H-1B Cap

H-1B "cap" reached in 2024 (FY 2025)

On April 1, 2024, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) announced that it has received a sufficient number of H-1B petitions to reach the statutory H-1B visa “cap” for fiscal year (FY) 2025.

The USCIS announcement states:

“We have randomly selected enough properly submitted registrations for unique beneficiaries projected as needed to reach the H-1B cap and have notified all prospective petitioners with selected beneficiaries that they are eligible to file an H-1B cap-subject petition for such beneficiaries. Registrants’ online accounts will now show one of the following statuses for each registration (that is, for each beneficiary registered): 

  • Submitted: The registration has been submitted and is eligible for selection. If the initial selection process has been completed, this registration remains eligible, unless subsequently invalidated, for selection in any subsequent selections for the fiscal year for which it was submitted.

  • Selected: Selected to file an H-1B cap petition.

  • Not Selected: Not eligible to file an H-1B cap petition based on this registration.

  • Denied – duplicate registration: Multiple registrations were submitted by or on behalf of the same registrant for the same beneficiary. If denied as a duplicate registration, all registrations submitted by or on behalf of the same registrant for this beneficiary for the fiscal year are invalid.

  • Invalidated – failed payment: A registration was submitted but the payment method was declined, not reconciled, or otherwise invalid.

  • Deleted: The submitted registration has been deleted and is no longer eligible for selection.

  • Processing submission: USCIS is processing your submission. It may take up to 72 hours for all of your case information to show on the case details page. While it is processing, you will be unable to access your draft.

… H-1B cap-subject petitions for FY 2025, including those petitions eligible for the advanced degree exemption, may be filed with USCIS beginning April 1, 2024, if filed for a selected beneficiary and based on a valid registration. Only petitioners with registrations for selected beneficiaries may file H-1B cap-subject petitions for FY 2025.”

USCIS has not yet announced whether and when an additional selection might take place in 2024. In 2023 and 2021, additional selections took place to make use of unused H-1B visas. In 2022 no additional selections took place. We will watch developments closely and post updates here as they occur.

© Jewell Stewart Pratt Beckerson & Carr PC 2024

USCIS issues Final Rule on H-1B cap registration process

On Friday, February 2, 2024, U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services (USCIS) published a Final Rule in the Federal Register that will bring significant changes to the annual H-1B cap selection process (89 FR 7456). The Final Rule is based on a Notice of Proposed Rule Making (NPRM) for H-1B modernization published on October 23, 2023 (88 FR 72870).  Although the NPRM included several H-1B modernization measures, the Final Rule is solely about H-1B cap selection.  The other proposals in the NPRM are expected to be the subject of a separate Final Rule at a later date.

The Final Rule on H-1B cap selection changes will take effect on March 4, 2024, just prior to the opening of the upcoming H-1B cap registration window on March 6. The Final Rule will make the upcoming and future H-1B cap selection processes “beneficiary-centric.”  Details follow.

Making H-1B cap selection lottery “beneficiary-centric”

The Final Rule bases the H-1B cap selection process on unique beneficiaries rather than unique registrations. It is hoped that this will reduce the incentive for employers and individuals to pursue registrations without the existence of a bona fide job offer. Multiple employers may register the same beneficiary, assuming each has a bona fide job for them.  If a beneficiary registered by multiple employers is selected in the H-1B cap lottery, each employer will receive a selection notice and may file an H-1B petition based on their bona fide job offer that the beneficiary intends to accept -- for example, two employers each offering part-time work to the beneficiary. The Final Rule does not bar related entities from registering the same beneficiary, so long as there is a legitimate business need for those related entities to file multiple H-1B petitions for the same beneficiary.

The key principles in the Final Rule are that a beneficiary will be entered only once in the lottery regardless of the number of employers registering the beneficiary, and that a bona fide job offer must underlie each registration.

To enforce the limit of one H-1B cap selection per beneficiary, beneficiaries will be identified not only by the same information used currently, but also by their passport data (or travel document data if the beneficiary is a refugee or stateless and therefore cannot obtain a passport). Passport or travel document data will be required in all cases. In addition, with limited exceptions, the beneficiary must use the same passport or travel document in the registration that they will use to enter the United States on their future H-1B visa. If an individual has more than one passport or travel document, only one may be used for H-1B cap registration.

Jewell Stewart & Pratt will watch for developments related to the other H-1B modernization proposals that are not yet final and will post updates here as they occur.

© Jewell Stewart & Pratt PC 2024

H-1B "cap" reached for FY 2024

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) announced on December 13, 2023 that it has received a sufficient number of H-1B petitions to reach the statutory H-1B visa “cap” for fiscal year (FY) 2024. 

The USCIS announcement states:

USCIS has received a sufficient number of petitions needed to reach the congressionally mandated 65,000 H-1B visa regular cap and the 20,000 H-1B visa U.S. advanced degree exemption, known as the master’s cap, for fiscal year (FY) 2024.

We will send non-selection notices to registrants through their online accounts over the next few days. When we finish sending these non-selection notifications, the status for properly submitted registrations that we did not select for the FY 2024 H-1B numerical allocations will show:

·         Not Selected: Not selected – not eligible to file an H-1B cap petition based on this registration.

We will continue to accept and process petitions that are otherwise exempt from the cap. Petitions filed for current H-1B workers who have been counted previously against the cap, and who still retain their cap number, are exempt from the FY 2024 H-1B cap. We will continue to accept and process petitions filed to:

·         Extend the amount of time a current H-1B worker may remain in the United States;

·         Change the terms of employment for current H-1B workers;

·         Allow current H-1B workers to change employers; and

·         Allow current H-1B workers to work concurrently in additional H-1B positions.

No further selections for new H-1B petition filings will take place for FY 2024, and the next registration period for FY 2025 will take place sometime in Q1 2024.

© Jewell Stewart & Pratt PC 2023

USCIS proposes new H-1B definitions, H-1B Cap processes, and benefits for F-1 students

On Monday, October 23, 2023, U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services (USCIS) published a proposed rule (Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, or NPRM) in the Federal Register that would bring significant changes to H-1B visa processes, including changes to the H-1B cap selection. The NPRM (88 FR 72870, 10/23/23) has a 60-day public comment period ending on December 22, 2023, after which a Final Rule is expected.

USCIS is prioritizing the H-1B cap selection changes to take effect in time for the FY2025 cap selection, for which registration will open in early 2024. However, in its preamble to the NPRM, USCIS acknowledges that it is also possible, if there are technology or resource issues, that the new system may be postponed. In that case, USCIS says it will publish a notice in the Federal Register at least 30 days before the initial H-1B cap registration period.

Highlights of the NPRM follow.

1.       Extended cap-gap for F-1 students

Under the NPRM, an F-1 student with OPT or STEM OPT work authorization who is the beneficiary of a change-of-status H-1B cap petition gets, upon timely filing of the petition, an automatic extension of their F-1 status and work authorization (“cap gap”) to April 1 of the fiscal year for which the H-1B is being sought. Under the current system, “cap gap” work authorization ends on September 30 of the year prior to the year for which H-1B status is sought and the individual’s F-1 status ends 60 days later. This proposal should go a long way toward minimizing F-1 work authorization gaps while awaiting H-1B status.

2.       Making H-1B cap selection lottery “beneficiary-centric”

The NPRM proposes that the registration selection process be based on unique beneficiaries rather than unique registrations. It is hoped that this will reduce the incentive for employers and individuals to pursue registrations without the existence of a bona fide job offer. Multiple (non-related, non-coordinating) employers may still register the same beneficiary, assuming each has a bona fide job for them; but under the NPRM, the beneficiary will only be entered once in the H-1B cap lottery. If a beneficiary is selected, and has been registered by multiple employers, each employer will receive a selection notice, and the beneficiary may then choose to pursue an H-1B with any of the employers that filed a registration on their behalf, provided there are bona fide job offers that the beneficiary intends to accept.

To enforce the limit of one H-1B cap registration per beneficiary, beneficiaries will be identified not only by the same information used currently, but also by their passport data. Passport data will be required in all cases and, if the beneficiary is abroad, they must use the same passport in the registration that they will use to enter the U.S. (with limited exceptions).

3.       Codifying the Simeio memo for H-1B petitions

According to the USCIS Administrative Appeals Office’s decision in Matter of Simeio Solutions, LLC (2015), and the 2015 USCIS Policy Memo to implement the decision, a new or amended H-1B petition involving material changes to an H-1B beneficiary’s job must be filed with USCIS before the changes take effect. In cases where H-1B portability rules apply, the changes may take effect upon filing of the new/amended petition instead of waiting for petition approval. Any change to a beneficiary’s job that requires a new Labor Condition Application from the U.S. Department of Labor is, by definition, a material change and requires an amended H-1B petition.

The NPRM would codify the Policy Memo, giving it the force of federal regulation, and give it teeth by adding a new ground for H-1B petition revocation to the existing revocation grounds. The new ground would allow USCIS to revoke an H-1B petition if the H-1B petitioner (employer) fails to timely file an amended petition notifying USCIS of a material change. Potentially softening the effect of this is an expansion of the circumstances in which USCIS may “forgive” and accept a late-filed petition: it would not only cover filings after I-94 expiration, as it does currently, but would also cover late-filed amended petitions, i.e., where the I-94 is not expired but circumstances requiring an amended filing took effect before the amendment was filed.

 4.       Codifying policy on USCIS H-1B site visits

The NPRM codifies current USCIS policy and practice regarding employer site visits to investigate the validity of H-1B and other nonimmigrant petitions. Per the NPRM, USCIS at any time after filing of the petition, including after petition approval, may conduct unannounced site visits, hold interviews of petitioners or beneficiaries without the presence of counsel, and perform investigations to verify that the information in the petition is/was true. Failure or refusal of the petitioner to cooperate in a site visit may result in denial or revocation of the H-1B petitions of any H-1B workers at the work site in question.

5.       Revision to the regulatory definition and criteria for a “specialty occupation” including some helpful clarifications

The make-or-break issue in every H-1B petition is whether the job in question is in a “specialty occupation,” i.e., requires a bachelor’s or higher degree in a specific field. The NPRM would change the existing regulatory definition of “specialty occupation” to make it clear that any field of study stated as required for the job in the H-1B petition must be directly related to the job duties. The NPRM also would clarify that, if a range of academic fields satisfy the employer’s degree requirement, each such field must be established as directly relating to the position. The NPRM’s proposed definition of “specialty occupation” is (emphasis ours):

Specialty occupation means an occupation that requires theoretical and practical application of a body of highly specialized knowledge in fields of human endeavor including, but not limited to, architecture, engineering, mathematics, physical sciences, social sciences, medicine and health, education, business specialties, accounting, law, theology, and the arts, and that requires the attainment of a bachelor’s degree or higher in a specific specialty, or its equivalent, as a minimum for entry into the occupation in the United States. The required specialized studies must be directly related to the position. A position is not a specialty occupation if attainment of a general degree, such as business administration or liberal arts, without further specialization, is sufficient to qualify for the position. A position may allow a range of degrees or apply multiple bodies of highly specialized knowledge, provided that each of those qualifying degree fields or each body of highly specialized knowledge is directly related to the position.

6.       Revision to the regulatory definition of “U.S. employer,” allowing H-1B sponsorship by an entity majority-owned by the H-1B beneficiary

In a potential boon for early-stage startups, the NPRM proposes that a “U.S. employer” for H-1B sponsorship purposes may be an entity that is majority-owned by the sponsored H-1B beneficiary as long as the majority (over 50%) of the beneficiary’s time is spent on “specialty occupation” duties. In the majority owner-beneficiary scenario, the initial H-1B petition validity would be limited to 18 months, and the first extension (including an amended petition with a request for an extension of stay) would also be limited to 18 months. Any subsequent extension may be approved for up to three years, assuming the petition satisfies all other H-1B requirements.

7.       To allow more H-1B petitions to qualify as “cap exempt,” a broadening of key definitions

H-1B petitions sponsored by certain types of organizations are exempt from the lottery for new H-1B visas each year. An H-1B beneficiary’s work for nonprofit research organizations, governmental research organizations, and nonprofit organizations affiliated with institutions of higher education is considered cap-exempt, but proving cap-exemption has been a challenge due to USCIS’ strict interpretation of the criteria, and the difficulty of proving the degree of closeness of the H-1B beneficiary’s work to the cap-exempt organization’s mission or purpose. Key liberalizing changes in the NPRM include:

  • “Nonprofit research organization” – The H-1B sponsoring entity will need an IRS determination letter confirming tax-exempt status, but the IRS letter need not necessarily specify that the organization’s purpose is “research.” “Research” may be shown in other documentation.

  • “Research” – Research (basic or applied) need not necessarily be the organization’s main purpose; it may be just one part of what the organization does.

  • A nonprofit’s affiliation with an institution of higher education – The nonprofit’s main purpose need not necessarily be to contribute to the research or education mission of the institution; doing so may merely be a purpose, or even merely a fundamental activity, of the nonprofit.

  • An H-1B petition may be cap-exempt if beneficiary’s job duties support or advance a (not necessarily the) fundamental purpose, function, mission, or objective of the cap-exempt entity.

  • In an H-1B petition that is cap-exempt for a beneficiary not directly employed by the exempt entity but working “at” the exempt entity, the word “at” can mean working remotely as versus physically onsite, and work for the exempt entity may be as little as 50% of the beneficiary’s time.

The NPRM’s liberalizations in the cap-exempt area would significantly increase the number of H-1B petitions exempt from the cap, thus taking pressure off the annual demand for cap-subject H-1Bs.

Jewell Stewart & Pratt will watch developments related to the NPRM closely, including the publishing of the Final Rule, and post updates here as they occur.

© Jewell Stewart & Pratt PC 2023

USCIS runs second lottery on 2023 (FY 2024) H-1B registrations

On July 31, 2023, USCIS announced that it ran a second H-1B lottery on 2023 (FY 2024) registrations. The USCIS announcement states:

We now have randomly selected, from the remaining FY 2024 registrations properly submitted, a sufficient number of registrations projected as needed to reach the cap, and have notified all prospective petitioners with selected registrations from this round of selection that they are eligible to file an H-1B cap-subject petition for the beneficiary named in the applicable selected registration.

Only petitioners with selected registrations may file H-1B cap-subject petitions for FY 2024, and only for the beneficiary named in the applicable selected registration notice.

An H-1B cap-subject petition must be filed within the period indicated on the registration selection notice; for this round of selectees, that period is August 2 to October 31, 2023.

As we noted before, in 2021 (FY 2022) a second and third selection process took place in August and November, respectively, to make unused H-1B visas available. No additional selections took place in 2022 (FY 2023). USCIS has not yet announced whether and when a third selection might take place later in 2023 (FY 2024).

© Jewell Stewart & Pratt PC 2023

H-1B "cap" reached in 2023 (FY 2024)

On March 27, 2023, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) announced that it has received a sufficient number of H-1B petitions to reach the statutory H-1B visa “cap” for fiscal year (FY) 2024.

The USCIS announcement states:

“We randomly selected from among the registrations properly submitted to reach the cap, and have notified all prospective petitioners with selected registrations that they are eligible to file an H-1B cap-subject petition for the beneficiary named in the applicable selected registration. Registrants’ online accounts will now show one of the following statuses for each registration (that is, for each beneficiary registered): 

  • Submitted: The registration has been submitted and is eligible for selection. If the initial selection process has been completed, this registration remains eligible, unless subsequently invalidated, for selection in any subsequent selections for the fiscal year for which it was submitted.

  • Selected: Selected to file an H-1B cap petition.

  • Denied: Multiple registrations were submitted by or on behalf of the same registrant for the same beneficiary. If denied as a duplicate registration, all registrations submitted by or on behalf of the same registrant for this beneficiary for the fiscal year are invalid.

  • Invalidated-Failed Payment: A registration was submitted but the payment method was declined, not reconciled, disputed, or otherwise invalid.

… H-1B cap-subject petitions for FY 2024, including those petitions eligible for the advanced degree exemption, may be filed with USCIS beginning April 1, 2023, if based on a valid, selected registration. Only petitioners with selected registrations may file H-1B cap-subject petitions for FY 2024, and only for the beneficiary named in the applicable selected registration notice.”

In 2021 (FY 2022) a second and third selection process took place in August and November, respectively, to make unused H-1B visas available. No additional selections took place in 2022 (FY 2023). USCIS has not yet announced whether and when an additional selection might take place in 2023 (FY 2024).

© Jewell Stewart & Pratt PC 2023

H-1B "cap" registration dates announced for 2023 (FY 2024)

On January 27, 2023, USCIS announced the dates for the upcoming H-1B cap registration window and selection process. Selection will be via random lottery, as in prior years.

In its announcement USCIS stated that the registration period will open at 9:00am PT / 12:00pm ET on March 1, 2023 and will close at 9:00am PT / 12:00pm ET on March 17, 2023. The random lottery will be conducted following the close of the registration period, and account holders will be notified of selected registrations by March 31, 2023.

USCIS also stated that registrants will be able to create new accounts beginning at 9:00am PT / 12:00pm ET on February 21. Employers MUST NOT create an account before this date because it will lack H-1B registration functionality.

© Jewell Stewart & Pratt PC 2023

H-1B "cap" reached for FY 2023

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) announced on August 23, 2022 that it has received a sufficient number of H-1B petitions to reach the statutory H-1B visa “cap” for fiscal year (FY) 2023. 

The USCIS announcement states:

USCIS has received a sufficient number of petitions needed to reach the congressionally mandated 65,000 H-1B visa regular cap and the 20,000 H-1B visa U.S. advanced degree exemption, known as the master’s cap, for fiscal year (FY) 2023.

We have completed sending non-selection notifications to registrants’ online accounts. The status for registrations properly submitted for the FY 2023 H-1B numerical allocations, but that were not selected, will now show:

  • Not Selected: Not selected – not eligible to file an H-1B cap petition based on this registration.

We will continue to accept and process petitions that are otherwise exempt from the cap. Petitions filed for current H-1B workers who have been counted previously against the cap, and who still retain their cap number, are exempt from the FY 2023 H-1B cap. We will continue to accept and process petitions filed to:

  • Extend the amount of time a current H-1B worker may remain in the United States;

  • Change the terms of employment for current H-1B workers;

  • Allow current H-1B workers to change employers; and

  • Allow current H-1B workers to work concurrently in additional H-1B positions.

No further selections for new H-1B petition filings will take place for FY 2023, and the next registration period for FY 2024 will take place sometime in Q1 2023.

© Jewell Stewart & Pratt PC 2022

H-1B "cap" registration dates announced for 2022 (FY 2023)

On January 28, 2022, USCIS announced the dates for the upcoming H-1B cap registration window and selection process. Selection will be via random lottery, as in prior years. (USCIS has abandoned its plans for a wage-based selection process.)

In its announcement USCIS stated that registrants will be able to create new accounts beginning at 9AM PT / 12 PM ET on February 21. Employers MUST NOT create an account before this date because it will lack H-1B registration functionality.

USCIS also stated that the registration period will open at 9AM PT / 12 PM ET on March 1 and close at 9AM PT / 12 PM ET on March 18. The random lottery will be conducted following the close of the registration period, and account holders will be notified of selected registrations by March 31, 2022.

© Jewell Stewart & Pratt PC 2022

USCIS Runs Third H-1B Lottery on 2021 (FY 2022) Registrations

On November 19, 2021, USCIS announced that it ran a third H-1B lottery on 2021 (FY 2022) registrations. The petition filing period based on the new selected registrations will be from November 22, 2021 to February 23, 2022. We will be notifying clients of additional selections and next steps for filing ASAP. Thank you for your patience!

© Jewell Stewart & Pratt PC 2021