H-1B FY2026 Cap Planning: Best Practices For Employers

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The FY2026 H-1B Cap Registration period will run from 7 March to 24 March 2025, as recently confirmed by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). With the H-1B modernization regulation taking effect on 17 January 2025, employers should take a strategic approach to this year’s lottery. This article highlights key changes and best practices to maximize success in the H-1B process.




What Is Changing in H-1B Cap Registration?​


The most significant update for FY2026 is the sharp rise in the registration fee:


  • Previous fee: $10 per beneficiary
  • New fee: $215 per beneficiary

This 2000% increase, introduced in USCIS’s revised fee schedule (effective 1 April 2024), is designed to cover the cost of administering the registration system.


The beneficiary-centric selection model continues from FY2025. This means:


  • The lottery is based on the individual beneficiary rather than the number of employer registrations.
  • Multiple employers may register the same beneficiary.
  • If selected, all sponsoring employers are notified and may file petitions for that beneficiary.

With higher costs per entry, employers must be more deliberate in deciding which candidates to register.




Why the H-1B Remains Valuable​


The H-1B visa continues to be one of the most versatile and advantageous U.S. work visas:


  • Dual intent allows beneficiaries to pursue permanent residence without jeopardizing their nonimmigrant status.
  • Extensions beyond six years are available under the American Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century Act (AC21):
    • Three-year increments: For those with an approved I-140 whose priority date is not yet current.
    • One-year increments: For those with a PERM or I-140 pending for 365+ days.

This makes the H-1B particularly attractive in light of ongoing immigrant visa backlogs, especially for nationals of India and China.




Selecting Candidates for H-1B Registration​


Employers should review their workforce carefully and prioritize employees in the following categories:


  • F-1 Students: Often working under OPT (12 months) or STEM OPT (up to 36 months with E-Verify employers).
  • L-1 Intracompany Transferees: L-1A holders have seven years of stay; L-1B holders have five years. Both must reset their clock by spending 365 days abroad.
  • TN Professionals: Available to Canadians and Mexicans but carries challenges due to its single intent nature.
  • Dependents (H-4, L-2, TD): Their work authorization depends on the principal status (only L-2 allows work incident to status).
  • DACA and TPS Holders: May be considered given program uncertainty, though eligibility to change status must be reviewed.



Impact of the H-1B Modernization Rule​


The modernization regulation brings greater clarity to the “specialty occupation” definition:


  • Employers may specify multiple acceptable degree fields if all are logically connected to the job duties.
  • Employers must document the link between each degree field and the role’s responsibilities.
  • Job descriptions must be detailed, showing how education directly relates to duties.
  • The Labor Condition Application (LCA) must accurately correspond to the offered role.

Careful pre-registration review of job and candidate profiles will help reduce the risk of denials later in the process.




Options for Employees Not Selected​


Given selection rates of 25–30% in recent years, employers should plan alternatives for strong candidates who are not chosen. Options include:


  • Country-specific visas: TN (Canada/Mexico), E-3 (Australia), H-1B1 (Chile/Singapore), and E-1/E-2 (treaty traders/investors).
  • F-1 Extensions: Additional study, OPT, STEM OPT, or Curricular Practical Training (CPT).
  • O-1 Visa: For individuals with extraordinary ability or achievement.
  • L-1 Transfers: Placement in a qualifying role abroad, followed by a U.S. transfer after one year.
  • Dependent Status: Where spouses hold valid U.S. immigration status (work authorization varies).



Key Takeaways for Employers​


  • Budget carefully: The registration fee increase requires more selectivity in candidate choice.
  • Prioritize documentation: Ensure job descriptions and degree requirements align under the modernization rule.
  • Plan early: Begin identifying candidates now to avoid rushed filings during the March window.
  • Have a backup plan: With lottery odds remaining uncertain, alternative visa strategies are essential.
 
The 2,000 % fee increase from $10 to $215 changes the registration economics completely. Employers will now need to treat the lottery like a real budget item, not a token formality. Larger tech firms can absorb it, but smaller consultancies will have to be selective and strategic.
 
I remember when we could register fifty candidates in a day without thinking twice! 😅 This year, our HR team actually held a meeting to vote on which STEM-OPT employees to prioritize. It’s tough — especially when everyone’s contracts end around the same time.
 
Not surprised by the fee hike — USCIS has been telegraphing it for months. What worries me more is the “specialty occupation” scrutiny under the modernization rule. I expect a spike in Requests for Evidence. Employers should lock down degree-to-duty correlations now rather than patch them post-lottery.
 
If selection odds stay around 25 %, then four out of five talented workers still get left out every year. That’s not a system — that’s a raffle. At some point Congress needs to expand visa numbers instead of just adjusting fees.
 
“Preparation is the mother of confidence.” 🌟 Employers who start candidate reviews early, document thoroughly, and keep backup visa routes ready will navigate this year just fine. The goal isn’t luck — it’s readiness. 💼✨