(UNITED STATES) President Trump’s first year back in office has brought a new wave of immigration executive orders and proclamations that reach into campuses, labs, and workplaces across the country. International students on F-1, J-1, and M-1 visas, and companies that employ H-1B workers and other specialists, are seeing tighter rules, higher costs, and more checks at every stage—from consular interviews to secondary inspection at ports of entry.
Some policies took effect right away. Others are tied up in court or will move through a formal rulemaking process. But the direction is clear: more control at the border and more conditions on who can study and work in the United States 🇺🇸.

Key executive actions and proclamations
- EO 14160 — “Protecting the Meaning and Value of American Citizenship” (January 2025)
Seeks to limit birthright citizenship to children of U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents. Courts have blocked the measure for now, yet it signals a stricter reading of immigration law that could affect long-term family planning, students who later seek permanent residence, and employers that sponsor foreign talent. -
EO 14159 — “Protecting the American People Against Invasion” (January 2025)
Expanded border enforcement and expedited-removal powers. The immediate effect is tighter screening for all nonimmigrant travelers, including student and work visa holders. Universities and employers report more questions about program dates, funding, and job duties at primary inspection and more frequent referrals to secondary checks. -
Presidential proclamation — $100,000 supplemental fee on certain H-1B filings (September 19, 2025)
Targets new H-1B petitions filed for workers outside the United States after September 25, 2025, aiming to discourage offshore outsourcing and encourage hiring people already in the country. Analysis by VisaVerge.com shows mid-size tech and consulting firms reassessing hiring plans for project-based roles that relied on consular processing. -
DHS/USCIS clarifications (October 2025)
Narrowed who must pay and when:- The supplemental fee applies only to initial H-1B petitions filed from abroad; it does not apply to extensions, amendments, or change-of-employer filings for workers already in the United States.
- Cap-exempt institutions (universities, nonprofit research groups, affiliated teaching hospitals) are exempt.
- Certain national-interest roles in advanced-degree STEM and AI fields can be exempt with certification from the National Science & Technology Council.
- Small employers with fewer than 100 employees have an enforcement pause because of a pending U.S. Chamber of Commerce lawsuit.
- Payment timing is set at visa issuance (consular stage), not at petition filing. Existing H-1B visas remain valid; there is no retroactive collection. Court challenges continue.
- Proposed end to “Duration of Status” (D/S) (DHS proposal, August 27, 2025)
Would replace open-ended D/S for F-1, J-1, and M-1 visa holders with fixed end dates—often between two and four years. Extensions would be required to continue studies, join OPT, or move to H-1B. The goal: clearer recordkeeping and easier enforcement. The proposal must go through public comment and final rulemaking and has not taken effect.
Broader operational changes (2025)
- Reduced visa validity in some countries — sometimes single-entry, three-month visas.
- Increased consular interview scrutiny, especially for applicants with travel to security-sensitive regions.
- Expanded security screening of online activity; officers ask more about research fields, social media, and foreign funding.
- Longer timelines and increased uncertainty even for well-documented applicants.
Important takeaway: expect more questions and documentary requests at consulates, ports of entry, and initial inspections—carry up-to-date documents and know your dates and funding.
Four main policy tracks (summary)
- Enforcement themes from the January EOs — expedited removal expanded, raising the stakes for inconsistent answers or unclear funding.
- EO 14160’s broader posture — favors fixed timelines and stricter documentation even where changes aren’t immediate.
- H-1B supplemental fee — $100,000 per petition for certain overseas filings; clarified exemptions reduce the impact for universities, nonprofits, small employers, and in-country filings.
- Proposed end to D/S — would increase administrative workload for schools and put higher importance on timing for students and exchange visitors.
Practical advice for applicants and sponsors
Students:
– Check your I-20 end date and keep SEVIS records current.
– Build in time for possible extensions.
– File Form I-765 early for OPT; late filings can reduce authorized work time.
– If moving to H-1B, discuss filing strategies with your employer; in-country change of status may avoid the supplemental fee.
Scholars and J-1 visitors:
– Expect deeper questions about funding, hosting, and research subject matter—especially if research overlaps sensitive tech.
M-1 students:
– Fixed periods could compress already short vocational timelines—plan conservatively.
H-1B workers:
– If already in the U.S. and employer files extension, amendment, or transfer, the supplemental fee does not apply (current guidance).
– If abroad and a brand-new H-1B petition is required, plan for the extra cost unless exempt.
– Employers should evaluate exemptions early (national-interest certifications take time).
Employers and universities:
– Update onboarding checklists and internal deadlines for potential fixed stay periods.
– Create an intake survey to flag:
– Whether a new hire is abroad,
– Whether the position could qualify for national-interest exemption,
– Whether the employer is cap-exempt or a small employer (<100 employees).
– Hold short meetings with counsel or create intake forms to avoid refiling or extra fees.
Implementation details and forms
- H-1B filings: Employers file Form I-129. For workers abroad, the supplemental fee—if applicable—is due upon visa issuance at the consulate, not at petition filing.
- Student work authorization: F-1 students use Form I-765 to request an EAD for OPT.
- Extensions / change of status: Use Form I-539 if DHS finalizes fixed stay periods.
- Visa stamping: Complete DS-160 for consular interviews. Prepare extra proof of funds, detailed study/research plans, and ties to your program/job.
- Consular and port-of-entry checks: Carry recent enrollment or job letters and practice short, clear answers on your studies/job duties.
Official form links:
– Form I-129 (Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker): USCIS Form I-129
– Form I-539 (Application to Extend/Change Nonimmigrant Status): USCIS Form I-539
– Form I-765 (Application for Employment Authorization, including OPT): USCIS Form I-765
– DS-160 (Online Nonimmigrant Visa Application): U.S. Department of State DS-160
Short, practical steps to reduce risk
- Meet early with your DSO (at least a semester before graduation) to map OPT and any STEM extension.
- Ask HR for a one-page summary of job duties matching the H-1B petition.
- Employers: create a one-page policy memo on the supplemental fee, exemptions, and steps for national-interest certification.
- Keep copies of job offers, funding letters, and updated I-20s; don’t travel close to filing deadlines or program end dates.
- Maintain clean SEVIS records and brief managers on sponsorship basics (public access files, wage levels, consular vs. in-country processes).
Human and market impacts
- Students and families face stress from travel uncertainty and tighter timelines.
- Universities worry about declines in F-1 enrollment and the extra administrative burden.
- Companies dependent on offshore recruitment are recalculating costs; some build nearshore teams or convert interns to in-country hires to avoid extra fees.
- Global talent markets shift — Canada, the U.K., and Germany are becoming more attractive to candidates weighing options.
Rule of thumb: always know the end date of your authorized stay. If D/S ends, that date will drive filings, travel, and work authorization.
Glossary (quick)
- SEVIS — Student and Exchange Visitor Information System.
- I-20 — School-issued form showing your program and funding details.
- EAD — Employment Authorization Document (after
Form I-765approval). - Form I-129 — Employer petition for many temporary work categories (including H-1B).
- Form I-539 — Application to extend/change certain nonimmigrant statuses.
- DS-160 — Online nonimmigrant visa application for consular interviews.
What to watch next
Three possible near-term shifts:
– Courts could narrow or pause the H-1B supplemental fee.
– DHS could finalize the rule ending D/S, probably with a phased timetable.
– Consular operations could keep stricter interview standards through the academic year, causing longer waits and more questions for recent graduates.
Each outcome will affect enrollment targets, hiring cycles, and travel planning.
Final guidance
2025 has reshaped the daily reality for student visas and H-1B workers through a mix of executive orders, a new supplemental fee for some overseas hires, and a pending rule that may end open-ended student stays. The message from Washington is one of consistency and control. The response from campuses and companies is early planning and careful execution.
Those who prepare—by checking dates, gathering documents, and choosing the right filing path—will still find doors open, even as the rules grow stricter.
This Article in a Nutshell
The 2025 policy landscape introduced multiple executive actions affecting international students and skilled workers. EO 14159 expands expedited removal and tightens entry screening for nonimmigrant travelers. EO 14160 seeks to restrict birthright citizenship but remains blocked in courts. A presidential proclamation imposes a $100,000 supplemental fee on initial H-1B petitions filed from abroad starting September 25, 2025; DHS/USCIS later clarified exemptions for cap-exempt institutions, certain STEM/AI national-interest roles, and paused enforcement for small employers amid litigation. DHS proposed ending Duration of Status for F-1, J-1 and M-1 holders, replacing open-ended stays with fixed end dates. Practical impacts include shorter visa validity in some countries, tougher consular interviews, longer processing times, and increased administrative burdens for universities and employers. Stakeholders should verify I-20/SEVIS records, prepare documentation, assess exemption eligibility, and consult counsel for filing strategies.