Who qualifies for EB-5?
The EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program grants permanent residence to foreign nationals who make a qualifying capital investment in a new commercial enterprise that creates at least ten full-time jobs for U.S. workers. It is the only employment-based green card category built entirely around investment rather than employment or professional achievement.
There are two ways to invest: directly into a business you establish or substantially reshape, where you must actively manage the enterprise and create ten direct jobs; or through a USCIS-designated Regional Center, where you invest as a passive limited partner in a larger project — often commercial real estate, infrastructure, or hospitality — and job creation counts direct, indirect, and induced positions. Most EB-5 investors choose the Regional Center path for its simplicity and the ability to count indirect jobs.
The EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act of 2022 overhauled the program, reauthorizing the Regional Center model, introducing new set-aside visa categories for rural and high-unemployment area projects, and adding significant integrity protections. Investors in set-aside categories — particularly rural Targeted Employment Areas — benefit from reserved visa numbers that are currently available for all nationalities, including India and China, making TEA projects a strategic choice for faster processing.
How much do I need to invest?
Investment amounts are set by regulation and adjusted periodically for inflation. The reduced threshold applies when the investment is in a Targeted Employment Area — either a rural area or an area with unemployment at least 150% of the national average.
What every EB-5 petition must show.
Regardless of pathway — direct or Regional Center — all EB-5 petitions must satisfy four core requirements. Source of funds documentation is consistently the most time-intensive and scrutinized element.
New commercial enterprise
The investment must go into a commercial enterprise established after November 29, 1990 — or one that has been substantially restructured or expanded. Passive investments like stocks and real estate held for appreciation do not qualify.
Capital at risk
The invested capital must be genuinely "at risk" — meaning there can be no guaranteed return of principal and no buyback agreements. The investor must be exposed to potential loss. Loan-based structures must meet specific requirements.
Ten qualifying jobs
The investment must create or preserve at least ten full-time positions for qualifying U.S. workers — citizens, lawful permanent residents, or others authorized to work. For Regional Center investments, indirect and induced jobs may count.
Lawful source of funds
Every dollar of the invested capital must be traceable to lawful sources. USCIS requires comprehensive documentation of how funds were earned, inherited, gifted, or obtained through asset sales — typically going back five or more years.
Transparent legal fees.
Attorney fees below are separate from the investment capital, government filing fees, and any Regional Center administrative charges. EB-5 involves multiple USCIS filings over several years; we handle each stage.
Timeline from investment to permanent green card.
EB-5 is a multi-year process with two distinct USCIS filings. The conditional green card is granted first; after two years of sustained investment and job creation, you petition to remove the conditions and receive permanent residence.
Consultation & project selection
We review your financial background, assess source of funds documentation complexity, and advise on direct vs. Regional Center pathways. For Regional Center investors, we help evaluate specific projects for legal soundness and TEA designation.
2–4 weeksSource of funds documentation
The most intensive phase: we work with you to trace and document the lawful origin of all invested capital. This involves gathering tax returns, bank statements, business records, sale agreements, loan documents, and gift letters going back multiple years.
4–10 weeksI-526 / I-526E petition filing
We file the petition with USCIS after funds are invested. Concurrent filing with adjustment of status may be possible for TEA set-aside investors when a visa number is immediately available. For Regional Center investors, the I-526E is filed in lieu of I-526.
Filing dayUSCIS adjudication & visa processing
I-526/I-526E adjudication currently takes 12–36 months. After approval, investors file for adjustment of status (if in the U.S.) or go through consular processing. TEA set-aside investors in current priority date categories can file I-485 concurrently in some cases.
18–48 monthsI-829 — removal of conditions
The initial green card is conditional for two years. Within 90 days before the second anniversary of receiving conditional residence, we file I-829 to demonstrate the investment was sustained and ten jobs were created. Approval yields the permanent green card.
Filed at 2 years · 12–24 months to approve