Indian professionals working in the United States are confronting renewed uncertainty under the Donald Trump administration, with US consulates across India deferring H-1B visa-stamping interviews until 2027, upending travel schedules and employment plans for thousands.
Visa offices in Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Hyderabad and Kolkata currently show no availability for routine interview slots, leaving applicants with few options.
The disruption began in December 2025, when interviews scheduled for that month were first shifted to March 2026. Those appointments were later postponed to October 2026 and have now, in many cases, been pushed back again to 2027, sharply expanding the backlog.
Overhaul of the H-1B system
The mounting delays coincide with broader changes to the H-1B visa regime. On December 29, 2025, US Citizenship and Immigration Services released revised rules for the 2027 fiscal year. While the annual quota remains capped at 85,000 visas — including 20,000 reserved for applicants with US postgraduate degrees — the selection process has been reworked.
Under the new framework, salary and experience levels carry greater weight in the lottery. Employers sponsoring Level IV workers will receive four lottery entries, Level III workers three, Level II workers two, and Level I workers one. The lottery window is expected to open in early March.
Additional vetting adds pressure
Processing times have also lengthened due to tougher screening requirements. From December 15, 2025, the US made social media checks mandatory for employment-based visa applicants, increasing scrutiny and reducing the number of cases consulates can handle each day.
At the same time, the State Department has withdrawn the facility that allowed Indian nationals to seek visa stamping in third countries. As a result, all applications are now funnelled back to Indian missions, intensifying pressure on already overstretched consulates.
Strain on US businesses
American employers are beginning to feel the fallout. Sectors such as technology, healthcare and higher education, which rely heavily on H-1B professionals for specialised roles, have reported project delays, staffing gaps and higher operational costs due to prolonged employee absences.
Some firms have responded by permitting limited remote work or temporarily redistributing responsibilities. Others — including Indian IT companies with a US presence — are accelerating the recruitment of American citizens to limit exposure to visa-related disruptions.
Worries over global competitiveness
Immigration specialists caution that prolonged uncertainty could erode the United States’ appeal as a destination for skilled global talent. They note that rival countries are streamlining work-visa pathways, making them increasingly attractive alternatives for highly qualified professionals.
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