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.
F1Visa

OPT Under Fire: Indian Students Face Uncertainty Over Jobs and Status

A proposed $100,000 H‑1B fee, tougher DHS rules, and stepped-up enforcement are making OPT-to-H‑1B transitions riskier for Indian students. Over 69,000 were flagged in recent sweeps. Tax bills could add 15.3% FICA on OPT wages. Students should document jobs, file timely I‑765 forms, stay in close contact with DSOs, and prepare backup plans, including relocation or STEM reclassification to extend OPT.

Last updated: October 17, 2025 2:00 am
SHARE
VisaVerge.com
📋
Key takeaways
A proposed one-time $100,000 H-1B fee for petitions filed on/after Sept. 21, 2025 threatens OPT→H-1B transitions.
ICE and SEVP flagged over 69,000 Indian students in a sweep, increasing SEVIS termination and enforcement risks.
Bills like the OPT Fair Tax Act could impose ~15.3% FICA, reducing students’ take-home pay and hiring incentives.

(NEW DELHI) Indian students across the United States 🇺🇸 are racing to protect jobs, paychecks, and legal status as the long‑reliable OPT bridge from classroom to career faces its toughest test in years. A new one‑time $100,000 H‑1B fee on fresh petitions filed on or after September 21, 2025, proposed limits on how companies can place international hires, and stepped‑up enforcement have raised the risk that a small mistake could end a student’s U.S. plans. University advisers describe heavier caseloads, employers are second‑guessing sponsorship, and students on OPT fear that one sudden status change could force them to leave the country.

At the center is OPT, the program that lets F‑1 students work in jobs tied to their degree for up to 12 months, or up to 36 months for STEM graduates. For many Indian students, OPT is the only practical way to earn U.S. experience before trying for H‑1B, the main employer‑sponsored work visa. Because Indian nationals make up the largest group of international students in the country, policy shocks ripple through campuses, family finances, and hiring teams.

OPT Under Fire: Indian Students Face Uncertainty Over Jobs and Status
OPT Under Fire: Indian Students Face Uncertainty Over Jobs and Status

For official background on how OPT works, the U.S. government’s guidance is available at DHS’s Study in the States portal: Optional Practical Training (OPT) for F‑1 Students.

Policy shocks, fees, and enforcement

The sticker shock from the $100,000 H‑1B fee is real. While exemptions may apply and renewals are not affected, the headline number alone has led many companies—especially smaller firms and startups—to delay or drop sponsorship plans for graduating students.

Concurrently, the Department of Homeland Security has floated rule changes that could:

  • Limit third‑party client placements
  • Tighten eligibility proof requirements
  • Narrow certain exemptions that previously reduced compliance burdens

All of this makes the OPT → H‑1B handoff more fragile and less predictable.

Tax debates in Congress add another pressure point. Bills including Senator Tom Cotton’s OPT Fair Tax Act and the broader DIGNITY Act of 2025 aim to remove the current payroll tax break for students on OPT, which would force both workers and employers to pay FICA taxes of about 15.3%. If enacted, those taxes would:

  • Cut take‑home pay for students
  • Raise total labor costs for companies
  • Likely dampen hiring of recent graduates on OPT

Meanwhile, enforcement is running hotter. ICE and the Student and Exchange Visitor Program (SEVP) have sent warning letters and launched broad checks. Key metrics cited in recent reports include:

  • More than 69,000 Indian students flagged in a recent ICE sweep for alleged employment lapses tied to their OPT records, risking SEVIS termination
  • Increased unannounced employer visits under USCIS’s Administrative Site Visit & Verification Program (ASVVP) — visits now include worksites and sometimes homes
  • Compliance checks focusing more on whether job duties, locations, and hours truly align with the degree and what was reported to the DSO

Important takeaway: enforcement now examines the match between job duties and degree more closely, as well as the accuracy of reported locations and hours.

On‑the‑ground fallout for students

A widely shared Reddit case illustrated the system’s fragility: an employer withdrew an H‑1B petition just before its start date, but USCIS records had already auto‑activated the change of status. SEVIS then auto‑terminated the student’s record, and the student slipped out of status overnight.

Immigration lawyers say these electronic timing issues are not rare. When system triggers fire before a formal withdrawal is recorded, students may have few options and very little time.

Fixing such disruptions often requires a rapid, precisely timed sequence of steps:

  1. Obtain formal written confirmation from USCIS that the H‑1B petition has been withdrawn.
  2. Ask the DSO to request a SEVIS data correction so the student’s record reflects the correct, earlier status.
  3. If needed, file for reinstatement under F‑1 rules using Form I‑539 (Application to Extend/Change Nonimmigrant Status): USCIS I‑539.
  4. In tougher cases, depart the U.S. and re‑enter on a new F‑1 visa to reset status.

Students on initial OPT also face tight reporting timelines and substantive requirements:

  • Work must be related to the degree
  • Employment details must be kept current with the DSO
  • Gaps in employment or missed reporting can trigger warnings or SEVIS termination
  • OPT applicants must seek employment authorization from USCIS via Form I‑765 (Application for Employment Authorization): USCIS I‑765

With stricter vetting and more background checks in 2025, students are applying earlier to reduce the risk of delayed start dates.

💡 Tip
Prepare a detailed OPT plan now: map each job to your degree, keep all documentation organized, and use Form I-765 promptly to secure employment authorization.

How students are adjusting

As policy pressures mount, Indian students are building contingencies:

  • Keeping a “Plan B” such as returning to India or moving to countries with more predictable post‑study options (Canada 🇨🇦, Australia, Germany)
  • Shifting majors or adding STEM qualifications to secure longer OPT extensions
  • Seeking roles at global firms likely to relocate employees if U.S. sponsorship becomes difficult

Practical steps DSOs and lawyers advise for Indian students:

  • Keep steady, proactive contact with your DSO and respond immediately to any SEVP or USCIS emails
  • Document job title, duties, supervisor’s name, work location(s), and start/stop dates; save offer letters and pay stubs
  • Match job duties to your degree field in plain language and be ready to explain tasks and tools used on the job
  • Consult counsel immediately if you receive a warning, request for evidence, or any SEVIS notice about termination
  • If an employer plans to withdraw an H‑1B, request a written date and ensure your DSO is notified the same day

What universities and employers are bracing for

Campus leaders warn that shrinking OPT access — or even the fear of surprise status loss — can alter application patterns from India. Consequences for universities may include:

  • Lower international enrollment, affecting budgets
  • Fewer teaching assistants in STEM labs
  • Reduced industry‑campus collaborations and potential delays in research projects

Employers are facing a different squeeze. OPT has long served as a trial period to train and assess international hires before committing to an H‑1B. Now:

  • The $100,000 H‑1B fee prompts finance and HR to scrutinize each case
  • Tighter rules on third‑party placements may force companies to bring work in‑house or send projects abroad
  • Potential payroll tax changes (FICA at 15.3%) could lead companies to reduce offers or switch hires to contractor roles that may not qualify as valid OPT employment — inadvertently harming students’ status

Some employers are exploring cross‑border teams or short‑term assignments outside the U.S. as alternatives that keep talent in the corporate pipeline while delaying a stateside role.

Policy tweaks in 2025 brought a few mitigations:

  • A clearer 60‑day grace period after OPT ends, allowing more time to transfer schools or prepare next steps
  • Easier transfers between SEVP‑certified schools at the same or higher level without losing status

However, these gains are overshadowed by the fee shock, the enforcement climate, and longer security checks that can slow visa issuance.

⚠️ Important
Be aware: a withdrawn H-1B can auto-terminate SEVIS records if not properly coordinated; secure written withdrawal confirmation and request a SEVIS correction immediately.

For families in India, the stakes are immediate. Many budget study plans assuming a year or two of U.S. work to repay loans. A sudden SEVIS termination or a withdrawn H‑1B can upend those plans within days. That is why advisers emphasize early, careful filing; detailed job documentation; and clear employer communication. Students should ask pointed questions in interviews about:

  • Sponsorship timelines
  • Job locations and remote work policies
  • Who will respond if government officers visit the office

Practical priorities for students now

Despite anxiety, pathways remain for well‑documented, degree‑related roles at employers with solid immigration practices. Still, the margin for error is thinner. Indian students should focus on three priorities:

  1. File clean, timely OPT applications with clear proof that the job matches the degree — use Form I‑765 and track delivery and receipts.
  2. Keep status records current with the DSO and retain evidence of every report and update.
  3. Discuss H‑1B costs, withdrawal risks, and contingency plans openly with employers so expectations and responsibilities are clear.

Warning: Early planning cannot eliminate every shock, but it can reduce damage if plans change.

As Washington debates tax bills and refines visa rules, technical red tape has very real effects on young careers and family budgets. The fight over OPT and H‑1B is a contest for global talent: if the U.S. raises costs and risks too high, more graduates will take their skills to countries that promise a steadier launch. For Indian students weighing offers this fall, that choice now feels far less theoretical—and far more urgent.

VisaVerge.com
Learn Today
OPT → Optional Practical Training, a program allowing F-1 students to work in roles related to their degree for 12–36 months.
H-1B fee → A proposed one-time $100,000 charge on new H-1B petitions filed on or after Sept. 21, 2025.
SEVIS → Student and Exchange Visitor Information System, the database that tracks international students’ status and employment records.
DSO → Designated School Official, the campus representative who manages international student SEVIS records and reporting.
Form I-765 → USCIS application form used by F-1 students to request employment authorization for OPT.
Form I-539 → USCIS form used to extend or change nonimmigrant status, including F-1 reinstatement requests.
ASVVP → Administrative Site Visit & Verification Program, USCIS inspections of employer worksites and compliance.
FICA → Federal Insurance Contributions Act taxes (Social Security and Medicare), combined around 15.3% of wages if applied.

This Article in a Nutshell

OPT, the F-1 program enabling up to 12 months of work (36 for eligible STEM degrees), is under strain from a proposed $100,000 one-time H‑1B fee effective Sept. 21, 2025, DHS rule changes limiting third‑party placements and tightening eligibility proofs, and heightened enforcement by ICE and SEVP. These shifts have prompted employers to reconsider sponsorship, increased DSO caseloads, and left Indian students vulnerable to rapid status loss—over 69,000 were flagged in recent checks. Concurrent tax proposals could impose roughly 15.3% FICA on OPT wages, cutting take-home pay and raising labor costs. Students are advised to document degree-related duties, file clean I‑765 applications, maintain timely SEVIS reporting, and coordinate closely with DSOs and legal counsel. Universities and employers may see enrollment and hiring impacts, while many students prepare contingency plans including relocation to countries with clearer post-study routes.

— VisaVerge.com
Share This Article
Facebook Pinterest Whatsapp Whatsapp Reddit Email Copy Link Print
What do you think?
Happy0
Sad0
Angry0
Embarrass0
Surprise0
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.
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

ICE Philadelphia Removes Honduran Fugitive Wanted for Femicide and Attempted Homicide
Immigration

ICE Philadelphia Removes Honduran Fugitive Wanted for Femicide and Attempted Homicide

By Jim Grey
358 Migrants Use Same CBP One Address in Central California
Immigration

358 Migrants Use Same CBP One Address in Central California

By Robert Pyne
Impact of New Remittance Excise Tax on H‑1B Families Sending Money Home
H1B

Impact of New Remittance Excise Tax on H‑1B Families Sending Money Home

By Oliver Mercer
Ontario Gas Leak Incident: Indian Student Suffers Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
News

Ontario Gas Leak Incident: Indian Student Suffers Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

By Jim Grey
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?