
Embarrass0
Surprise0
Oliver Mercer
ByOliver Mercer
Chief Editor
Follow:
As the Chief Editor at VisaVerge.com, Oliver Mercer is instrumental in steering the website's focus on immigration, visa, and travel news. His role encompasses curating and editing content, guiding a team of writers, and ensuring factual accuracy and relevance in every article. Under Oliver's leadership, VisaVerge.com has become a go-to source for clear, comprehensive, and up-to-date information, helping readers navigate the complexities of global immigration and travel with confidence and ease.
Subscribe
Login
Notify of
guest

guest

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
U.S. Visa Invitation Letter Guide with Sample Letters
Visa

U.S. Visa Invitation Letter Guide with Sample Letters

U.S. Re-entry Requirements After International Travel
Knowledge

U.S. Re-entry Requirements After International Travel

Opening a Bank Account in the UK for US Citizens: A Guide for Expats
Knowledge

Opening a Bank Account in the UK for US Citizens: A Guide for Expats

Guide to Filling Out the Customs Declaration Form 6059B in the US
Travel

Guide to Filling Out the Customs Declaration Form 6059B in the US

How to Get a B-2 Tourist Visa for Your Parents
Guides

How to Get a B-2 Tourist Visa for Your Parents

How to Fill Form I-589: Asylum Application Guide
Guides

How to Fill Form I-589: Asylum Application Guide

Visa Requirements and Documents for Traveling to Cote d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast)
Knowledge

Visa Requirements and Documents for Traveling to Cote d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast)

Renew Indian Passport in USA: Step-by-Step Guide
Knowledge

Renew Indian Passport in USA: Step-by-Step Guide

You Might Also Like

Trump Targets Britain With Tough Pharmaceutical Tariffs
News

Trump Targets Britain With Tough Pharmaceutical Tariffs

By Visa Verge
Sudiksha Konanki’s Parents Urge Dominican Officials to Declare Her Dead
India

Sudiksha Konanki’s Parents Urge Dominican Officials to Declare Her Dead

By Visa Verge
H-1B Lottery Alternatives for Non-Selected Applicants
H1B

H-1B Lottery Alternatives for Non-Selected Applicants

By Jim Grey
Oklahoma Requires Teachers to Pass U.S. Naturalization Test
News

Oklahoma Requires Teachers to Pass U.S. Naturalization Test

By Oliver Mercer
Show More
VisaVerge official logo in Light white color VisaVerge official logo in Light white color
Facebook Twitter Youtube Rss Instagram Android

About US


At VisaVerge, we understand that the journey of immigration and travel is more than just a process; it’s a deeply personal experience that shapes futures and fulfills dreams. Our mission is to demystify the intricacies of immigration laws, visa procedures, and travel information, making them accessible and understandable for everyone.

Trending
  • Canada
  • F1Visa
  • Guides
  • Legal
  • NRI
  • Questions
  • Situations
  • USCIS
Useful Links
  • History
  • Holidays 2025
  • LinkInBio
  • My Feed
  • My Saves
  • My Interests
  • Resources Hub
  • Contact USCIS
VisaVerge

2025 © VisaVerge. All Rights Reserved.

  • About US
  • Community Guidelines
  • Contact US
  • Cookie Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Ethics Statement
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
wpDiscuz
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?