Metadata
Title
H-1B Workers
Category
general
UUID
417dd02d00f1490a9e41069ab8e2e05b
Source URL
https://oia.osu.edu/scholars/h-1b-workers
Parent URL
https://oia.osu.edu/
Crawl Time
2026-03-18T05:29:23+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

H-1B Workers

Source: https://oia.osu.edu/scholars/h-1b-workers Parent: https://oia.osu.edu/

The H-1B Specialty Occupation Worker non-immigrant classification allows a foreign national to work in the United States in a position considered to be a "specialty occupation." This means the position must require highly specialized knowledge and skills to perform the position and require a bachelor's degree or its equivalent. In addition, the employer must pay the prevailing wage or higher and attest to certain working conditions under U.S. Department of Labor laws.

The process of applying for an H-1B is complex due to U.S. government labor and immigration laws and regulations that protect foreign workers from abuse and ensure jobs for U.S. workers. The amount of time it takes to get an approved H-1B status is often difficult to estimate because the processing times of government agencies fluctuate and change without notice.

The employer, not the foreign national, applies to the government agencies for the H-1B classification. Documentation must be provided to demonstrate the employer is paying the required wage rate and meeting the required working conditions, that the job is a specialty occupation, and that the foreign national meets the requirements for the job. These materials and related forms are compiled into an “H-1B petition” and submitted to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services for approval of the H-1B.

Below are articles describing the H-1B petition process and related regulations. H-1B application materials can be found at Inviting Scholars to Ohio State. For an explanation of the related immigration documents and terms, see Terms to Know.

H-1B Step by Step Process

H-1B Fees

Changing Status

H-1B Extension

Changes in Position

Portability

Travel

Getting a U.S. Visa Stamp

Maintaining Status

Dependents

Departure

FAQ

U.S. Entry Restrictions