HomeWorldStanford, Columbia risk getting hit by Trump’s $100,000 H-1B fee

Stanford, Columbia risk getting hit by Trump’s $100,000 H-1B fee

Stanford, the largest employer of H-1B holders in the education sector, currently employs more than 500 staff and faculty on the high-skill visa

September 25, 2025 / 23:08 IST
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For now, like companies across corporate America, most schools are waiting to see how the visa changes play out.
For now, like companies across corporate America, most schools are waiting to see how the visa changes play out.

President Donald Trump's $100,000 fee for H-1B visas was a warning shot to Corporate America to toe the line on immigration. It also deals another financial blow to universities already battered by the administration's crusade against top colleges.

The White House's attempts to overhaul the H-1B visa system has sowed chaos in tech and finance, with Microsoft Corp., Amazon.com Inc. and Citigroup Inc. among the biggest users of the program. But colleges across the US, from the Ivy League to state universities and dozens of medical schools, apply for thousands of visas annually to hire researchers and academic staff.

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Stanford, the largest employer of H-1B holders in the education sector, currently employs more than 500 staff and faculty on the high-skill visa. It has averaged roughly 270 new hires per year since 2023, according to data from the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services. That means it would cost at least $27 million a year extra to fulfill these visas.

Other top H-1B employer universities, such as Columbia, the University of Michigan, Harvard and Washington University in St. Louis, hire hundreds and would have to pay the government in the range of $10 million to $20 million a year under the new visa rules, if they maintain the same level of hiring.