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    Friday, June 5
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    You are at:Home » International Students Built Their American Dream on a Work Visa , Now That Dream Has a Deadline
    International Students Built Their American Dream on a Work Visa
    International Students Built Their American Dream on a Work Visa
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    International Students Built Their American Dream on a Work Visa , Now That Dream Has a Deadline

    Radio TandilBy Radio Tandil5 June 2026No Comments5 Mins Read1 Views
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    A graduate student from Hyderabad is using two spreadsheets at once in the library of a university engineering school someplace in the Research Triangle. One monitors the development of her thesis. The other is a job application tracker that is color-coded according to the firm, status, and whether or not the organization is known to sponsor H-1B visas. A third tab titled “Canada/Germany backup” appears beneath the tracker, almost like a footnote. She has spent four years living in the United States. She graduated from a reputable institution with a master’s degree in computer science.

    In addition to paying out-of-state tuition and occupying a graduate seat that US universities increasingly rely on for funding and research output, she is doing what hundreds of thousands of overseas students will be doing in 2026: establishing an American career while keeping a permanent eye on the exit route. The old-fashioned route of obtaining a degree, OPT, H-1B, and ultimately permanent residency has not vanished. However, students who came five years ago with a clear mental image of how this was meant to work are now operating in a much more uncertain environment because it has gathered so many pressure points.

    STEM graduates have a hypothetical thirty-six-month window to find an employer ready to sponsor an H-1B thanks to the STEM OPT extension, which is currently in effect. It provides twelve months of work permission after graduation, followed by a potential twenty-four-month extension for qualifying degrees. Three opportunities to enter the lottery. That was the calculation that supported the investment. The issue is that the H-1B lottery isn’t really a lottery anymore.

    The selection procedure changed to a wage-based approach in February 2026, with higher-paying positions being chosen first. The prospects for entry-level positions, which are the most likely to be offered to recent graduates and serve as the foundation of an American career, have drastically decreased. The goal of the rule modification was to stop staffing companies from abusing the lottery by overloading it with low-wage applications. An alternative form of collateral damage affects recently graduated international students.

    The limitation that most individuals outside of this world don’t fully understand is the OPT unemployment clock. An overseas student may not accrue more than ninety days of unemployment benefits during OPT. Ninety cumulative days, not ninety consecutive days. Ninety days is particularly tight in a job market where entry-level hiring timeframes often take four to six months, and where tech and consultancy firms dramatically reduced their employment of recent graduates through 2024 and into 2025.

    Regardless of how much they have committed in their studies or their life here, students who graduate in May and do not have a job by August are monitoring a countdown that, if it expires, eliminates their legal ability to stay in the nation. Immigration scholars attribute the 36% decline in student visa issuances in the summer of 2025 to a number of issues, including lottery restructuring and OPT uncertainty.

    Because it impacts students before they even reach the OPT stage, the Duration of Status proposal is the one that is most significantly altering the underlying calculus. F-1 visa holders are permitted to stay in the US under the current D/S framework as long as they are making academic progress; the end date of their permitted stay is linked to the program’s completion rather than a specific date on their visa stamp. This would be replaced with a strict four-year limit under the proposed rule, after which students would have to apply for extensions with USCIS. In September 2026, new students entering the US are anticipated to be subject to the finalized regulation. There is now an 11.3 million case backlog at USCIS.

    According to DHS, the regulation would result in an extra 414,000 extension requests annually. The American Hospital Association specifically warned about the impact on about 17,000 J-1 physicians training in rural and underserved communities, a less obvious aspect of international student policy that seldom comes up in political discourse. NAFSA and major university associations have been outspoken about the implications.

    International Students Built Their American Dream on a Work Visa
    International Students Built Their American Dream on a Work Visa

    From the outside, it appears that the US immigration system is making a number of decisions that add up to make the pathway more costly, unpredictable, and dependent on circumstances beyond a student’s control—all the while the STEM workforce gap that made international students essential to American research and technology persists. Students’ parallel planning makes sense.

    The UK’s Graduate Route, Germany’s skilled worker visa reforms, and Canada’s Express Entry scheme are all promoting themselves as substitutes for the same talent pool that the US is making harder to keep. The question that has been postponed year after year with each subsequent tightening of the regulations is whether or not that talent disparity eventually registers as an economic cost worth addressing.

    American Dream on a Work Visa ICEF Monitor reporting International Students STEM extension
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