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Indian H-1B workers are stuck at home as US visa renewals face sudden delays.
US Visa
Representational image created with AI

H-1B renewal chaos leaves Indian techies stranded as US tightens visa vetting

| @indiablooms | Dec 22, 2025, at 05:53 pm

New Delhi/IBNS: Hundreds of Indian professionals holding H-1B visas have found themselves stranded in India after travelling home to renew their US work permits, following abrupt interview postponements linked to Washington’s tightened social media vetting rules.

 

The affected workers had visa interview appointments scheduled between December 15 and 26, a period coinciding with the US holiday season.

However, these appointments have now reportedly been pushed to March next year, leaving many unable to return to their jobs in the United States.

Immigration law firms say the scale of disruption is unprecedented.

Several firms have acknowledged that hundreds of their clients are currently stuck in India with no clarity on when they will be able to re-enter the US.

“This is the biggest mess we have seen. I’m not sure there is a plan,” immigration attorney Veena Vijay Ananth told The Washington Post, reflecting the growing anxiety among affected workers and employers alike.

In one case cited by the report, an Indian-origin professional living in the Detroit suburbs flew to India earlier this month to attend a wedding.

His consular appointments, scheduled for December 17 and 23, have now lapsed, leaving him uncertain about when he can return.

Legal experts warn that prolonged delays could test how long US companies are willing to hold positions open for stranded employees.

US cites new social media vetting policy

According to emails received by applicants, the US State Department attributed the delays to a new social media screening policy aimed at ensuring that visa applicants do not pose threats to US national security or public safety.

Earlier this month, the US Embassy in India issued a formal advisory cautioning applicants against turning up on previously scheduled dates if their appointments had been rescheduled.

The embassy warned that such applicants would be denied entry to consular premises.

“If you have received an email advising that your visa appointment has been rescheduled, Mission India looks forward to assisting you on your new appointment date,” the advisory said, adding that arriving on an old appointment date would result in refusal of entry.

India dominates H-1B numbers

The uncertainty has hit Indian nationals particularly hard.

According to a US Citizenship and Immigration Services report released in April, Indians account for nearly 71 percent of all H-1B visa holders, making them the largest group impacted by the delays.

Google, Apple warn employees

The disruption has prompted major US technology firms to step in.

Google and Apple have reportedly warned some employees against travelling overseas after internal assessments revealed that visa re-entry processing delays could stretch up to 12 months.

Google’s external counsel, BAL Immigration Law, cautioned employees that international travel could result in an “extended stay outside the US” due to appointment backlogs at American embassies and consulates.

Broader crackdown under Trump administration

The social media vetting requirement is part of a broader tightening of immigration scrutiny under the Donald Trump administration.

H-1B and H-4 visa applicants are now subject to enhanced screening, including checks of online profiles—measures that were earlier limited to students and exchange visitors.

“Every visa adjudication is a national security decision,” the State Department has said, defending the move.

In recent months, the administration has also imposed a one-time $100,000 fee on new H-1B visas and paused several immigration pathways for applicants from 19 “countries of concern,” further amplifying uncertainty for foreign workers.

For now, stranded H-1B holders remain caught between shifting US immigration policies and professional obligations back home, with little indication of when the logjam will ease.
 

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