“This will be absolutely devastating in the medical field. ~30% residents are international medical graduates & ~10k of 43k residency spots are filled by docs with H-1B visas,” the Sept. 19 post[5] said. “Previously the h-1B fee was <$5,000. No hospital will pay a $100k fee for a $55k resident salary.”

Residency is the phase[6] of physician training when recent medical school graduates participate in supervised clinical training in a healthcare facility. 

The X post is partially accurate but leaves out important details about international students and medical residents in the U.S.

The X post cited as evidence a 2025 National Resident Matching Program report[7] that says approximately 30% of U.S. medical residents are international medical graduates. It’s important to note, though, that this category includes foreign graduates and U.S. citizens who graduated from international schools. The report says that of international medical graduates who obtained a spot in first-year U.S. residency programs, 3,108 were U.S. citizens and 6,653 were noncitizens.  

It’s inaccurate that 10,000 of 43,000 resident spots are filled by H-1B visa holders. The X post cites a 2017 report[8] that analyzed 2016 Labor Department data[9]. This data shows how many working U.S. physicians were certified for H-1B visas. It includes all doctors, not only those in residency. (More recent Labor Department data from the last quarter of 2025, covering determinations from Oct. 1, 2024, through June 30, shows that around 9,000 physicians were certified for H-1B visas.)

The American Medical Association says[10] the most common visa used by medical graduates for medical residency is the J-1 visa, which is for graduate medical education[11] or training, among other purposes. 

The majority of H1-B visa workers have been hired in STEM — science, technology, engineering and math — occupations, with about two-thirds working in computer-related fields, according to the Congressional Research Service[12]

Nancy Nielsen, University at Buffalo senior associate dean for health policy, also confirmed to PolitiFact that the most common visa used for medical residency is the J-1 visa. She said for context, in her school, they have about 830 medical residents and only 27 are on H-1B visas.

PolitiFact reached out to the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates, a division of Intealth[13], which helps medical graduates with sponsorship obtain training in the U.S., and the commission said to its knowledge, no centralized data repository exists for H-1B physicians in residency.

What is the H-1B visa program?

The H-1B visa is available to graduates of foreign medical schools who have a license or other authorization required by the state where they’ll practice, and people who have an unrestricted license to practice medicine or have graduated from a U.S. medical school, according[14] to the American Medical Association. 

Prospective H-1B employers must attest that they will pay the H-1B worker the greater of the actual wage paid to similar employees or the prevailing wages for that occupation.

The visa status is generally valid for up to three years and renewable for another three years, but can be extended if the employer sponsors the worker for permanent residency. 

Congress caps[15] the number of new H-1B visas at 85,000 per fiscal year, including 20,000 for noncitizens who earned a U.S. master’s degree or higher. The fiscal year 2025 cap was met[16] in December 2024. 

Daniel Costa, director of immigration law and policy research at the Economic Policy Institute, a left-of-center think tank, told PolitiFact that the H-1B visa fee must be paid by the employer, not the employee. 

“The H-1B employees are generally not allowed to pay for the primary fees for visas and processing, they are the responsibility of the employer,” Costa said via email Sept. 24. 

Our ruling

An X user said that 30% of medical residents are international medical graduates and 10,000 of 43,000 medical residency spots are filled by doctors with H-1B visas.

Data shows that approximately 30% of medical residents are international medical graduates, which includes both U.S. citizens and noncitizens. Ten thousand doctors hold H-1B visas, but that represents all physicians, not only those in residency. The American Medical Association says[17] the most common visa used by medical graduates for medical residency is the J-1 visa. 

The statement is partially accurate but leaves out important details. We rate it Half True. 

References

  1. ^ will require (www.whitehouse.gov)
  2. ^ said (www.whitehouse.gov)
  3. ^ letter (searchlf.ama-assn.org)
  4. ^ posted data on X (x.com)
  5. ^ Sept. 19 post (x.com)
  6. ^ phase (www.ama-assn.org)
  7. ^ report (www.nrmp.org)
  8. ^ 2017 report (pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
  9. ^ 2016 Labor Department data (www.dol.gov)
  10. ^ American Medical Association says (www.ama-assn.org)
  11. ^ graduate medical education (www.uscis.gov)
  12. ^ Congressional Research Service (crsreports.congress.gov)
  13. ^ Intealth (www.ecfmg.org)
  14. ^ according (www.ama-assn.org)
  15. ^ caps (www.uscis.gov)
  16. ^ met (www.uscis.gov)
  17. ^ American Medical Association says (www.ama-assn.org)

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