The H-1B lottery remains one of the most competitive and misunderstood parts of the U.S. immigration system. In recent years, USCIS has introduced a series of changes aimed at reducing fraud, improving fairness, and modernizing the registration process. Some of these changes significantly affect how employers and foreign nationals should plan for H-1B filings going forward.
Here’s what you need to know and how these changes may affect your strategy.
What Changed in the H-1B Lottery?
1. The Lottery Is Now Beneficiary-Centric (Not Registration-Centric)
USCIS now runs the H-1B lottery by individual beneficiary, rather than by the number of employer registrations submitted for the same person.
What this means:
- Each worker gets one chance in the lottery, regardless of how many employers submit registrations.
- Submitting multiple registrations for the same person no longer increases selection odds.
- This change was designed to eliminate gaming of the system and restore fairness.
Bottom line: Quality planning matters more than volume.
2. Stronger Anti-Fraud Attestations and Enforcement
USCIS now requires:
- Clear employer attestations confirming that each registration represents a bona fide job offer
- Consistency across registrations for the same beneficiary
- Expanded authority to deny or revoke selections tied to coordinated or improper filings
USCIS has also increased post-selection scrutiny, including:
- Requests for evidence
- Site visits
- Registration audits
3. Higher Registration Fees
The H-1B registration fee has increased substantially in recent cycles.
Why this matters:
- Employers are filing more selectively
- “Speculative” or low-commitment registrations are becoming less common
- Strategic employer-employee alignment is now critical before registration is submitted
- Expanded Use of Organizational Accounts
USCIS has continued rolling out organizational and representative accounts, allowing:
- Employers, attorneys, and HR teams to coordinate filings more efficiently
- Better tracking of beneficiaries across registrations and petitions
- Increased transparency — and less tolerance for inconsistencies
What This Means for H-1B Strategy
For Employers
- The H-1B process now rewards intentional hiring decisions, not mass filings
- Job descriptions, wage levels, and corporate structure are more likely to be scrutinized
- Employers should be aligned with counsel before registration opens, not after selection
For Foreign Nationals
- Multiple registrations are no longer a shortcut
- Choosing the right employer and role matters more than ever
- Alternatives (cap-exempt H-1B, O-1, TN, L-1, or green card strategies) should be explored early
The Bigger Picture: A Shift Toward Merit and Compliance
Taken together, these changes reflect a broader shift in U.S. immigration policy:
- Less tolerance for volume-based or speculative filings
- Greater emphasis on compliance, documentation, and real job offers
- Increased importance of long-term planning beyond a single lottery cycle
For many professionals, the H-1B lottery is no longer a standalone solution — it’s one piece of a broader immigration strategy.
Concerned about your H-1B chances or planning next steps after a non-selection?
Whether you’re an employer preparing for upcoming H-1B registrations or a professional exploring alternatives after the lottery, strategic guidance can make a real difference.
👉 Book a consultation with visa iQ to discuss H-1B planning, alternative visa options, or long-term green card strategies tailored to your goals.