Which employers show H-1B sponsor activity in Texas?
VisaSignal lists employers with imported DOL LCA rows that include Texas as the worksite state. That is a state-level filing signal, not a promise that an employer is currently hiring or will sponsor a future role.
How should I read an H-1B visa sponsors database for Texas?
Start with the employer filing counts, then open individual employers to compare roles, worksites, wage signals, PERM activity, and source periods. The same employer can appear in several states when official LCA rows list multiple worksite locations.
Does a Texas LCA worksite mean the H-1B was approved?
No. A certified LCA is a Department of Labor labor-condition filing signal. USCIS decides H-1B petitions separately, so state sponsor pages should be used as research context rather than approval records.
What roles and worksite cities have the most H-1B sponsor activity in Texas?
The Texas filing snapshot rolls up the most frequent job titles and worksite cities across the employers shown, using the role and city fields from official DOL LCA and PERM disclosure rows. In recent Texas filings, the worksite cities that appear most often are Austin, TX, New York, NY, Plano, TX, Seattle, WA. The most common job titles are Software Engineer, Software Developer, DevOps Engineer, Engineering Manager. Read it as where recent filing activity clusters in Texas, not as a ranking of which employers are easiest to get sponsored by.
Is this a free H-1B visa sponsors list for Texas?
Yes. Every Texas employer shown here is built from free, public DOL OFLC disclosure data, so there is no paywall or login. VisaSignal layers the worksite-state grouping, the role and city rollups, and source-period caveats on top of the raw government files.
Which Texas employers also show green-card (PERM) sponsor activity?
Employers here are flagged when imported DOL PERM (permanent labor certification) rows list Texas worksites, shown alongside their H-1B LCA filings, often concentrated in Austin, TX, New York, NY, Plano, TX, Seattle, WA. A certified PERM is an earlier step toward an employment-based green card, but it is a Department of Labor labor-market signal only — not a guarantee of green-card approval, a job offer, or future sponsorship.