H-1B selection rates see 50% jump

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US immigration attorneys are seeing a significant increase in selection rates in H-1B applications this year, with as much as half of those being accepted, even as the number of petitions filed for the work permit has declined amid regulatory changes.

The average selection rate was 35% last year, according to data from the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS).

Companies, particularly in the technology sector, that seek to bring skilled foreign workers to the US filed fewer petitions for these non-immigrant visas this season due to high application fees and uncertainty amid an overhaul of the lottery system. This contributed to the higher acceptance rate, according to experts. The USCIS started sending notifications to employers after the H-1B application window ended on March 19. The selected candidates will have 90 days, starting April 1, to file for the visa at US embassies or consulates in their home countries.

Unlike previous years, the H-1B registration saw a significant overhaul this year.

In addition to the $100,000 fee for fresh H-1B petitions that came into effect on September 21, 2025, the Trump administration also introduced selection of H-1B registrations based on wage levels in place of random lottery for FY27. The fiscal year for the USCIS begins in September.

These measures had resulted in a 30-50% decline in the number of petitions filed this H-1B cap season. Gnanamookan Senthurjothi, founder of immigration platform The Visa Code, said that if they were filing 100 applications last year, this year they filed only 30-40. Also, most applications were for higher wage levels.