The 2026 H-1B cap season is shaping up to be one of the most competitive in recent history, and the new $100,000 H-1B fee proposal for certain foreign hires abroad could make it even tougher for small and mid-sized employers to plan. With lottery changes expected and increased scrutiny on filings, many organizations (especially in healthcare, education, and tech) simply can’t afford to wait until next spring.
If you need to fill a critical role before the 2026 lottery even opens, you have options. Here’s how to keep your hiring plans moving now.
TN Visa: Fast-Track Option for Canadian & Mexican Professionals
If your candidate is a Canadian or Mexican citizen in one of the USMCA-approved professions, think nurses, engineers, accountants, scientists, or professors, the TN visa is one of the fastest and most cost-effective H-1B alternatives.
- No lottery and no annual cap
- Immediate eligibility with same-day adjudication at the border (for Canadians)
- Renewable indefinitely in three-year increments
- No need to prove shortage or labor certification
“Many of our healthcare clients rely on the TN category to fill urgent nursing and therapy roles,” says Rosanna Berardi, Esq., Partner at Berardi Immigration Law. “It’s often the simplest solution for cross-border talent when the H-1B pipeline is clogged or uncertain.”
E-2 Visa: For Employers with Foreign Ownership or Investment
The E-2 Treaty Investor visa is a powerful tool for companies with ownership ties to a treaty country (including Canada and most of Europe). It allows businesses to bring in essential managerial, executive, or specialized-skill employees of the same nationality.
Why it works:
- Ideal for private clinics, startups, or subsidiaries of foreign companies
- Flexible job categories, not limited to a set list like the TN
- Renewable indefinitely while the business remains active
- Shorter processing timelines than the H-1B
If your company is majority-owned by a treaty-country national, E-2 employee visas can help you scale your team without waiting for the H-1B calendar.
O-1 Visa: For Individuals with Extraordinary Ability
The O-1 visa isn’t just for Nobel laureates or pro athletes. It’s increasingly used for researchers, physicians, therapists, and tech specialists who have proven excellence in their field through awards, publications, or career milestones.
O-1 can be a strategic bridge for professionals who clearly exceed standard qualifications but don’t want to gamble on the H-1B lottery.
Advantages:
- No cap or annual quota
- Three-year initial approval, renewable indefinitely
- Works well for talent in R&D, medicine, and academia
For high-skilled healthcare workers, especially those engaged in clinical research, innovation, or leadership roles, O-1 is often underutilized but highly effective.
H-1B Cap-Exempt Options: Partnering with Nonprofits & Universities
Even within the H-1B system, there’s a way around the cap. Certain employers are cap-exempt, including:
- Accredited colleges and universities
- Nonprofit entities affiliated with such institutions
- Governmental or nonprofit research organizations
If you can structure your candidate’s role within or jointly with a qualifying cap-exempt entity (for instance, a hospital affiliated with a teaching university), the petition can be filed year-round without regard to the lottery.
This strategy is particularly valuable for healthcare employers facing chronic shortages. A collaboration agreement or shared appointment can make a foreign professional immediately eligible for H-1B status under the exemption.
H-1B1 and E-3: Country-Specific Professional Options
For citizens of Chile and Singapore, the H-1B1 visa provides an H-1B-like pathway, minus the lottery. Likewise, the E-3 visa offers similar benefits for Australian nationals. Both categories allow U.S. employers to:
- Avoid the cap and long waits
- File at any time of year
- Use the same “specialty occupation” criteria as H-1B
If your candidate holds one of these nationalities, these categories can help you sidestep the crowd entirely.
The Long Game: Permanent Residence Sponsorship (EB-2/EB-3)
If you know your business will rely on a particular role long-term, starting the green card process early may actually be faster than waiting for a future H-1B lottery. With proper planning, many employers can sponsor candidates directly for PERM-based EB-2 or EB-3 permanent residence, even while the individual remains abroad or works under a different temporary visa.
Though this path involves more documentation, it provides stability and avoids the uncertainty of annual caps.
Practical Steps for Employers Now
Whether you’re an SMB with a critical software engineer or a hospital facing nursing shortages, acting early is key. Employers should:
- Map out candidate eligibility for alternative visas now
- Budget for evolving government fees and potential H-1B reforms
- Document the role’s U.S. equivalency and skill requirements
- Consult with experienced counsel to structure filings strategically
“At Berardi Immigration Law, we’re seeing employers get creative, using a mix of TNs, E-2s, and O-1s to build workforce continuity,” says Berardi. “The employers who plan early aren’t the ones stuck waiting next April.”
Use Smarter H-1B Filing Strategies
The H-1B cap isn’t the end of the road, it’s just one lane. Between treaty-based options, cap-exempt filings, and extraordinary-ability routes, businesses have multiple tools to recruit and retain top talent. For healthcare systems, startups, and growing employers, strategic visa planning can make all the difference between an empty seat and a thriving team.
Schedule a consultation with our team of immigration attorneys and learn how you can reach your U.S. immigration goals.
H-1B Filing Strategy FAQs
Can I file an H-1B petition outside of the lottery?
Yes. If your organization is cap-exempt, such as a nonprofit hospital affiliated with a university, you can file any time of year.
How fast can I get a TN or E-2 visa approved?
Canadians can secure TN status at the border the same day. E-2 visas typically process in 2–8 weeks depending on consulate availability.
Can I transition an employee from TN or E-2 to H-1B later?
Absolutely. Many employers start with TN or E-2 for quick entry, then shift to H-1B or green card sponsorship once timing and eligibility align.
Berardi Immigration Law’s attorneys have guided hundreds of employers through workforce planning beyond the H-1B lottery. Contact our team to explore which strategies make sense for your 2026 hiring goals.
