City
Epaper

US H-1B visa fee unlikely to dent IT companies’ margins significantly: Report

By IANS | Updated: September 22, 2025 13:40 IST

New Delhi, Sep 22 The US government's order, which restricts entry for H-1B visa petitioners unless they pay ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Sep 22 The US government's order, which restricts entry for H-1B visa petitioners unless they pay a one-time fee of $100,000, is unlikely to significantly impact large- and mid-cap IT services firms in India, a report said on Monday.

The restrictions can be addressed through increased local hiring, subcontracting, or offshoring, a report from fund management firm Equirus said.

The restriction, unless extended, will remain effective for 12 months from September 21, 2025, unless renewed and applies solely to new visa applicants.

Equirus estimated that the fee would lower the operating profit margins of large-cap IT companies by only 7 to 14 basis points if it only applies to new H-1Bs, and by 26 to 49 basis points if it includes new and existing visa holders outside the US.

Mid-cap firms would experience impacts ranging from 21 to 39 basis points for new applicants and 60 to 109 basis points if applied to new and existing visa holders outside the US.

Analysts said that the Indian IT vendors have reduced their on-site H-1B workforce over the past six to eight years. Such visas form around 25-35 per cent for most of the large caps and 30-60 per cent for most of the others, in our view, the report said.

Restriction-related payment of $0.1 million is in many cases higher than the salary of the H1-B visa holders paid by many Indian IT vendors.

"Hence, we believe common sense will prevail in replacing those affected applicants by doing incremental hiring of locals or green card holders or subcontractors and doing offshoring," the report said.

However, the fund management firm maintained that sales growth may decelerate slightly in the latter half of fiscal 2026, as the required pivoting needs proper planning or client approvals.

Approximately 71 per cent of H-1B visa holders are from India, primarily working for technology companies including Infosys, Wipro, Cognisant, and Tata Consultancy Services.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalTheyab bin Tahnoon unveils Dubai Miracle Garden Season 14 with host of new attractions

InternationalEight nations back Trump's Gaza peace plan

InternationalTwo new cases of polio takes nationwide tally to 29 in Pakistan

InternationalPakistan: Police personnel shot dead in Karachi while resisting a robbery

InternationalNetanyahu expresses deep regret over Doha attack in three-way call hosted by Trump with Al Thani

International Realted Stories

International"Plan to end war in Gaza achieves our war aims": Netanyahu rules out any role for Hamas or Palestinian Authority

International"If accepted by Hamas, it means immediate end to war itself": Trump on Gaza peace plan

InternationalWhite House releases please plan to end the Gaza conflict

InternationalIndian High Commission in London strongly "condemns" vandalism of Mahatma Gandhi's statue at Tavistock Square

InternationalTrump hosts phone call between Israel & Qatar; Netanyahu expresses 'deep regret'