Restrictive H‑1B policies drive tech talent back to India, reshaping global IT
US enterprises are experiencing a fundamental reversal in global technology talent flows as restrictive H-1B visa policies and India’s rapidly maturing tech ecosystem combine to redirect skilled professionals away from US careers, threatening American competitiveness while accelerating India’s emergence as a global innovation hub.
Workforce data from LinkedIn’s Labor Market Report released this month showed India’s hiring surged 40% above pre-pandemic levels while advanced economies, including the US, saw hiring decline 23%. Companies headquartered in the US, UK, Germany, France, and Australia all increased their share of India-based hiring between 2015 and 2025.
“In this climate, work is being upskilled around AI and is shifting across borders as companies embrace global teams (especially in India),” the LinkedIn report stated.
“Yes, this is a structural shift rather than a visa-led adjustment,” said Prashray Kala, partner at Everest Group. “Persistent talent shortages in the US and Europe, combined with strong cost advantages, make India increasingly attractive. More importantly, India offers deep and scalable next-generation skills across digital, AI, and product roles.”
The Trump administration’s $100,000 fee on new H-1B petitions imposed in September 2025 accelerated the shift, fundamentally altering career calculations for engineering talent with implications across enterprise IT strategies and global delivery models.
Graduate career preferences shift to India
Shalu Bindlish, director at Advaita Bedanta Consultants, an India-based talent recruitment agency, said the reversal became evident in recent months. “We have seen Indian tech talents looking for jobs in India rather than moving to the US, and many Indians graduated from US universities applying for jobs in India, which was unprecedented,” Bindlish said. “Now we are seeing 30-40 percent of students are keen for Indian jobs after studying in the US.”
The LinkedIn report showed AI engineering talent is eight times more likely to migrate across borders than average professionals, with India serving as a net exporter. However, visa restrictions are constraining US talent attraction, pushing American companies to establish operations where talent increasingly chooses to remain.
US tech giants redirect hiring to India
Recognizing the talent shift, American technology majors significantly expanded their Indian operations. Meta, Apple, Google, Amazon, Microsoft, and Netflix collectively added over 32,000 jobs in India during 2025, representing 18% year-over-year growth, according to staffing firm Xpheno.
For the first time, the top four H-1B approvals for new employment went exclusively to US companies, including Amazon with 4,644 approvals, Meta with 1,555, Microsoft with 1,394, and Google with 1,050, according to NFAP. These firms are hiring talent to support $380 billion in AI and related capital expenditures during 2025.
Ashutosh Sharma, VP and research director at Forrester, said the shift predates recent policy changes. “This shift has been ongoing for a few years now,” Sharma said. “This imposition of $100,000 H-1B fees has simply made it more difficult, whereas sourcing through offshore centers in India has long been a much more predictable path for US enterprises to gain access to technical talent at scale.”
India’s infrastructure enables talent retention
The talent reversal reflects India’s maturing technology infrastructure. India’s Global Capability Center ecosystem reached 1,760 centers employing more than 1.9 million professionals and generating $64.6 billion in revenue by the end of 2025, according to Zinnov’s India GCC Landscape Report. Projections showed the ecosystem reaching 2,100-2,200 centers employing 2.5-2.8 million workers by 2030.
Pari Natarajan, CEO of Zinnov, characterized the shift as “a global neural network” rather than traditional brain drain. “The idea that talent must physically move to headquarters to create value is steadily losing relevance,” Natarajan said. “What has fundamentally changed is trust. Capability, not proximity to headquarters, now determines where leadership sits.”
Strategic implications for enterprise IT leaders
The hiring shift carries immediate cost and operational implications for CIOs. The $100,000 H-1B fee will accelerate shifts from traditional offshore-onsite models toward remote-oriented approaches, with potential cost impacts reaching approximately $2 billion if service providers file as many H-1B petitions as they did in 2025, according to Forrester analysis.
Sanchit Vir Gogia, chief analyst at Greyhound Research, said enterprises face fundamental architectural changes. “We are witnessing a full-scale architectural pivot in how US enterprises access and deploy global tech talent,” Gogia said. “The old playbook — move the best minds to the US, integrate them into HQ, and control innovation centrally — is breaking apart.”
Bringing a mid-level engineer to the US now costs approximately $250,000 per person, including salary, visa fees, and relocation, according to Greyhound Research. The same headcount in India costs one-fifth to one-sixth of that amount. “For CIOs, this shift requires a fundamental rethink of global operating models,” Kala said. “India’s role has expanded steadily due to its talent depth, skill diversity, and cost competitiveness. Today, India is the second-largest technology talent base for most global enterprises. Continued expansion confirms this is a permanent structural shift.”Restrictive H‑1B policies drive tech talent back to India, reshaping global IT – ComputerworldRead More