H-1B Visas Changes Approved by White House: Report
Source: Newsweek
Published Aug 12, 2025 at 11:09 AM EDT Updated Aug 13, 2025 at 4:51 AM EDT
A proposed Department of Homeland Security rule that would alter how H-1B visas are allocated has cleared review by the White House's Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA), according to Bloomberg Law.
Federal regulators cleared a proposed rule that would apply a "weighted selection process" by replacing the current random lottery with a new system that gives priority in the selection process to registrants who meet or exceed certain criteria, such as wage or education level. Newsweek reached out to the DHS and the OIRA for comment.
Why It Matters
The H-1B program supplies tens of thousands of specialty-occupation workers to U.S. employers each year and is heavily used by the technology sector. Any shift from a random lottery to a weighted, wage- or skill-based system could change hiring incentives for employers, affecting which foreign professionals obtain U.S. work authorization.
The H-1B cap of 85,000 slots annually influences employers' ability to hire specialized foreign workers in fields including engineering, computer science and business specialties. Any change to the selection criteria could incentivize employers to offer higher wages to improve odds in a weighted system or change recruitment strategies.
Read more: https://www.newsweek.com/h-1b-visas-changes-approved-white-house-report-2112216

TBA
(885 posts)we need to be reducing the number of H-1B visas. The labor market is collapsing.
The number of open positions for programmers is miniscule.
Thank god I'm retiring soon.
cadoman
(1,617 posts)You think it's at the bottom but the bottom is when your job is subject to regulations beyond what an H1B would be (insurance, licensing, inspections, etc.) and it becomes financially impossible to compete.
LudwigPastorius
(13,395 posts)Looks like you're getting out at the right time.
TBA
(885 posts)But the reduction in jobs was more gradual and many younger programmers were pivoting learning new AI related skills.
Then Trump took office and it went downhill fast. DOGE, lost contracts, economic uncertainty; even the big companies are contracting.
Nigrum Cattus
(1,002 posts)All those 85,000 tech jobs could easily be filled by
Americans. They don't want to pay American wages.
Also, those workers always have the threat of having
their visas revoked at any time, real BS
itcfish
(1,834 posts)President Obama tried to reduce the number of these VISAS and republicans in congress voted against it.
ClaudetteCC
(106 posts)speaking out against H-1B visas on multiple occasions.
ClaudetteCC
(106 posts)Norrrm
(2,979 posts)PSPS
(14,918 posts)North Coast Lawyer
(186 posts)We need to go further and get rid of these indentured servitude visas. They're bad for everybody except corporations who don't want to pay equitable wages.
Hieronymus Phact
(664 posts)This whole program should be revoked.
iemanja
(56,700 posts)They do this and even list educational accomplishments as a criterion, though they don't want PhD students.
LudwigPastorius
(13,395 posts)uhh...yeah

Norrrm
(2,979 posts)
fujiyamasan
(676 posts)Companies have clearly abused it, by using degree creep as an excuse to also lower wages.
But Im always amused by the replies to stories about the H1-B program.
If this was about curtailing asylum seekers or ending TPS (both of which have been abused too), many on this site are outraged.