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Fiscal Years 2021-2022 H-1B Cap Selections Figures

USCIS (United States Citizenship and Immigration Services) recently offered insights into how many H-1B Cap Registrations have been selected since the new filing system went into effect in March 2020. This year’s H-1B Cap process still ongoing (selected cases must arrive at USCIS no later than June 30, 2021) and hence the data for last year’s H-1B Cap is a bit more complete. Figures for either of the fiscal years did not distinguish between the U.S. Master’s Cap and the Regular Cap.

Specifically, USCIS provided the following:

  • For Fiscal Year 2021

    • Of the 274,237 H-1B Registrations received within the prescribed filing period, USCIS initially selected 106,100Registration to fill the 85,000 H-1B Visa quota, making the initial acceptance rate approximately 39%.

    • Due to the COVID-19-induced economic downturn and resulting low filing volume of initially selected Registrations, USCIS conducted a second randomized selection in August 2020, wherein it chose an additional 18,315 Registrations.

    • Note – USCIS did not confirm how many H-1B Visas the extra 18,315 Registrations were meant to fill, just that that was the additional amount selected.

    • In total, USCIS selected 124,415 selected registrations, meaning the overall selection rate for Fiscal Year 2021 was approximately 44%.

  • For Fiscal Year 2022

    • This past March, USCIS received 308,613 H-1B Registrations from more than 37,000 different prospective employers.

    • Of the 308,613 Registrations submitted, nearly half were for prospective employees with U.S. Master’s Degrees (or higher).

    • To fill the 85,000 spots, USCIS selected 87,500 Registrations – making this year’s selection rate approximately 28%.

    • At this point, USCIS cannot determine how many more Registrations, if any, will be selected to fill the H-1B quota. However, we should expect updates in the coming months as H-1B Petitions arrive at USCIS Service Centers by the end of June.

To account for the multitude of reasons a selected case may not lead to an approved H-1B Visa Petition, USCIS has been known to select more H-1B Petitions than the 85,000 new H-1B Visas available. With this announcement, USCIS has made us privy to how many extra cases they have selected over the past two years, and that the number of extra cases selected may vary from year-to-year.  We are hoping that USCIS will continue with being transparent and provide more details about its H-1B Cap selection to answer these and other questions.