An Emirates flight departing the United States on Friday was delayed by hours, after widespread confusion over President Trump’s new H-1B visa policy…
H-1B visa causes confusion on Emirates flight
On Friday, September 19, 2025 Trump announced plans to add a new $100,000 fee for H-1B visas. This is a type of visa that allows US employers to hire foreign workers in specialty occupations.
At first, there was massive confusion about the logistics of this. Would this be an annual fee or a one-time fee? Could those on existing H-1B visas leave the United States and reenter? Perhaps there’s no place this confusion played out more in real time and in public than on Emirates flight EK226 from San Francisco (SFO) to Dubai (DXB).
As you’d expect, the Bay Area has a lot of tech workers on H-1B visas, and Emirates transports a lot of those people on its flights. So on Friday, this all played out in real time, as passengers were boarding the Emirates Airbus A380 bound for Dubai.
There was chaos and confusion in the cabin, as many tech companies were emailing their workers warning them not to travel abroad out of fear of not being able to reenter the country. In a video posted online, you can see the confusion in the cabin, and hear the captain making the following announcement:
“Ladies and gentlemen, it’s the captain speaking. Due to the current circumstances, obviously they’re unprecedented for us at Emirates, we are aware that a number of passengers do not wish to travel with us, and that’s perfectly fine. All we ask is that if you wish to offload yourself…”
The Emirates flight ended up departing over three hours late. While it was initially supposed to depart at 5:05PM, it only departed at 8:20PM. Presumably that was due to endless confusion among passengers, plus the need to offload the bags of those who no longer wished to travel.

This confusion and frustration was all avoidable
We don’t need to debate the merits of the plan to charge $100,000 for an H-1B visa. However, I think we should all be able to agree that if a policy this significant is implemented, it’s important there’s clarity around how it works.
When this was announced, Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick stood next to Trump and repeated that the new fee was annual. As you’d expect, this would have major implications for existing H-1B workers in the United States.
However, a day later, the White House released a “fact sheet,” clarifying that this isn’t an annual fee, and is a one-time fee that only applies at the time of the petition. Therefore those who are outside the country who already have an H-1B visa wouldn’t be charged this, and would be able to return to the United States.
If this had been clarified in the first place, then all of this chaos would’ve been avoided. So one wonders if Lutnick actually didn’t know the policy, if he repeatedly misspoke, or if the White House backpedaled within a day. Regardless, if that information had been shared from the beginning, that Emirates situation above wouldn’t have happened.
Bottom line
An Emirates Airbus A380 departing San Francisco on Friday was delayed by hours, as passengers scrambled to figure out how Trump’s new H-1B visa policy would impact them. Tech companies largely sent out emails discouraging H-1B holders from traveling abroad, so that’s obviously tricky when you’re onboard a flight departing the United Stats.
In retrospect, the passengers on the flight had little to worry about, since the policy is a one-time fee that doesn’t apply to existing H-1B visas. But unfortunately it took a day for that to be clarified.
What do you make of this Emirates delay situation?