Almost all Indian IT companies would pay between $8,000 and $10,000 per H1B visa from April 1
India’s third largest software services firm Wipro on Monday said the recent H-1B visa fee hike by the US will have a "large impact running into multi-million dollars".
The company is looking to mitigate the impact by hiring more locals in the US.
"It is a large impact running into multi-million dollars for Wipro and also I'm sure for similar such organisations, and it will have meaningful impact on our operating margins. Once we start applying for that, we will disclose those numbers," Wipro chief financial officer Jatin Dalal told reporters in Bengaluru.
He further said: "...this is certainly unexpected and we will have to work through it."
The US, under the 9/11 Health and Compensation Act, has imposed a special fee of $4,000 on certain categories of H-1B visas and $4,500 on L1 visas.
Almost all Indian IT companies would pay between $8,000 and $10,000 per H1B visa from April 1, when the next annual H-1B visa filing session starts, thus making it economically quite unsustainable for them.
According to the Indian IT body Nasscom, this is expected to have an impact of about $400 million annually on India's technology sector.
The industry, however, doesn't seem to be too worried.
Wipro's larger rival, Tata Consultancy Services has said the fee hike was not a big concern and that it is more of a cost issue than a revenue issue.
Infosys too, has said the fee hike will have less than 0.3 per cent impact on its margins.
Dalal said the key will be to diversify its workforce.
"I think the key also is for us to be able to diversify... to be able to localise more with in US. That is what we have already embarked on... by having local US centres and being able to deploy people from within those centres within the US is how in the long or medium term, we will mitigate the issues around visa and in general labour movement across the globe," he added.