7 Big Employers Pulling Back on H-1B Sponsorship

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A visa program long tied to U.S. hiring in technology, healthcare, consulting and corporate operations is being reshaped by one change: a $100,000 charge on certain new H-1B petitions. For employers that once treated sponsorship as a routine part of recruiting, the cost has forced a fresh review of who gets hired, where work is done, and whether some roles are better filled inside the United States.

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The pullback has not looked the same everywhere. Some companies have paused sponsorship in selected roles, some have leaned harder into local hiring, and others have signaled that global staffing models give them room to adapt. Together, those moves show how fast immigration policy can alter job postings, talent pipelines and long-term workforce planning.

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1. Cognizant is narrowing roles that need sponsorship

Cognizant has shown one of the clearest signs of a hiring reset through job language. In a South Carolina software engineering listing, the company said it would consider only applicants who were already authorized to work in the United States without employer sponsorship.

The company said the policy shift was expected to have limited near-term impact because of its scale and international footprint. Cognizant also said it had reduced its reliance on visas over several years and invested in a local talent pipeline. That combination matters because it suggests the company was already preparing for a labor model with fewer visa-dependent hires.

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2. Intuitive Surgical briefly froze offers, then resumed recruiting

At Intuitive Surgical, the reaction highlighted the uncertainty employers faced in highly specialized industries. Notices attached to more than 100 job listings said the company was temporarily pausing offers to candidates who required H-1B sponsorship.

The language was direct: “Due to the uncertainty caused by the recent U.S. executive proclamation, we are temporarily pausing offers to candidates who require H-1B visa sponsorship.” The company later said it had continued recruiting such candidates after reviewing its processes. Even so, the pause showed how quickly a policy change can ripple through med-tech hiring, where engineering and regulatory expertise can be difficult to replace.

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3. Tata Consultancy Services is shifting toward a more localized U.S. workforce

Tata Consultancy Services, long associated with the H-1B system, said it would stop hiring applicants through the program for now because it already has enough H-1B employees in the United States. The company’s leadership pointed instead to localization.

Chief Human Resources Officer Sudeep Kunnumal said, “On H-1B, we have significantly localized our workforce in the U.S.” That stance reflects a broader adjustment among large outsourcing firms, which have been building local hiring strategies for years while also expanding offshore delivery. The result is not only fewer sponsorship-dependent openings, but a wider redistribution of work across international teams.

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4. Walmart is pausing H-1B-dependent hiring in corporate roles

Walmart’s decision stood out because the company is better known for its size than for immigration policy. Still, it has been a major H-1B user in retail, and it confirmed that it would pause hiring candidates who require the visa.

The retailer had more than 2,000 H-1B visas approved in the first half of 2025, making it the sector’s largest user of the program. A spokesperson said Walmart remained committed to hiring the best talent while being thoughtful about its H-1B approach. The pause underscored that the fee’s impact extends well beyond Silicon Valley.

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5. Smaller employers and startups face the hardest arithmetic

Big companies may have the resources to redesign recruiting plans, but smaller employers often have less room to absorb sudden immigration costs. That concern sits at the center of the business backlash. Neil Bradley of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce said the fee would be “cost-prohibitive for U.S. employers, especially start-ups and small and midsize businesses.”

The Chamber challenged the policy in court, arguing that the new cost breaks with the purpose of a program designed to help employers reach needed talent. Even after later court setbacks, the business concern remained the same: hiring flexibility becomes harder to preserve when each new overseas petition carries a six-figure charge.

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6. AI hiring pressure is colliding with tighter sponsorship rules

The timing is especially notable because U.S. employers have been using H-1B hiring heavily in artificial intelligence-related work. According to over 80% of certified new H-1B labor condition applications at Amazon, Meta, Google, Microsoft and Apple in fiscal 2025, the roles were tied to AI-connected occupations.

That creates a sharper tension in the labor market. Employers are expanding AI investment, data infrastructure and advanced engineering teams at the same time that new restrictions make foreign hiring more expensive or less predictable. The practical effect is not only fewer sponsorship offers in some cases, but a tougher path for recent graduates and overseas specialists trying to enter the U.S. workforce.

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7. More work is being routed to India instead of the United States

When talent cannot move easily, work often does. That pattern is becoming more visible in India, where U.S. tech companies have been growing hiring for AI, cloud, cybersecurity and machine learning roles. As of early February, there were about 4,200 open positions at major U.S. tech companies in India.

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Rest of World also reported that those firms added around 33,000 workers in India in 2025. Research cited in the same report found that companies facing H-1B rejections often respond by hiring abroad, especially in India, China and Canada. That means the effect of sponsorship pullbacks is not limited to who gets hired in the United States; it also influences where high-skill work is ultimately performed.

Across these employers, one theme keeps emerging: sponsorship is no longer treated as a routine checkbox. It has become a strategic decision shaped by cost, legal uncertainty, local hiring goals and the geography of specialized talent.

For workers, the consequences differ by location and visa status. For companies, the larger shift is structural. Hiring plans are being rewritten not only around who can do the work, but around where that work can still be done efficiently.

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