03/21/2025
Businesses across the United States are grappling with a critical talent gap. We hear it from HR leaders in healthcare. We hear it from HR manufacturing, tech startups, construction firms, and beyond: key positions are going unfilled, stalling growth and innovation. In early 2025, there were roughly 8 million job openings in the U.S. but only 6.8 million unemployed workers available6.8 million unemployed workers available
uschamber.com. In other words, even if every American seeking work took an open job, millions of positions would remain vacant
uschamber.com. This labor shortage is unprecedented and cuts across industries – from hospitals struggling to hire nurses, to farms lacking seasonal pickers, to AI companies competing for scarce engineers. To bridge this gap, forward-thinking companies are tapping into global talent. U.S. employment-based visa programs offer a strategic lifeline, enabling employers to hire international workers with the skills they need. These visa pathways not only help fill roles when local labor is scarce, but also inject fresh perspectives and innovation into organizations. In this article, we’ll break down the key employment-based visas (H-1B, H-2A, H-2B, L-1, O-1, Q-1), explain their purpose, eligibility criteria, and benefits, and show how leveraging overseas talent can drive success for businesses struggling to find local labor. We’ll also discuss processing timelines, approval rates, and why expert legal guidance is essential in navigating the visa process. By the end, you’ll see how international employment in the U.S. can be a game-changer for companies facing talent shortages – and how to get started tapping into this global talent pool.
Understanding U.S. Employment-Based Visas
The U.S. offers several employment-based visas that allow companies to recruit and sponsor overseas talent for temporary work in America. Each visa category is designed for specific purposes and worker types. Below is an overview of the key visa types that employers across sectors are using to overcome labor shortages:
H-1B Visa – “Specialty Occupation” Professionals: For skilled workers in specialty occupations requiring a bachelor’s degree or higher (e.g. engineers, IT professionals, doctors). Often used by tech, finance, healthcare, and research firms to bring in highly educated talent. Cap of 85,000 new visas per year (with 20,000 reserved for U.S. advanced degree holders).
H-2A Visa – Temporary Agricultural Workers: For seasonal agricultural labor (farm workers, crop pickers, etc.). Allows U.S. farms and agri-businesses to hire foreign workers on a seasonal basis when domestic workers are unavailable. No annual numerical cap.
H-2B Visa – Temporary Non-Agricultural Workers: For seasonal or peak-load jobs outside agriculture (hospitality, landscaping, construction labor, resorts, etc.). Helps employers fill short-term roles like hotel staff for a tourist season or extra workers for holiday retail rush. Capped at 66,0