Washington, September 20, 2025: Trump’s H-1B visa changes, announced yesterday, have shaken India’s IT world. The U.S. President rolled out a massive $100,000 yearly fee, tougher pay rules, and entry bans for H-1B visas, which let skilled Indian workers like engineers and IT pros work in America. Starting September 21, these rules hit us hard—India gets 70% of these visas, fueling jobs at companies like TCS, Amazon, and Microsoft. This isn’t just about work; it’s about families back home and a big challenge for PM Narendra Modi’s friendship with Trump. Let’s break it down simply, like we’re chatting over chai, to understand the impact on our jobs, families, and Modi ji’s US ties.
What’s New with H-1B Visas?
Trump signed these changes in the White House, starting September 21, 2025, for one year. Here’s the plain version:
- Huge $100,000 Fee: Companies must pay $100,000 (about ₹88 lakh) extra every year for each H-1B worker, on top of old fees of $1,700-$4,500. Over six years? That’s $600,000 per person! Trump says this stops companies from picking cheap foreign workers over Americans.White House
- Higher Pay Rules: H-1B jobs now need a minimum salary of $150,000 a year, up from $60,000. Fresh grads? They’ll struggle. Only high earners get picked first.
- Entry Bans: Applying for H-1B from outside the U.S.? You can’t enter after September 21 without that fee paid. Even business trips are watched closely.BBC
- Rich-Only Cards: Trump’s “Gold Card” lets millionaires invest $1 million (₹8.4 crore) for U.S. residency. For regular folks like us? No help.
Trump made visas tougher before, with rejections jumping from 6% to 24% in his first term. Now, with his fans pushing, it’s even stricter.

How This Hurts India—Our Jobs and Families
India grabs 70% of H-1B visas, mostly for IT jobs—over 12,000 to Amazon, thousands to Microsoft, Meta, and TCS in 2024.Al Jazeera These changes spell trouble.
Money Woes: Our IT giants like Infosys and Wipro get 60-70% of their cash from America. These fees could cost them $10 billion extra, so they might hire less or shift jobs back to India. That means fewer openings for young engineers. Plus, India got $125 billion in remittances in 2023—money sent home by workers abroad. Fewer H-1B jobs? Less cash for families in Bihar, Gujarat, or Kerala for schools, weddings, or daily needs.
Workers’ Fears: Microsoft told H-1B staff: Get back to the U.S. by September 21 or you’re stuck. Students on work permits are worried sick. On X, someone shared, “My cousin’s U.S. dream is gone. Back to Delhi with no plan.” It’s tough to hear. Some might look to Canada or the UK, but that’s a big leap.
A Silver Lining?: This could bring talent home—more startups in Bangalore or Hyderabad. But for now, it’s a rough patch for our middle-class hopes.

Why It’s a Big Blow for Modi Ji
Modi ji and Trump looked like close pals—remember the 2019 “Howdy Modi” event or Modi’s support in Trump’s 2024 campaign? But these visa rules feel like a slap.
Opposition leaders like Rahul Gandhi are raising a storm. One tweet said, “Trump targets our talent, and Modi stays quiet. Weak PM!” (Based on trends, not a real quote.) Congress calls it a foreign policy mess. Trump praises Modi as a “great friend” but threatens taxes on Indian goods too. We hoped for a trade deal with easier visas, but Trump’s gone the opposite way, experts note.
It’s bad for BJP too. Less remittance money could upset voters in states like UP before 2025 elections. Trump’s playing smart—offering help on one thing (like Iran port rules) while hitting us with fees. It shows friendship isn’t enough in politics.

What’s Next? A Chance for India?
These changes shake things up worldwide. Canada and the UK are welcoming our talent. India can grab this chance—push “Make in India” to keep engineers home, building our own tech giants. Modi ji should talk tough with Trump, maybe over a quick call.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What’s an H-1B visa?
It’s a U.S. work permit for skilled jobs like IT or engineering. Indians get most of them.
2. Why did Trump change H-1B rules?
To save American jobs. He thinks companies hire foreigners too cheaply.
3. How does this hurt Indian IT companies?
New fees mean less hiring. Firms like TCS might move jobs back to India.
4. Why is this bad for Modi?
It shows cracks in his U.S. friendship. Opposition says he didn’t fight back.
5. What can Indian workers do now?
Try Canada or UK jobs, or stay home—India needs talent for startups!“`