USA Career Guide for Indians 2026: H1B, Green Card and OPT Strategy
The United States is where ambition meets scale. Indian professionals have built some of the USA's most important technology companies — Sundar Pichai at Google, Satya Nadella at Microsoft, Shantanu Narayen at Adobe, Arvind Krishna at IBM — and Indian engineers, doctors, researchers, and business leaders form an indispensable layer of the American professional economy.
The attraction is real. US salaries in technology dwarf Indian compensation by a factor of 5–10x. The professional networks, company ecosystems, and career trajectories available in Silicon Valley, New York, Boston, and Seattle are not replicated anywhere else. But the immigration system creates a fundamental challenge for Indian nationals that demands frank discussion.
This guide covers the full picture — the opportunity and the obstacles — with specific, actionable strategy for each stage.
The Study Pathway: F-1, CPT, OPT
Most Indian professionals enter the US workforce through the F-1 student visa route. This is the foundational strategy for those who do not already have US work experience.
F-1 Visa Basics
The F-1 student visa is obtained after receiving an I-20 form from a SEVIS-registered university. Key requirements: proof of financial support (typically $30,000–$70,000 depending on school and location), evidence of ties to India (helps demonstrate non-immigrant intent), and English proficiency.
CPT (Curricular Practical Training): Off-campus work authorisation during your studies, used for co-ops, internships, and work directly tied to your curriculum. 12+ months of full-time CPT makes you ineligible for OPT — a rule many students do not know until it is too late.
OPT (Optional Practical Training): 12 months post-graduation work authorisation. Apply 90 days before graduation; processing takes 3–5 months, so apply early. Work anywhere, for any employer in your field.
STEM OPT Extension: The 24-month extension available to STEM degree holders is the most important immigration tool in an international student's first years in the US. Total 36 months of work authorisation. Requirements: employer E-Verify registration, formal training plan with mentorship, and an I-983 form reviewed every 6 and 12 months.
Strategic implication: With 36 months of STEM OPT, you get three H-1B lottery entries (April registrations for October starts in 2024, 2025, and 2026 if you graduated in 2023). Most Indian STEM graduates in technology, engineering, or quantitative fields eventually get selected.
The H-1B Visa: What You Need to Know for 2026
How the Lottery Works
Every year, USCIS opens an H-1B registration window (typically March 1–18). Employers register their beneficiaries for a fee ($215 in 2026 for regular registration). The lottery then:
- First selects from the 20,000 US master's cap (for those with a US master's or higher)
- Those not selected in the master's draw go into the 65,000 regular cap draw along with all other registrants
In practice, the master's cap advantage is modest — with so many master's cap registrants, the probability boost over regular is perhaps 5–8%.
2026 registration numbers: Approximately 780,000+ registrations for 85,000 spots. The mathematics are brutal: roughly 1 in 9 registrants is selected. However, USCIS now limits registrations to one per applicant per employer (preventing the abuse of multiple registrations), which has slightly improved the odds compared to 2021–2022 peaks.
H-1B Alternatives
If you do not win the H-1B lottery, options include:
L-1 Visa (Intracompany Transfer): If your company has an Indian entity and a US entity, you can be transferred from India to the USA after 1 year of work with the Indian entity. L-1A (managers/executives) leads to EB-1C Green Card which has no Indian backlog. L-1B (specialised knowledge) is more common but has its own quota complications.
O-1 Visa (Extraordinary Ability): Requires demonstrating extraordinary achievement in your field — awards, publications, high salary, critical role at major companies, media coverage. Genuine O-1 cases exist for Indian professionals with strong credentials. No lottery, no cap. But the qualifying standard is genuinely high.
TN Visa: Only for Canadian and Mexican citizens under USMCA. Not available to Indian nationals.
E-3 Visa: Only for Australian citizens. Not available to Indians.
Green Card: The Uncomfortable Reality for Indians
The Backlog Problem
The Employment-Based Green Card system allocates a maximum of 7% of all employment-based Green Cards to any single country of birth per year. With 140,000 total EB visas annually and only 7% going to India-born applicants, the demand-supply mismatch is catastrophic.
| Category | Current Wait for Indians (Estimated) | |---|---| | EB-1A (Extraordinary Ability) | Current / minimal backlog | | EB-1B (Outstanding Researcher) | 1–3 years | | EB-1C (Multinational Manager) | Current / minimal backlog | | EB-2 (Advanced Degree / NIW) | 8–15 years (improving in recent years) | | EB-3 (Skilled Workers) | 50–100+ years |
These figures mean that an Indian engineer who files for an EB-3 Green Card today will not receive it in their lifetime at current processing rates. This is not hyperbole — it is the published USCIS data extrapolated forward.
What This Means Practically
Indian professionals on H-1B work and live in the US with H-4 dependants while awaiting Green Cards that may never come in a professionally relevant timeframe. Many accumulate 15–20 years in the US on H-1B renewals (extensions are available indefinitely if you have an approved I-140 petition). Their children are born in the US (automatically US citizens). The professional life is effectively permanent residency without the formal status.
Practical adaptations:
- File I-140 early: An approved I-140 (immigrant petition) preserves your priority date even if you change employers or leave the country.
- AC21 portability: After 180 days of having a pending I-485 (adjustment of status), you can change employers to a "same or similar" position without losing your Green Card queue position.
The Fast Tracks: EB-1A and EB-2 NIW
EB-1A (Extraordinary Ability): The standard is "extraordinary ability in sciences, arts, education, business, or athletics." Qualifying evidence includes: major awards (Padma Bhushan, IEEE Fellowship, National Merit Recognition), peer-reviewed publications with significant citations, judging of others' work, critical role in distinguished organisations, high salary relative to peers. A strong EB-1A case requires 3+ of 10 specific criteria. Indian professionals with strong academic or professional recognition records should actively evaluate EB-1A — no employer sponsorship required, and no backlog.
EB-2 NIW (National Interest Waiver): The NIW waives the Labour Certification requirement and employer sponsorship. You petition directly, arguing that your work is in the national interest of the USA. The standard post-Matter of Dhanasar requires: (1) your work has substantial merit and national importance; (2) you are well-positioned to advance it; and (3) it benefits the US to waive normal requirements.
NIW is achievable for Indian professionals in: healthcare (especially shortage areas), STEM research, clean energy, national security, and specialised technical fields. A good immigration attorney who has filed multiple successful NIW petitions is essential. Processing: 8–24 months for priority processing.
Salary: What Indian Professionals Actually Earn in the USA
Technology (Silicon Valley / New York / Seattle)
| Role | Total Compensation (USD) | Total Compensation (INR) | |---|---|---| | New Grad SWE (FAANG) | $200,000–$280,000 | ₹1.67–2.34 crores | | New Grad SWE (mid-tier) | $110,000–$160,000 | ₹92 lakhs–1.34 crores | | Mid-level SWE (FAANG) | $280,000–$450,000 | ₹2.34–3.76 crores | | Senior SWE (FAANG) | $400,000–$700,000+ | ₹3.34–5.85 crores | | Senior SWE (mid-tier) | $180,000–$280,000 | ₹1.5–2.34 crores | | Staff Engineer | $450,000–$900,000 | ₹3.76–7.52 crores | | Engineering Manager (FAANG) | $450,000–$750,000 | ₹3.76–6.26 crores | | Data Scientist | $140,000–$300,000 | ₹1.17–2.51 crores | | Product Manager | $150,000–$400,000 | ₹1.25–3.34 crores |
Note on total compensation: These figures include base salary (typically 40–60% of total), restricted stock units (RSUs, vested over 4 years typically), and annual cash bonuses. Base salary is ₹80–200 lakhs depending on level; the rest is equity and bonus.
Healthcare
| Role | Annual Salary (USD) | Annual Salary (INR) | |---|---|---| | Family Medicine Physician | $230,000–$290,000 | ₹1.92–2.42 crores | | Cardiologist | $350,000–$500,000 | ₹2.92–4.17 crores | | Radiologist | $400,000–$550,000 | ₹3.34–4.59 crores | | Registered Nurse (BSN) | $75,000–$100,000 | ₹63–83 lakhs | | Nurse Practitioner | $110,000–$145,000 | ₹92 lakhs–1.21 crores |
Indian doctors must pass USMLE Steps 1, 2CK (and formerly 2CS), and Step 3, then secure a residency position. The residency match is competitive and not all foreign medical graduates are selected, but Indian MBBS holders from MCI-recognised colleges with strong academic records do match regularly.
Which Companies Sponsor the Most H-1Bs?
Based on Department of Labor LCA (Labour Condition Application) data, the consistent top H-1B sponsors include:
- Infosys — routinely the top filer by volume (20,000–30,000+ per year)
- Tata Consultancy Services — similar volumes
- Cognizant — large IT staffing operations
- Wipro — significant volume
- Amazon — largest product company filer
- Google / Alphabet — substantial filings
- Microsoft — consistent top 10
- Deloitte — consulting
- Ernst & Young — consulting
- Meta / Apple / Salesforce — growing volume
Implication: IT services firms (Infosys, TCS, Wipro, Cognizant, HCL) sponsor large numbers of H-1Bs at salaries that meet the prevailing wage requirement but are often lower than direct-hire tech company compensation. Many Indian IT services employees use this route to get to the USA and then transition to product companies — a well-worn path.
Tax Considerations for Indian Nationals in the USA
Indian nationals in the US on H-1B are generally US tax residents and pay US federal and state income tax on worldwide income. Key considerations:
US-India Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA): Prevents double taxation on income earned in one country while residing in the other.
Foreign Bank Account Reporting (FBAR): If you have foreign financial accounts (Indian bank accounts, mutual funds, provident fund) totalling over $10,000 at any point in the year, you must report them. Failure has severe penalties.
India tax on US salary: You do not pay Indian income tax on salary earned while a US tax resident. But when you visit India or eventually return, maintaining clear residency documentation matters.
RSU taxation: Stock vesting in the US is taxable as ordinary income in the year of vesting. This catches many H-1B holders off guard in their first year of RSU vesting.
Strategy Summary: The Indian Professional's USA Roadmap
| Phase | Duration | Key Action | |---|---|---| | F-1 Study | 2 years | Choose STEM programme, build US network, intern | | OPT / STEM OPT | 12 + 24 months | Work in target company, file H-1B multiple times | | H-1B | 3 years (renewable) | File I-140 early, evaluate NIW/EB-1A | | H-1B extension | 3-year blocks | AC21 portability for job changes, build EB track | | GC / Citizenship | Depends on track | EB-1A fastest; NIW realistic; EB-3 not viable |
Your Next Step
The USA offers the highest upside of any career destination for Indian professionals — but requires navigating a genuinely complex immigration system with long-term strategic clarity. Understanding the H-1B lottery, STEM OPT window, and Green Card track options before you start is what separates successful US careers from those defined by immigration anxiety.
At Dheya, we help Indian professionals develop US career strategies that account for immigration realities — from programme selection for OPT advantage to evaluating whether NIW or EB-1A is appropriate for your profile.
Visit dheya.com to start planning your US career strategy with a Dheya counsellor.