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  • From Amazon to Pinterest: The 40 tech companies that file the most H-1B immigrant work visas

    President Donald Trump addresses a joint session of Congress at the Capitol in Washington.
    President Donald Trump

    • Tech companies seek to hire thousands of skilled foreign workers through H-1B visas each year.
    • President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown is raising questions about the future of such visas.
    • See which tech companies file for the most H-1B visas, according to publicly available data.

    Tech industry giants are hiring thousands of foreign workers through H-1B visas each year, even as the program faces renewed scrutiny under President Donald Trump’s second term and growing skepticism from Silicon Valley leaders who once championed it.

    The H-1B program allows US companies to hire up to 85,000 foreign workers with specialized skills annually. Workers are chosen through an annual lottery, which kicked off last week and will run through March 24. While Trump expressed support in December, calling it “a great program” that he has “used many times,” key figures in his political base have voiced opposition.

    Things escalated late last year when Trump appointed Sriram Krishnan, a first-generation Indian American who immigrated to the US from India in 2007, to serve as a senior White House advisor for AI. The appointment drew backlash from some MAGA supporters, including former Trump aide Steve Bannon, who called the program “a total and complete scam to destroy the American worker.”

    In late January, Republican Senators John Kennedy and Rick Scott introduced a joint resolution under the Congressional Review Act to reverse a Biden-era rule that extended the automatic renewal period for employment authorization documents from 180 days to 540 days. Kennedy said the extension “hampers the Trump administration’s efforts to enforce our immigration laws,” signaling there would be additional scrutiny of work permits for foreign nationals.

    Even tech leaders have softened their stance. Elon Musk and Marc Andreessen, once unequivocal supporters, have recently acknowledged the need for improvement.

    Andreessen said on Lex Fridman’s podcast last month that the US has been conducting “a 60-year social engineering experiment to exclude native-born people from the educational slots and jobs that high-skill immigration has been funneling foreigners into.”

    Musk has called for raising the minimum salary requirements for people on H-1B visas and adding a “yearly cost” to make it more expensive for companies to hire from overseas. “I’ve been very clear that the program is broken and needs major reform,” he posted on X.

    While the program’s future remains uncertain, any significant changes or restrictions to H-1B visas would profoundly impact America’s largest technology companies, which have built their workforces around access to global talent.

    Business Insider used publicly available data from the Department of Labor and US Citizenship and Immigration Services to analyze which tech companies filed the most H-1B requests during the 2024 government fiscal year. The data comes from applications submitted by businesses seeking to sponsor skilled workers’ visas.

    Our analysis shows that tech giants collectively file for thousands of these visas annually, using them to fill critical roles that they claim cannot be adequately staffed domestically.

    Notably, not every visa filing results in an actual hire, and occasionally multiple filings might be associated with a single position. Companies sometimes submit new applications to accommodate amendments or extend existing visas. Nevertheless, the data available to the public offers a reliable glimpse into the H-1B visa requirements of major corporations.

    We have excluded IT consulting firms from this analysis to focus specifically on tech product companies, despite consulting giants like Infosys and Tata Consultancy Services traditionally being among the program’s largest users.

    The analysis reveals that tech giants like Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Meta, and Apple are among the program’s heaviest users, with thousands of filings each.

    While most positions are for software engineers and other technical roles, companies also use the program to fill specialized positions in research, product management, and data science. The employee head count for each firm comes from the latest publicly available data such as the company’s latest annual report, their corporate website, or according to sources BI spoke with.

    The firms listed either did not respond to a request for comment or declined to comment on the record.

    Here are the top 40 tech companies sponsoring H-1B visas, ranked by their number of filings:

    1. Amazon

    Amazon CEO Andy Jassy
    Amazon CEO Andy Jassy

    Total certified H-1B filings: 14,783 (including 23 for Whole Foods).

    Total employees worldwide: 1,556,000 as of the end of 2024.

    2. Microsoft

    Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella wearing a suit and tie against an orange background.
    Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella

    Total certified H-1B filings: 5,695 flings (including 970 from LinkedIn).

    Total employees worldwide: 228,000 as of the second quarter of 2024.

    3. Alphabet

    Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai
    Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai

    Total certified H-1B filings: 5,537 (including 115 from Waymo and Verily).

    Total employees worldwide: 183,323 as of the end of 2024.

    4. Meta

    Mark Zuckerberg
    Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg

    Total certified H-1B filings: 4,844.

    Total employees worldwide: 74,067 as of the end of 2024.

    5. Apple

    Tim Cook
    Apple CEO Tim Cook

    Total certified H-1B filings: 3,880.

    Total employees worldwide: 164,000 as of the third quarter of 2024.

    6. IBM

    IBM logo
    IBM

    Total certified H-1B filings: 2,907.

    Total employees worldwide: More than 293,400 as of the end of 2024.

    7. Intel

    Intel in an eye
    Intel

    Total certified H-1B filings: 2,558.

    Total employees worldwide: 108,900 as of the end of 2024.

    8. Oracle

    Oracle
    Oracle

    Total certified H-1B filings: 2,141.

    Total employees worldwide: 159,000 as of the end of May 2024.

    9. Tesla

    Elon Musk
    Tesla CEO Elon Musk

    Total certified H-1B filings: 1,677.

    Total employees worldwide: 125,665 as of the end of 2024.

    10. Bytedance

    tiktok logo
    TikTok parent company Bytedance

    Total certified H-1B filings: 1,611.

    Total employees worldwide: More than 150,000, according to the company’s website.

    11. Salesforce

    Salesforce logo above revolving door
    Salesforce

    Total certified H-1B filings: 1,525 (A Salesforce spokesperson said that the company filed 1,808 H-1B petitions in fiscal year 2024 including new hires, amendments, and extensions).

    Total employees worldwide: 76,453 as of the end of January 2025.

    12. Nvidia

    Photo illustration of Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang
    Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang

    Total certified H-1B filings: 1,519.

    Total employees worldwide: 36,000 as of the end of fiscal year 2025.

    13. Cisco

    A Cisco Systems sign is seen outside a Cisco health clinic at Cisco Systems in San Jose, California, U.S., March 22, 2018. REUTERS/Elijah Nouvelage
    Cisco health clinic at Cisco Systems in San Jose

    Total certified H-1B filings: 1,330.

    Total employees worldwide: 90,400 as of the end of fiscal year 2024.

    14. Qualcomm

    qualcomm
    Qualcomm

    Total certified H-1B filings: 1,291.

    Total employees worldwide: 49,000 employees as of the end of the third quarter of 2024.

    15. Adobe

    Adobe logo on smartphone
    Adobe

    Total certified H-1B filings: 787.

    Total employees worldwide: More than 30,708 of as November 2024.

    16. Intuit

    Off white Intuit building with gate around it
    Intuit

    Total certified H-1B filings: 770.

    Total employees worldwide: 18,200 at the end of fiscal year 2024.

    17. Uber

    Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi talking about AI at the World Economic Forum in Davos.
    Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi

    Total certified H-1B filings: 703.

    Total employees worldwide: 31,100 as of the end of 2024.

    18. Paypal

    The PayPal logo on a sign at its headquarters.
    PayPal

    Total certified H-1B filings: 623.

    Total employees worldwide: 24,400 as of the end of 2024.

    19. eBay

    eBay logo sign outside its office
    eBay

    Total certified H-1B filings: 548 (An eBay spokesperson said eBay filed 494 H-1B visas in fiscal year 2024, noting that the publicly available information doesn’t disclose the exact number of roles hired for.)

    Total employees worldwide: 11,500 as of the end of 2024.

    20. Rivian

    Rivian
    Rivian

    Total certified H-1B filings: 584.

    Total employees worldwide: 14,861 as of the end of 2024.

    21. ServiceNow

    servicenow
    ServiceNow

    Total certified H-1B filings: 578.

    Total employees worldwide: 26,293 as of the end of 2024.

    22. HP

    HP
    HP

    Total certified H-1B filings: 533.

    Total employees worldwide: 58,000 as of the end of 2024.

    23. Dell

    Dell Technologies sign
    Dell

    Total certified H-1B filings: 489.

    Total employees worldwide: 120,000 as of February 2, 2024.

    24. Lucid Motors

    lucid factory
    Lucid

    Total certified H-1B filings: 488.

    Total employees worldwide: 6,800 as of the end of 2024.

    25. DoorDash

    A person on a bike with a Doordash box on their back.
    DoorDash

    Total certified H-1B filings: 427.

    Total employees worldwide: 23,700 as of the end of 2024.

    26. Fiserv

    Fiserv
    Fiserv

    Total certified H-1B filings: 403.

    Total employees worldwide: 38,000 as of the end of 2024.

    27. Micron Technology

    Micron technology logo
    Micron

    Total certified H-1B filings: 369.

    Total employees worldwide: 48,000 as of August 29, 2024.

    28. VMWare

    vmware
    VMWare

    Total certified H-1B filings: 359.

    Total employees worldwide: 16,000 according to Business Insider’s sources.

    29. ADP

    ADP logo
    ADP

    Total certified H-1B filings: 350.

    Total employees worldwide: 64,000 as of June 2024.

    30. Workday

    Workday logo
    Workday

    Total certified H-1B filings: 347.

    Total employees worldwide: 20,400 as of January 31, 2025.

    31. Expedia

    Expedia
    Expedia

    Total certified H-1B filings: 331.

    Total employees worldwide: 16,500 as of the end of 2024.

    32. MathWorks

    MathWorks sign
    MathWorks

    Total certified H-1B filings: 295.

    Total employees worldwide: 6,500, according to the corporate website.

    33. Snowflake

    Snowflake
    Snowflake

    Total certified H-1B filings: 285.

    Total employees worldwide: 7,004 as of January 31, 2024.

    34. Databricks

    Databricks logo on phon screen
    Databricks

    Total certified H-1B filings: 283.

    Total employees worldwide: More than 7,000, according to the company’s website.

    35. Synopsys

    synopsys
    Synopsys

    Total certified H-1B filings: 267.

    Total employees worldwide: 20,000 as of November 2024.

    36. Stripe

    Stripe logo displayed on a phone
    Stripe

    Total certified H-1B filings: 265.

    Total employees worldwide: Approximately 8,200 according to BI’s reporting.

    37. Snap

    Evan Spiegel
    Snap CEO Evan Spiegel

    Total certified H-1B filings: 258

    Total employees worldwide: 4,911 as of December 2024.

    38. Netflix

    Computer with a Netflix logo and fast-forward button on its screen
    Netflix

    Total certified H-1B filings: 256.

    Total employees worldwide: 14,000 as of the end of 2024.

    39. Block

    Jack Dorsey likes to meditate every morning.
    Block CEO Jack Dorsey

    Total certified H-1B filings: 231.

    Total employees worldwide: 11,372 as of the end of 2024.

    40. Pinterest

    pinterest
    Pinterest

    Total certified H-1B filings: 225.

    Total employees worldwide: 4,666 as of the end of 2024.

    Read the original article on Business Insider