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HOW CERTAIN EMPLOYERS CAN SPONSOR H-1B VISAS YEAR-ROUND
Contributor
Tukki
Reading time
7 mins read
Date published
Mar 20, 2026
A cap-exempt H-1B is an H-1B visa petition filed by an employer that isn't subject to the annual 65,000 + 20,000 visa cap or the lottery. If you work for (or can find a role at) a qualifying employer, they can sponsor your H-1B at any time during the year without entering the lottery registration. This makes cap-exempt H-1B one of the most reliable paths to H-1B status, especially if you weren't selected in the lottery or want to avoid the uncertainty altogether.
The exemption is tied to the employer, not the employee. That distinction matters because it determines what happens when you change jobs, and it's the most common source of confusion around cap-exempt H-1B rules. This guide covers which employers qualify, how the filing process works, what transferability actually looks like in practice, and what premium processing costs.
Four categories of employers are exempt from the annual H-1B cap under U.S. immigration law. If you're searching for a cap-exempt H-1B employers list, these are the categories USCIS (U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services) recognizes.
Institutions of higher education include universities, colleges, and community colleges that meet the definition under the Higher Education Act of 1965. Both public and private accredited institutions qualify. This covers full-time faculty, researchers, administrators, and other staff positions at these schools, as long as the role meets the H-1B specialty occupation requirement (a position requiring at least a bachelor's degree in a specific field).
Nonprofit organizations related to or affiliated with institutions of higher education extend the exemption beyond the university itself. Teaching hospitals, university-affiliated research foundations, and other nonprofit entities with a formal affiliation to a qualifying institution fall into this category. The key word is "affiliated," and USCIS looks for a meaningful organizational relationship, not just a loose connection. A hospital that operates independently but has no formal institutional ties to a university likely wouldn't qualify.
Nonprofit research organizations are nonprofits whose primary mission is fundamental research. These organizations must qualify under a state nonprofit statute, and their principal function must be research rather than education, healthcare delivery, or other activities. Think of independent research institutes, policy research organizations, and scientific foundations organized under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
Government research organizations round out the list. These are federal, state, or local government entities whose primary function is conducting research. National laboratories, government-funded research centers, and similar entities fall into this category.
Not every nonprofit qualifies. A nonprofit focused on community services, advocacy, or general education without a research mission isn't cap-exempt simply because of its tax status. The employer's primary function must align with one of these four categories.

The filing process for a cap-exempt H-1B petition follows the same general steps as a cap-subject petition, minus the lottery. The employer files Form I-129 (Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker) directly with USCIS at any time during the year. There's no registration window, no March deadline, and no random selection.
Before filing the I-129, the employer must obtain a certified Labor Condition Application (LCA) from the U.S. Department of Labor, attesting that they'll pay at least the prevailing wage and that hiring the foreign worker won't adversely affect U.S. workers. This step is identical for cap-exempt and cap-subject filings.
The fees for cap-exempt H-1B petitions include the I-129 base filing fee of $780, the Fraud Prevention and Detection Fee of $500, and the ACWIA (American Competitiveness and Workforce Improvement Act) Training Fee, which is $1,500 for employers with 25 or more employees and $750 for smaller employers. The Asylum Program Fee also applies: $600 for employers with 25 or more employees, or $300 for smaller employers.
One fee that cap-exempt employers generally don't pay is the Public Law 114-113 Fee of $4,000, which only applies to certain large employers where more than 50% of employees hold H-1B or L-1 status. Most cap-exempt institutions don't meet that threshold.
Premium processing is available for cap-exempt H-1B petitions just like cap-subject ones. By filing Form I-907 with the premium processing fee of $2,965, you get an initial response from USCIS within 15 business days.
This is particularly useful when timing matters, for instance, if you need to start a new academic appointment by a specific date or transition from OPT to H-1B status before your OPT expires. Without premium processing, regular H-1B processing times can stretch to several months. For a full breakdown of H-1B processing costs, see our H-1B premium processing guide.
This is the most important question for anyone considering the cap-exempt route, and the answer depends on where you're moving. The exemption follows the employer, not the employee, so transferability rules change depending on the type of employer you're joining.
Cap-exempt to cap-exempt. If you move from one cap-exempt employer to another (say, from one university to a different nonprofit research organization), you don't need to go through the lottery. Your new cap-exempt employer files a new I-129 petition, and you can start working as soon as USCIS receives it, thanks to H-1B portability rules.
Cap-exempt to cap-subject. If you want to move to a for-profit company or any employer that doesn't fall into the four cap-exempt categories, you'll need to go through the H-1B lottery. This is the biggest limitation of the cap-exempt path, since leaving a cap-exempt employer for the private sector means you're back in the same lottery pool as everyone else.
The concurrent employment workaround. Some professionals maintain part-time employment at a cap-exempt institution while also working for a cap-subject employer. This requires the cap-subject employer to register for the lottery and be selected, but it lets you keep your cap-exempt H-1B active as a safety net during the transition.
Previously counted against the cap. If you held a cap-subject H-1B at some point in the past (meaning you were previously counted against the annual cap), you may be exempt from going through the lottery again when moving from a cap-exempt employer to a cap-subject one, as long as you haven't exhausted your six-year maximum H-1B time. This rule applies because the cap only counts each worker once. Discuss this scenario with your immigration attorney to confirm whether it applies to your situation.
| Feature | Cap-exempt H-1B | Cap-subject H-1B (lottery) |
|---|---|---|
| Annual cap | Not subject to cap | 65,000 + 20,000 (advanced degree) |
| Lottery required | No | Yes |
| Filing timeline | Any time during the year | After lottery selection (April-June) |
| Employer type | Universities, affiliated nonprofits, research orgs, government research | Any U.S. employer in a specialty occupation |
| Initial validity | Up to 3 years | Up to 3 years |
| Maximum stay | 6 years (extensions possible) | 6 years (extensions possible) |
| Premium processing | Available ($2,965) | Available ($2,965) |
| Green card eligibility | Same as cap-subject | Same as cap-exempt |
Both cap-exempt and cap-subject H-1B holders have the same visa status once approved. The visa validity, extension rules, dual intent (the ability to pursue a green card while on H-1B status), and H-1B requirements are identical. The difference is purely in how you get there.
"All nonprofits are cap-exempt." This is the most common misunderstanding. Only nonprofits that are affiliated with institutions of higher education or whose primary mission is research qualify. A nonprofit focused on healthcare delivery, social services, or advocacy doesn't qualify simply because it has tax-exempt status.
"Once you have a cap-exempt H-1B, you're always exempt." The exemption belongs to the employer, not to you. If you leave a cap-exempt employer for a cap-subject one, you'll generally need to go through the lottery unless you were previously counted against the cap.
"Cap-exempt H-1B has different visa rules." It doesn't. The initial validity period is up to 3 years, the maximum stay is 6 years (with extensions available if a PERM labor certification or I-140 petition has been filed), and you can pursue permanent residence through employer-sponsored green card categories like EB-2 or EB-3 just like any other H-1B holder.
"You can only work in research or academic roles." Cap-exempt employers can sponsor H-1B workers for any specialty occupation role within their organization, not just research or faculty positions. Administrative, IT, finance, and other professional roles at a qualifying institution can all be sponsored under the cap exemption.
WE CAN HELP
Need more clarity?
Find quick answers to frequent visa questions from our legal experts
Does each employer pay separate filing fees?
Yes. Each employer must pay the filing fees for their own H-1B petition, including the base fee and any applicable fraud prevention or American Competitiveness and Workforce Improvement Act (ACWIA) fees.
If the employer wants expedited processing, they also pay the premium processing fee.
Can a worker file Form I-129 on their own behalf?
No. Form I-129 must be filed by the U.S. employer acting as the petitioner.
The foreign national beneficiary cannot self-petition.
The employer is responsible for completing the form, paying the filing fees, and providing supporting documentation to USCIS.
Is the O-1A visa harder to get than the H-1B?
The O-1A requires more upfront documentation because you need to prove extraordinary ability through at least 3 of 8 criteria. However, it removes the randomness of the H-1B lottery.
Many professionals in tech, research, finance, and entrepreneurship qualify for the O-1A based on achievements they've already accumulated. The evidentiary bar is higher, but the process is entirely merit-based.
Who pays for a US work visa, the employer or the employee?
For most employer-sponsored visas like the H-1B, the employer is legally required to pay certain fees, including the I-129 base filing fee, the ACWIA Training Fee, and the Fraud Prevention and Detection Fee.
The employer cannot pass these costs to the employee.
Premium processing fees can sometimes be paid by either party, depending on who benefits from faster processing.
Consular fees and travel costs are typically the employee’s responsibility.
How long does it take USCIS to process Form I-129?
Standard processing time for I-129 petitions is typically between 2 and 8 months, depending on the service center and visa category.
With premium processing (Form I-907), USCIS guarantees a response within 15 business days.
Processing times can change, so it is recommended to check the USCIS processing times page for current estimates.
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