Trump slaps $100,000 (₦155 million) fee on work visa (H-1B), shocks tech world


by Jungle Journalist


Washington, Sept 19, 2025 — U.S. President Donald Trump has thrown a heavy blow at immigrant workers and tech companies by introducing a $100,000 annual fee (about ₦155 million) for every work visa (H-1B) application.

The work visa (H-1B) is America’s special visa that allows U.S. companies to employ skilled foreign professionals in areas like software engineering, medicine, science, and finance. Thousands of Nigerians, Indians, and Chinese rely on it to pursue careers in the United States each year.


A bombshell for immigrants


Why this matters in Nigeria

For young Nigerian professionals — software developers in Yaba, fintech engineers in Lagos, or medical doctors hoping for U.S. placements — the news is devastating.

The ₦155 million yearly price tag is higher than the annual operating budget of many startups. For individuals, it’s completely out of reach. Even big firms may think twice before spending that kind of money on foreign hires.


What Trump’s team is saying

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick defended the measure, insisting it will “train Americans first” and ensure that only the very best foreign talents enter the U.S. economy. He claimed that major Silicon Valley companies supported the plan.


Critics push back


Bottom line

Trump’s $100,000 (₦155 million) fee on work visa (H-1B) is not just a policy change — it’s a wall against global talent. For Nigeria and Africa’s brightest minds, it could mean the end of the dream of using skills abroad to build careers and later reinvest at home.