H-1B visa renewal will get simpler in 2025, Indians to benefit most as home country travel won't be required
Washington DC/IBNS: Indians working on H1-B visas will soon be able to renew the same without the need for them to travel to their home country after the success of a pilot project by the US Department of State.
The pilot project, started a year ago, involved approximately 20,000 eligible participants who meet the requirements listed in the US Federal Register.
After a successful culmination of the pilot project, the renewal of H-1B visas will not require the applicant to travel back to their home country for a stamp of renewal.
This was a long-pending concern raised by highly skilled professionals who work in the US under this visa programme, most of whom are Indians.
Besides the inconvenience of traveling so far and spending lakhs of rupees on air tickets for this purpose, the process was a tedious one involving the applicant going through long wait times for a confirmed visa appointment.
The pilot project was aimed to make the renewal process fast and convenient.
In the declaration made in its year-end press statement, the US Department of State said the pilot project for H-1B renewal "allowed many specialty occupation workers from India to renew their visas without leaving the United States. This pilot program streamlined the renewal process for thousands of applicants, and the Department of State is working to formally establish a US-based renewal program in 2025."
Though the new process has been confirmed to start this year, a date from which it will officially begin is yet to be announced.
This comes at a time when there is an intense debate over the H-1B visa and its impact on American citizens when it comes to the job market. Even though hardliners urged President-elect Donald Trump to end the programme along with his other plans of curbing immigration, Donald Trump and his top officials including Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy have backed it.
They are of the view that "America needs talented people", and the H-1B allows for the world's top talent to live and work in the US, which helps the United States stay ahead of the global curve on technology, research, and healthcare.
India tops the list of H-1B visa holders globally, most of whom work in the tech industry, followed by medical and research.
According to US State Department data from 2022, as much as 77 percent of 3,20,000 H-1B visa applications went to Indians. In 2023 too, out of 3,86,000 visas, more than 72 percent were issued to Indian nationals.