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OpenAI and Nvidia CEOs didn’t flinch at Trump’s $100,000 H-1B visa fee, and now they’re paying up as their application numbers soar
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OpenAI and Nvidia CEOs didn’t flinch at Trump’s $100,000 H-1B visa fee, and now they’re paying up as their application numbers soar

Fortune · Jun 10, 2026, 1:53 PM

When President Donald Trump suddenly imposed a $100,000 fee on new H-1B visas last year, leading AI companies didn’t flinch. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang told CNBC he was “glad to see President Trump making the moves he’s making,” and Open AI’s Sam Altman said aligning financial incentives around skilled immigration “seems good” to him. Eight months later, the visa fee has split the tech industry in two. The frontier AI companies that publicly supported the move have sharply increased their foreign-worker filings, even at $100,000 a head—while the Big Tech giants with far larger workforces have pulled back. And on Monday, a federal judge struck the fee down entirely, calling it an unlawful tax. Big Tech companies are overwhelmingly the largest holders of H1-B visas. On Monday, a federal judge struck President Donald Trump’s $100,000 visa fee for highly skilled immigrant workers. But that’s no matter to the Big Tech companies that have doubled down on immigrant employees, despite their high price tag. Nvidia’s certified H-1B applications rose 19% in the first quarter of this year compared with the same period in 2025, according to a Fortune analysis. OpenAI’s more than tripled, and Anthropic went from roughly 10 to nearly 60. (function(){function e(){window.addEventListener(`message`,function(e){if(e.data[`datawrapper-height`]!==void 0){var t=document.querySelectorAll(`iframe`);for(var n in e.data[`datawrapper-height`])for(var r=0,i;i=t[r];r++)if(i.contentWindow===e.source){var a=e.data[`datawrapper-height`][n]+`px`;i.style.height=a}}})}e()})(); Over the same stretch, Amazon—the country’s single largest H-1B sponsor—along with Google and Microsoft posted steep declines, with smaller dips at Meta and Apple. The divergence comes down to math. For a company like Amazon, which sponsors H-1B workers by the thousands across its engineering and corporate ranks, a $100,000 surcharge on every new hire could be a budget-breaking

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