H-1B · 2025–2026
Two H-1B changes are getting mixed up.
One is a $100,000 fee. One is a new lottery. Here is what each one actually is — what's settled, what's still moving — with a link to the official source on every point.
The H-1B lottery is now wage-weighted
Starting with the FY 2027 cap season, USCIS no longer runs a purely random lottery. Under a DHS final rule — Weighted Selection Process for Registrants and Petitioners Seeking To File Cap-Subject H-1B Petitions, published December 29, 2025 and effective February 27, 2026 — each registration gets entries based on its Department of Labor OEWS wage level.
More entries means better odds — but not a guarantee. Real probability depends on the whole pool, the separate advanced-degree round, and a rule that counts a beneficiary with multiple registrations at the lowest wage level. The statutory caps are unchanged: 65,000 regular plus 20,000 for U.S. master's degrees. Cap-exempt employers stay outside the lottery entirely.
Sources DHS final rule · Federal Register·USCIS news release
The $100,000 fee was struck down
A White House proclamation on September 19, 2025 created a $100,000 payment tied to certain new H-1B petitions, framed as a "restriction on entry." On June 8, 2026, a federal district court in Massachusetts ruled the payment is a tax the President had no authority to impose, and vacated the policy materials implementing it. The White House has said it expects to appeal.
So as of mid-June 2026, this fee is not in effect — but treat it as active litigation, not a permanent outcome. If you see a video or post claiming you "won't have to pay $100K," check the date. The current reality is a court order the government may challenge, not a settled rule.
Sources White House proclamation·White House H-1B FAQ·Reuters · court ruling
On F-1 / OPT / STEM OPT inside the U.S.? Not the main target
Even while the fee was in effect, USCIS's October 20, 2025 implementation guidance focused it on beneficiaries outside the U.S. without a valid H-1B visa — plus certain in-country requests routed through consular notification, port-of-entry notification, or pre-flight inspection. A normal change of status from F-1 / OPT / STEM OPT, filed inside the U.S. while you maintain valid status, was not the primary target. Legal analysis noted the fee did not apply to in-country change-of-status requests, extensions, or amendments.
With the fee now vacated, this point is somewhat moot for the moment. The durable thing to plan around is the wage-weighted lottery, your wage level, and keeping valid status — not the fee drama.
If you're a student
- The fee headline is loud but unstable. Don't build your plan on it — in either direction.
- The wage-weighted lottery is the real, durable change. Your offered wage level now affects your odds.
- Maintaining valid status and timing your change of status correctly matters more than the fee noise.