7 Explosive Facts About the EXILE Act Threatening H-1B Visas for Indians and global talent.The future of the H-1B visa program, one of the most important legal pathways for skilled foreign workers to live and work in the United States, is once again under intense political scrutiny.
A newly introduced bill in the US Congress — the Ending Exploitative Imported Labor Exemptions (EXILE) Act — seeks nothing less than the complete elimination of the H-1B visa program starting in fiscal year 2027.
For Indian professionals, who make up the overwhelming majority of H-1B recipients, the proposal has triggered fresh anxiety about job prospects, career mobility, and long-term settlement in the United States.
Here is a comprehensive breakdown of what the EXILE Act proposes, why it was introduced, its political context, and what it could realistically mean for Indians and global talent.

7 Explosive Facts About the EXILE Act Threatening H-1B Visas for Indians
What Is the EXILE Act?
The EXILE Act was introduced on February 9 by Republican Congressman Greg Steube, who represents Florida’s 17th Congressional District.
The bill proposes to amend Section 214(g)(1)(A) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, the provision that authorises the H-1B visa category.
Key Proposal
- Reduce the annual number of H-1B visas to zero
- Effective from FY2027
- No phased reduction — a complete termination
If enacted, US employers would no longer be allowed to file new H-1B petitions, effectively ending the program that has existed for over three decades.
Why the H-1B Visa Matters Globally
The H-1B visa allows US employers to hire foreign professionals in specialty occupations, including:
- Technology and software engineering
- Artificial intelligence and data science
- Healthcare and medicine
- Finance and accounting
- Research and higher education
Although it is a US visa program, its impact is global, shaping talent flows, innovation hubs, and corporate hiring strategies worldwide.
Why Indians Are at the Center of the Debate
Indian nationals are by far the largest beneficiaries of the H-1B system.
Key Numbers
- Around 70% of all H-1B holders are Indian
- In 2024, 71% of approved H-1B visas went to Indians
- China ranked a distant second at under 12%
For decades, the H-1B visa has served as:
- A gateway for Indian IT professionals
- A bridge from US education to employment
- A stepping stone to permanent residency
Many of today’s global tech leaders — including Satya Nadella, Sundar Pichai, and Elon Musk — once entered the US through this route.
What Greg Steube Says Is Wrong With H-1B
In announcing the EXILE Act, Rep. Steube argued that the H-1B visa program has been systematically abused by corporations to suppress wages and displace American workers.
“Prioritising foreign labour over American workers undermines our national interests. Our young people are being displaced and disenfranchised,” Steube said.
Claims Cited by Supporters of the EXILE Act
Steube’s office listed several high-profile examples to support the argument that H-1B visas harm American workers:
Healthcare
- Over 10,000 US physicians allegedly denied residency placements
- While 5,000 foreign-born doctors entered through visa provisions
Technology
- 16,000 Microsoft employees displaced
- Following approval of 9,000 H-1B visas in 2025
Logistics
- FedEx allegedly closed 100+ US facilities
- Linked to reliance on H-1B labour
Entertainment
- Disney laid off 250 US workers in 2015
- Replaced by foreign workers under H-1B
Energy
- Southern California Edison fired 540 employees in 2014
- Replacements hired via Indian outsourcing firms using H-1B visas
Critics Push Back Against These Claims
Opponents of the EXILE Act argue that:
- H-1B workers must be paid prevailing wages
- Employers face strict compliance requirements
- The program fills skill shortages, not cheap labour gaps
Industry groups have long warned that eliminating H-1B visas could:
- Hurt US competitiveness
- Slow innovation in AI and technology
- Worsen shortages in healthcare and education
How the EXILE Act Fits Into a Larger Pattern
The EXILE Act is not an isolated proposal. It is part of a broader legislative push to restrict or dismantle skilled immigration pathways.
Other Bills Targeting the H-1B Program
1. PAUSE Act
- Introduced by Rep. Chip Roy (Texas)
- Calls for freezing nearly all immigration
- Proposes ending H-1B and OPT programs
2. End H-1B Now Act
- Introduced by Marjorie Taylor Greene (January 2026)
- Proposed eliminating H-1B with limited medical exemptions
3. H-1B and L-1 Visa Reform Act
- Introduced by Chuck Grassley and Dick Durbin
- Seeks stricter qualification and degree requirements
All these bills remain in the “introduced” stage and have not passed Congress.
Trump Administration and the Immigration Crackdown
The renewed focus on ending H-1B visas aligns with the Trump administration’s broader immigration agenda.
Recent Measures
- $100,000 fee imposed on new H-1B visas
- End of random lottery, replaced by wage-weighted selection
- Mandatory social media vetting for H-1B and H-4 applicants
- Visa interview delays across India
These changes have already disrupted thousands of Indian professionals and students.
What Happens If the EXILE Act Becomes Law?
If passed:
- No new H-1B visas from FY2027 onward
- US employers must seek alternatives
- Indian professionals lose a primary pathway to US employment
Possible Alternatives
- L-1 intra-company transfers
- O-1 visas for exceptional talent
- Remote work from outside the US
However, none offer the scale or accessibility of the H-1B program.
What Are the Chances of the EXILE Act Passing?
Historically, bills seeking to completely end the H-1B visa program:
- Gain media attention
- Serve political messaging
- Rarely survive the full legislative process
To become law, the EXILE Act must:
- Pass the House of Representatives
- Pass the Senate
- Be signed by the President
Given opposition from business groups, universities, and parts of Congress, most experts view it as unlikely in its current form.
What Indian Applicants Should Do Now
For Indian professionals and students:
- The H-1B program remains fully active
- No immediate changes apply
- FY2026 and earlier filings are unaffected
Experts advise staying informed but not panicking, as similar bills in the past have failed.
A Global Talent Debate Far From Over
The EXILE Act has reignited a long-running debate over:
- Protecting domestic jobs
- Competing in a global talent market
- Balancing nationalism with innovation
For now, the H-1B visa survives — but the political pressure surrounding it is stronger than ever.
Bottom Line
The EXILE Act represents the strongest rhetorical attack yet on the H-1B visa program, but it remains a proposal, not law.
Still, it signals growing uncertainty for Indian professionals and underscores how immigration policy has become a central fault line in US politics.
Also Read: 7 Bold Policy Shifts: Trump’s Stunning Change of Heart on H-1B, Tariffs, and Foreign Students
Also Read: What is the EXILE Act? A look at the bill that seeks to end the H-1B visa programme





