H-1B Lottery
Part 3 – H-1B Strategy 2026: What Employers Should Be Doing Right Now
March 24, 2026

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The H-1B process has changed.
It’s no longer just about submitting registrations and hoping for the best. With wage-weighted selection, increased scrutiny, and a tight registration window, employers who wait until March will already be behind.
If you’re planning to sponsor talent in the 2026 cycle, the question isn’t whether you’ll file.
It’s whether your strategy is ready.
Read the 3 Part Series
- Part 1: What Changed in the H-1B Lottery for 2026? Wage-Weighted Selection Explained
- Part 2: The $100,000 H-1B Fee: Who Actually Pays It (And Who Doesn’t)
- Part 3: H-1B Strategy for 2026: What Employers Should Be Doing Right Now

Why 2026 Requires a Different Approach
Two major shifts are driving change:
- Wage-weighted selection means compensation impacts selection odds
- Increased compliance enforcement means mistakes carry higher risk
The H-1B process now intersects with:
- Compensation strategy
- Workforce planning
- Payroll and documentation systems
- Compliance infrastructure
This is no longer a siloed immigration decision. It’s an operational one.
Step 1: Identify Candidates Before March
The registration window runs March 4–19, 2026.
That’s not the time to decide who to sponsor. That decision should already be made.
Ask:
- Which employees require H-1B sponsorship this year?
- Are they currently on F-1, OPT, or STEM OPT?
- Are any candidates outside the U.S.?
- Are there risks of competing employer filings?
Delays here create downstream risk.
Step 2: Align Wage Strategy with Selection Odds
Under the new system, wage level directly affects probability.
This changes how employers should approach compensation decisions.
Key considerations:
- Is the role classified at the correct OEWS wage level?
- Does the salary align with both business reality and selection competitiveness?
- Are multiple worksites involved (triggering lower wage levels)?
- Can the wage be supported and maintained post-selection?
This is not about inflating wages. It’s about aligning compensation with strategy.
Step 3: Pressure-Test Your Compliance Readiness
USCIS has introduced stricter anti-gaming enforcement.
Common risk areas include:
- Incorrect wage level selection
- Multiple worksites with inconsistent wage classifications
- Wage inflation at registration followed by reduction
- Weak or inconsistent documentation
Employers should confirm:
- One registration per beneficiary
- Accurate job descriptions and wage alignment
- Documentation supports the role and compensation
- Internal processes can withstand audit review
Compliance is no longer a back-end step. It’s a front-end requirement.
Step 4: Understand Your Cost Exposure
Even if the $100,000 proclamation fee does not apply to most cases, employers still need clear visibility into costs.
Budget planning should include:
- Registration fees
- Government filing fees
- Legal fees
- Optional premium processing
For candidates outside the U.S., evaluate:
- Whether consular processing is required
- Whether the supplemental fee could apply
- Whether alternative hiring strategies make more sense
Step 5: Build a Contingency Plan
Not every registration will be selected.
That’s expected.
Employers should plan for alternatives, including:
- TN visas
- E-3 visas
- O-1 visas
- L-1 transfers
- OPT, CPT, or cap-gap extensions
- Green card sponsorship strategy
The strongest organizations plan for both outcomes.
Step 6: Connect Immigration to Workforce Planning
The biggest mistake employers make is treating H-1B as a one-off event.
It’s not.
It connects to:
- Hiring timelines
- Compensation benchmarking
- Retention strategy
- Payroll systems
- Compliance processes
Organizations that integrate immigration into broader workforce planning will have a significant advantage.
How MP Helps Employers Move from Reactive to Strategic
The shift to wage-weighted selection has made H-1B a planning exercise, not just a filing process.
MP helps employers:
- Align compensation strategy with H-1B selection dynamics
- Evaluate workforce planning and hiring timelines
- Strengthen compliance documentation and audit readiness
- Ensure payroll systems support wage obligations
- Coordinate immigration strategy with broader HR operations
While immigration counsel handles legal filings, MP supports the operational infrastructure that makes sponsorship sustainable.
About the Source
This guidance is based on insights from Jennifer Behm, Esq., Partner at Berardi Immigration Law and a nationally recognized immigration attorney, shared during MP’s webinar “H-1B Lottery & Beyond: Smarter Ways to Sponsor Global Talent.”
The webinar took place on February 11, 2026, and reflects immigration policy guidance accurate as of that date.
Employers should verify current requirements, as policies may change.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
When should employers start H-1B planning for 2026?
Immediately. Employers should identify candidates and align wage strategy before the March 4–19, 2026 registration window.
How does wage-weighted selection impact strategy?
Higher wage levels receive more entries in the selection pool, increasing selection probability. Compensation strategy now directly affects outcomes.
What is the biggest risk for employers in 2026?
Misalignment between wage level, job role, and documentation. USCIS is enforcing anti-gaming rules more aggressively.
What happens if a candidate is not selected?
Employers can explore alternatives such as TN, E-3, O-1, L-1 visas, or continued work authorization through OPT or CPT.
Do employers need to adjust compensation for H-1B?
Compensation should be accurate, defensible, and aligned with both business needs and the wage-weighted selection model.
Is H-1B still worth pursuing in 2026?
Yes. However, success now depends on planning, not chance. Employers that prepare early and align strategy will be in the strongest position.
Final Takeaway
The 2026 H-1B cycle rewards preparation.
Employers who:
- Identify candidates early
- Align wage strategy
- Strengthen compliance
- Plan for contingencies
will be positioned to compete.
Those who wait will be reacting to a system that no longer rewards luck.

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