The EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program can allow qualifying investors and eligible family members to pursue lawful permanent residence if they meet investment, job creation, and source-of-funds requirements under current law and policy. Final decisions are made by USCIS and other government agencies.
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Investment
How the investment works
USCIS and the Congressional Research Service describe EB-5 as an investment into a new commercial enterprise that must meet capital and job-creation rules. The exact project terms vary, but several core points stay consistent.
Capital is invested into a qualifying enterprise
EB-5 investors place capital into a new commercial enterprise, usually through a standalone structure or a regional center offering. Current statutory thresholds are generally $1,050,000, or $800,000 for qualifying targeted employment area or infrastructure cases, with future inflation adjustments possible under current law.
Repayment timing is not fixed by USCIS
Current law requires the investor to expect to keep the investment in place for at least two years, and later immigration stages look at sustained investment and job creation. In practice, return of capital usually depends on project documents, business performance, refinancing or sale proceeds, and the offering's exit terms rather than a guaranteed government timetable.
EB-5 money must be at risk
EB-5 eligibility requires capital to be at risk for gain or loss. That means no compliant EB-5 offering can promise that the money is completely safe, guarantee repayment of principal, or guarantee a profit as a condition of immigration eligibility.
This summary reflects USCIS EB-5 program materials and the Congressional Research Service overview published June 23, 2025. Rules, thresholds, and agency guidance can change.
Costs
What costs money in EB-5
People often mix up the EB-5 investment amount with the rest of the case budget. They are different. The investment is capital placed into the enterprise, while other costs are separate case or transaction expenses.
1. EB-5 investment capital
This is usually the largest amount. Under the current framework, investors generally commit $1,050,000, or $800,000 in qualifying targeted employment area or certain infrastructure cases. This is investment capital, not just a filing fee.
2. USCIS filing fees
USCIS filing fees are separate from the investment amount. The exact total depends on which forms apply to the case and whether family members file related applications. Fee schedules can change, so applicants should confirm the current USCIS fee pages and form instructions.
3. Lawyer, project, and transaction costs
Many cases also involve immigration attorney fees, document translation costs, source-of-funds preparation expenses, and project or regional-center-related administrative or subscription fees. These costs vary significantly by provider and case complexity.
Quick view: investment vs. fees vs. possible return
Whether any invested capital is returned later depends on the project terms and performance. Filing, legal, and administrative fees are usually costs, not refundable investment principal.
Comparison
Standalone EB-5 vs. regional center EB-5
Congressional Research Service and USCIS materials describe two main EB-5 pathways. The right fit depends on the project structure, management expectations, and how job creation will be documented.
Standalone EB-5
A standalone investment is made into a new commercial enterprise that generally must create direct jobs, meaning the enterprise or its subsidiaries are the actual employer. Investors often need to pay closer attention to operational involvement and how direct job creation will be proven.
Regional center EB-5
Regional center investors usually participate through a USCIS-approved regional center structure. These cases may rely on direct, indirect, and in some cases induced job modeling under applicable rules, and investors are often less involved in day-to-day management than in standalone structures.
Glossary
EB-5 glossary
Key terms that appear often in EB-5 materials and project documents.
TEA
A targeted employment area that may qualify for the lower EB-5 investment threshold under the current framework.
Regional center
A USCIS-approved structure used in many EB-5 offerings where job creation may include indirect and modeled impacts under applicable rules.
New commercial enterprise
The for-profit U.S. business entity into which the EB-5 investor places capital.
Direct jobs
Jobs where the qualifying enterprise or its subsidiaries are the actual employer, especially important in standalone EB-5 cases.
At risk
A core EB-5 concept meaning the invested capital must face possible gain or loss and cannot be guaranteed as a risk-free deposit.
Source of funds
The evidence showing how the investor lawfully obtained and transferred the capital used for the EB-5 investment.
Sources
Official sources
Review the government and congressional source material directly if you want to compare this summary against the underlying public references.