US Senator Flags H-1B Misuse: DHS Orders Full Review; What It Means for 600,000 Indian Techies

India is keenly following up the investigation of the US Department of Homeland Security on H-1B and OPT programs which are major immigration programs through which Indian technology professionals and students access the country.

Most H-1B visa are controlled by Indian nationals. According to the statistics of the US Citizenship and Immigration Services, 70-75 percent of successful H-1B applications are processed with Indians as the primary beneficiaries due to the requirements of the American technology companies and consultants. With the visa, US employers are able to recruit foreign talent in the areas of software engineering, data science, finance and biotechnology.

The H-1B program has been a primary entry point of Indian talent into the US technocratic industry. Big Indian companies, such as Infosys, Tata Consultancy Services, Wipro, and HCLTech, are the largest users, together with the US giant tech companies.

India’s Response to H1B Row

No fresh DHS or USCIS statements emerged tied directly to Schmitt’s “plea” or Senate oversight. However, related processing changes persist: premium processing fees increased effective March 1, 2026, and the FY 2027 H-1B registration window opened March 4–19, 2026, under the updated skills-based selection process (selections expected by March 31).

The Indian Ministry of External Affairs recently made detailed public comments on H-1B disruptions, following expanded social media vetting (effective December 15, 2025), which triggered mass rescheduling of consular interviews in India (many pushed from late 2025/early 2026 to mid-2026 or even 2027 in some cases).
MEA Spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal (December 26, 2025 briefing) said: “The Government of India has received multiple representations from Indian nationals facing delays and difficulties in scheduling or rescheduling US visa appointments. While visa matters fall under the sovereign domain of the issuing country, India has raised these concerns with the US authorities in New Delhi and Washington DC.” He added that prolonged delays cause “hardship for families and children,” and India remains “actively engaged” with U.S. authorities to “minimize the impact on Indian nationals” and address disruptions.Current Practical Impact on Indian Applicants

Consular backlogs in India remain severe due to vetting layers (social media over 5 years required public, site visits, wage checks). Some January–March 2026 slots were deferred as far as 2027. No evidence of resolution or easing in early March.

No major regulatory changes to H-1B/OPT have been finalized yet as reviews remain ongoing. Indian tech firms and NASSCOM continue highlighting project delays.
The Indian students may witness setbacks during the review due to the OPT program, which allows foreign students who complete their studies in US universities to remain and have a temporary work period. Most Indian students spend this period to have professional experience and then move on to other long term visas such as the H-1B.

A change in the policy towards these paths may extend throughout the Indian labour force in technology, its education sector overseas and remittance. America is still the number one destination of the Indian IT talents and the income of Indian employees to foreign markets is one of the largest contributors to the global remittances of the nation.

Although the Department of Homeland Security has not yet confirmed that the review would result in a change in the regulations, immigration experts fear that a tighter rule may impact thousands of Indian workers and students who plan their careers in the US technology market.