Does Stubhub sponsor H-1B workers?
VisaSignal shows official LCA filing activity found in the imported dataset. That activity can indicate historical immigration-related hiring signals, but it is not a promise of sponsorship.
Employer profile
Official filing activity, wage signals, roles, and source freshness in one place.
LCA
38
PERM
1
Median wage
$250,000
Last activity
Mar 30, 2026
Summary
Stubhub has filed 38 Labor Condition Applications (LCA) and 1 Program Electronic Review Management (PERM) application in FY2026 Q2. The majority of LCAs are for positions like Senior Software Engineer and Software Engineer II, primarily located in New York, NY. The median salary for these roles is reported at $250,000, with a range from $80,000 to $500,000. Notably, 29 LCAs were certified while 10 were withdrawn. It's important to note that LCA certification does not guarantee USCIS H-1B petition approval, and PERM certification does not equate to green card approval. This information does not constitute legal advice.
Wondering whether Stubhub sponsors H-1B? The H-1B sponsor checker reads any company against the same official LCA and PERM filing signals shown here.
Sources
Source context
Employer filing context
Use this section for searches such as "Stubhub H-1B", "Stubhub LCA", and "Stubhub PERM" before comparing individual case rows.
Activity mix
38 LCA rows and 1 PERM rows are normalized to this employer.
Latest source period: FY2026 Q2.
Search the full LCA & PERM disclosure database to see these rows next to every other employer’s official DOL filings.
Each H-1B petition behind these counts carries government filing fees. See the H-1B sponsor cost breakdown for the per-filing fee stack.
Role and worksite signal
Top observed role: Senior Software Engineer. Top worksite: New York, NY.
See national wage context on the Senior Software Engineer H-1B salary page.
See other H-1B sponsors in New York.
Compare this with the H-1B/LCA and PERM drill-down tabs before treating counts as a hiring signal.
Normalization and source check
Primary source: DOL OFLC disclosure data. Last verified: .
Name matching is a normalization heuristic. Read the source methodology and import freshness before treating matched aliases as a complete sponsor history.
Filing trends
Server-rendered charts from imported DOL OFLC disclosure data. Filing counts are official signals — not sponsorship, hiring, or approval outcomes.
Imported filings by fiscal year
Stubhub shows 39 imported H-1B/LCA and PERM filings in FY2026. Counts are imported DOL filing signals, not sponsorship, hiring, or approval outcomes.
| Fiscal year | H-1B/LCA filings | PERM filings | Total filings |
|---|---|---|---|
| FY2026 | 38 | 1 | 39 |
Wage distribution (recent imported records)
Stubhub imported wage records (n=39) span $80,000 to $500,000, with a middle 50% from $185,000 to $260,000 and a median of $250,000.
Median $250,000
| Minimum | $80,000 |
|---|---|
| 25th percentile | $185,000 |
| Median | $250,000 |
| 75th percentile | $260,000 |
| Maximum | $500,000 |
| Records | 39 |
Source: DOL OFLC disclosure data, retrieved .
Roles
Worksites
Status mix
Related sponsors
Employers with imported DOL LCA or PERM filings that also list New York worksites, weighted toward overlapping roles. Shared filing footprints are a research and discovery signal, not a hiring or sponsorship guarantee.
LCA and PERM rows are filing signals, not USCIS approvals, green-card approvals, legal advice, or outcome predictions.
FAQ
VisaSignal shows official LCA filing activity found in the imported dataset. That activity can indicate historical immigration-related hiring signals, but it is not a promise of sponsorship.
The PERM count reflects imported DOL PERM disclosure rows for this normalized employer. Raw employer names and aliases are preserved so users can inspect normalization confidence.
For Stubhub H-1B research, the page summarizes imported DOL LCA labor-condition rows. For Stubhub PERM research, it summarizes imported DOL permanent labor certification rows. Both include roles, worksites, wage signals, case-status mix, and the latest source period.
No. A DOL-certified LCA is not the same as USCIS H-1B petition approval. It is an official labor-condition filing signal that should be interpreted with that limit.
No. PERM certification is one step in an employment-based green card process. It does not mean a green card, I-140 petition, or adjustment of status was approved.
No. Official filing history can show recent activity, roles, worksites, and wage signals, but it does not guarantee future sponsorship or predict legal outcomes.