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How is COVID-19 Affecting EB-5 Processing and Visa Availability?

Though the COVID-19 pandemic has brought the world to a standstill, with economic shutdowns across the United States and other countries, the EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program continues on. The pandemic has caused United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (UCSIS) to temporarily close its offices to the public all across the nation, but since application processing doesn’t require face-to-face interaction with the public, it has continued to adjudicate I-526, I-829, and I-485 petitions throughout the crisis.

As of June 1, 2020, USCIS is preparing to reopen its offices to the public on or after June 4. However, even after the reopening, USCIS still plans to offer deadline extensions for requests for evidence (RFEs) and notices of intent to deny (NOIDs) issued between March 1 and July 1. USCIS has announced on its “Response to COVID-19” page that responses to such notices received within 60 days of the deadline stipulated on the notice will be accepted and considered.

What will happen with the EB-5 program going forward in 2020 is anyone’s guess. The modern world has never experienced a pandemic of this magnitude before, so the consequences are impossible to know. Nonetheless, it’s possible to make some predictions about what could happen.

More Lawyer Involvement in EB-5

The Immigrant Investor Program Office (IPO) recorded famously low I-526 adjudication rates in FY2019, with productivity dropping as much as four times compared to FY2018. The stark difference in processing volumes can largely be attributed to the management of Sarah Kendall, who took over the IPO in FY2019. The unprecedently low processing volumes have caused headaches for EB-5 investors and eroded trust in the program, and this situation may be a factor in the sudden drop in EB-5 demand in India.

In 2019, the IPO got away with essentially failing to do its job, but that may change in 2020. With almost the entire world on lockdown, lawyers have little to do in 2020, so they may set their sights on the EB-5 program, turning investor lawsuits against USCIS into one of their few viable sources of income during the crisis. Indeed, the delays are unreasonably long and are jeopardizing the EB-5 program’s ability to foster economic growth and revitalization, and EB-5 investors forgotten by the system have a right to recourse. The best strategy for the IPO would be to take the opportunity the pandemic has afforded it to start clearing up the backlog and avoid the lawsuits that might pour in otherwise.

EB-5 Visa Availability for Consular Processing

With all U.S. embassies and consulates suspending routine visa processes, consular EB-5 processing has come to a halt. Visa appointments have ceased, so overseas EB-5 investors can do nothing but wait for the pandemic to pass and the consulates to resume services. As of June 1, 2020, the U.S. consulates in China, India, and Vietnam have all yet to announce plans to resume visa appointments, meaning the wait for EB-5 investors will continue for the foreseeable future. Thus, even though EB-5 visas can still legally be issued, the consulate closures prevent this from happening.

In October 2019, the beginning of FY2020, the Department of State announced that 11,112 EB-5 visas were available for FY2020. It further explained that India and Vietnam could both receive 778 visas and Chinese EB-5 investors could receive an estimated 5,270 leftover visas. Under normal circumstances, the yearly available visas are distributed roughly equally throughout the year—one quarter per quarter—but the worldwide consulate closures make this even distribution impossible in 2020, with the actual numbers vastly lower than the expectations in October 2019.

Chart showing a lower-than-expected number of EB-5 visas issued to China, India, and Vietnam as of April 30, 2020.

Possible Routes of FY2020 EB-5 Visa Processing

Given the COVID-19 pandemic and the U.S. consulate closures, FY2020 is anything but a normal year for the IPO. Only time will tell how EB-5 visas are ultimately issued, but a few scenarios are possible:

Visas Could Go to Domestic EB-5 Investors

Not all EB-5 investors invest from overseas—some already live in the United States on different visas and claim their EB-5 permanent resident status by filing Form I-485 to adjust their immigration status. Since USCIS doesn’t release information on pending I-485 petitions, it’s not clear how many domestic EB-5 investors are available to claim visas, but previous years have shown that domestic applicants account for only a small minority of all EB-5 investors. Furthermore, the rapidly advancing final action dates in the months of the pandemic suggest that the I-485 backlog may be fairly small. Thus, even if the I-485 backlog is entirely cleared up, there are likely to still be many leftover visas.

Visa Processing Might Catch Up by the End of the Fiscal Year

If the U.S. embassies and consulates reopen soon enough and catch up on all the visa appointments they missed during the pandemic, USCIS may be able to pick up the pace and issue all the available visas before the fiscal year ends on September 30, 2020. Different embassies and consulates may reopen at different times, but the most important are the ones in China, as Chinese investors account for the largest EB-5 backlog.

Visas Might Roll Over to EB-1 FY2021

If, conversely, the consulates remain closed for a while yet, it’s unlikely that they can catch up to demand before the end of FY2020. If USCIS can’t issue all the allocated EB-5 visas before September 30, 2020, the leftover visas will roll over to EB-1 in FY2021, and the EB-5 program will suffer a loss of visas in FY2020, further aggravating the backlogs.

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Why Aren’t All I-526 Petitions Adjudicated in the Same Time Frame?

It can be frustrating for EB-5 investors to wait a long time for their I-526 petition to be adjudicated, especially when they see other investors around them receiving adjudication. Since the EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program is complicated, every petition is different and therefore requires a different process and timeline for adjudication. This can result in some EB-5 investors waiting far longer than others, even if they have invested in the same EB-5 project.

There are several reasons why one EB-5 investor’s I-526 petition may take longer to adjudicate than another’s. Some are within the investor’s control, although some are not.

Adjudicator Differences

Just as all EB-5 investors are different, so too are all EB-5 adjudicators different. Different adjudicators may use different processes and have different timelines for adjudicating I-526 petitions.

Complicated Sources of Funds

All EB-5 investors are required to document the lawful sources of their $1.8 million or $900,000 in EB-5 capital. The capital can come from many different sources, from investments, to business income, to donations from family, but in all cases, the EB-5 investor must document that the funds are legal. Some sources are more complicated than others, which can increase the processing time for an I-526 petition.

Country Backlogs

At the end of March 2020, United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) implemented a new processing approach for I-526 petitions. Unlike the previous first-in-first-out method, the new approach prioritizes petitions for adjudication based on the immediate availability of visas for the applicant’s country. Chinese EB-5 investors, who, as of May 2020, are the only investors affected by the switch, may experience longer wait times due to the new regulation.

Petition Errors

If an I-526 petition contains errors or insufficient information, it will naturally take longer to adjudicate. Investors who fall into this category may receive a request for evidence (RFE) or notice of intent to deny (NOID), and in the worst-case scenario, their I-526 petition may just be denied.

How to Reduce the Likelihood of Processing Delays

Any EB-5 investor could face processing delays, but there are steps investors can take to reduce the likelihood. Here are three simple tips to help EB-5 investors accelerate their I-526 adjudication process.

  • Work with an EB-5 immigration attorney to figure out the best funds to use as EB-5 capital.
  • If you are from a country subject to backlogs but your spouse is not, list your spouse as the principal investor. This way, your entire family can be processed under your spouse’s country, potentially speeding up your journey to an EB-5 green card.
  • Carefully review your I-526 petition for mistakes and omissions before you submit it. Have your immigration attorney look it over as well. It’s worth it to take the time to sort out minor issues that could result in major delays.

There’s no surefire way to avoid I-526 processing delays, but these tips can help many investors. The EB-5 program remains one of the fastest and easiest ways to immigrate permanently to the United States.

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How to Make an EB-5 Investment During COVID-19

Though much of the world has come to a standstill in the COVID-19 pandemic, the EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program carries on. United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) continues to work on EB-5 petition adjudications, and foreign investors are still free to prepare and make EB-5 investments during the crisis.

The pandemic has certainly changed certain aspects of the EB-5 process, and some investors already in the pipeline may have to wait until restrictions are lifted to overcome certain obstacles. Specifically, the closure of USCIS offices to the public and suspension of routine visa procedures at U.S. embassies and consulates represents an insurmountable hurdle for EB-5 investors already halfway through their EB-5 journey. However, nothing is preventing prospective EB-5 investors from launching their own EB-5 journey during the pandemic.

Figure Out What Kind of EB-5 Investment Works Best for You

The first step any prospective EB-5 investor should take is discussing the matter with an experienced EB-5 immigration attorney. An immigration attorney can help investors determine whether direct or regional center EB-5 investment better suits their needs and whether investing in a project within a targeted employment area (TEA) would be preferable. Prospective investors can connect with immigration lawyers via video call applications during the pandemic.

Assess Your Eligibility for the EB-5 Program

EB-5 investors must meet certain requirements to be eligible for the program. A minimum investment amount of $900,000 if the project is in a TEA and $1.8 million if not is the most pressing requirement. It may be necessary to sell assets to liquidize the funds, which may be difficult during the pandemic, depending on the asset.

If an investor possesses the necessary funds, they must then determine whether they can prove the lawful sources of that capital. Prospective EB-5 investors are encouraged to consult an immigration attorney to determine the best types of funds to facilitate the process of proving the lawful sources of investment capital.

Determine Your EB-5 Investment Goals

Many EB-5 investors are primarily concerned with obtaining a U.S. green card and do not particularly care if they don’t earn high returns on their investment. In such cases, regional center investment is generally more appropriate, as it facilitates the job creation requirement of the EB-5 program, which is vital to obtaining an EB-5 visa.

Some investors, however, do wish to make a lucrative financial investment as well. Such EB-5 investors may wish to exercise more control over their capital to help ensure the success of the new commercial enterprise (NCE). In such cases, direct EB-5 investment is a good idea, as it allows investors with strong managerial skills to help drive the NCE to success and earn a higher profit on their investment.

Conduct Meticulous Due Diligence

All the pandemic-related shutdowns make for a good opportunity to conduct careful due diligence at home. Any prospective EB-5 investors who wish to fly out to the project site for an up-close view will have to wait until travel restrictions are lifted, but investors can certainly comb through a project’s documentation and investigate the track records of the associated developer and regional center. Investors should ensure that the majority of the regional center’s I-526 and I-829 petitions were approved in the past and that they have returned investors’ funds.

One great way to conduct due diligence is to use EB5AN’s EB-5 Project Risk Assessment Questionnaire. This carefully developed tool allows investors to meticulously assess a potential project’s immigration and financial risk and makes it easy to determine whether it’s a good idea to invest in a given EB-5 project.

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Obtain a U.S. Green Card Through the EB-5 Program After COVID-19

As the number of new COVID-19 infections continues to decline in various countries, the world can start to evaluate each country’s response to the pandemic. The health crisis has exposed weaknesses in many countries’ systems, particularly in developing countries. In response, foreign investors around the world are contemplating whether they should move to a more secure country.

Many opt for the United States because it remains a wealthy powerhouse where foreign nationals can thrive in freedom and prosperity, and the EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program is a relatively quick and easy pathway to a U.S. green card. To make the most out of life in the United States, EB-5 investors can even apply for U.S. citizenship after five years of permanent residency.

Foreign nationals simply need to invest $900,000 or $1.8 million in a qualifying new commercial enterprise (NCE) to qualify as an EB-5 investor. The minimum required investment amount depends on the targeted employment area (TEA) status of the EB-5 project, and qualifying for the lower investment amount is quite easy because most regional centers primarily sponsor projects in TEAs.

The Benefits of a U.S. Green Card

Living in the United States as a permanent resident offers many advantages to EB-5 investors and their immediate family members, such as the following:

  • A facilitated admissions process at U.S. universities and potential in-state tuition savings
  • The freedom to live anywhere in the United States
  • The freedom to work for any U.S. company, engage in freelance work, or launch a business
  • The freedom to travel abroad freely
  • The ability to live permanently in the United States without going through the hassle of renewing a visa
  • No need to pass a language proficiency test
  • The ability to apply for U.S. citizenship after living in the United States as a permanent resident for five years

The benefits extend to an EB-5 investor’s spouse and unmarried children below the age of 21, with the whole family receiving U.S. green cards after a successful EB-5 investment. Therefore, the EB-5 program is a way for foreign nationals to invest in a better future following the COVID-19 pandemic.

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All About the Visa Bulletin

While the EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program is open to investors from all over the world, not everyone experiences the same EB-5 journey. United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) only allocates approximately 10,000 visas to the EB-5 program per fiscal year, and no country is supposed to get more than 700, meaning investors from high-demand EB-5 countries face a backlog and a delayed EB-5 visa process.

When an EB-5 investor submits an I-526 petition, USCIS sends them a priority date—the date USCIS received the petition. Until March 2020, USCIS used priority dates to assign petitions for adjudication, but now, the organization uses a visa availability approach to adjudicate I-526 petitions. Now, priority dates are only relevant to EB-5 investors whose countries are backlogged.

As of May 2020, only three countries are subject to a backlog: China, India, and Vietnam. While applicants from all other countries are free to immediately apply for and receive their EB-5 visa as soon as they receive approval on their I-526 petition, Chinese, Indian, and Vietnamese EB-5 investors must wait until their priority date is on or before the final action date for their country. The final action dates are presented in the monthly Visa Bulletins the U.S. Department of State releases on its website.

EB-5 investors from countries that are not backlogged do not need to pay attention to the Visa Bulletins, as their final action date is “current.” However, investors from countries such as South Korea and Brazil, which have been seeing more and more investors in recent years, should keep an eye on the situation, in case their country also builds up a backlog. Chinese and Vietnamese EB-5 investors will likely need to continuously consult the final action dates for the foreseeable future, although a recent drop in EB-5 demand in India means India’s final action date could become current by summer 2020.

Chart A vs Chart B

What makes the Visa Bulletin for EB-5 investors a little more complicated is that it is comprised of two different charts. Most EB-5 investors need only concern themselves with Chart A, which displays the final action dates. The final action date refers to the date by which an EB-5 visa is available for an investor, so if USCIS has received an EB-5 visa application from the investor and has all the necessary information it needs to make an adjudication, the investor may receive his or her conditional permanent resident status once his or her priority date is on or before the final action date. As of May 2020, Chinese, Indian, and Vietnamese EB-5 investors must monitor Chart A.

Chart B is only relevant to investors from China. It presents the dates for filing, which refer to the date from which an overseas EB-5 investor can submit a visa application to the National Visa Center (NVC), even though a visa is not yet available for the applicant. Whereas Indian and Vietnamese EB-5 investors may apply for their visa immediately, even though they are subject to considerable wait times before receiving a visa, Chinese investors may have to wait years just to submit their EB-5 visa application.

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FY2019 EB-5 Investor Country Statistics

The country statistics for EB-5 investors in FY2019 are in, and they reveal an increasingly diversifying pool of EB-5 investors. Since FY2014, several countries have seen spikes in investor numbers, and these countries may even join the ranks of backlogged countries in the future.

The top six countries are China, India, Vietnam, South Korea, Brazil, and Taiwan, with China leading by a significant margin. A whopping 45.7% of EB-5 investors in FY2019 hailed from China—but this is down considerably from 85.4% in FY2014. India has also experienced sizable growth during this five-year period, growing from 0.9% to 8.0%. Venezuela is another country with significant growth, from no investors in FY2014 to FY2016 to making the top 10 in FY2019 at 1.8%. Likewise, Brazil has made it into the top 10 from 0 investors in FY2015.

Even though China’s numbers are decreasing, it still represents by far the largest pool of EB-5 investors, and the Chinese EB-5 backlogs show no sign of letting up anytime soon. India, on the other hand, which accounted for the second-largest number of EB-5 investors in FY2019, is predicted to become current by summer 2020, which means Indian EB-5 investors will no longer be subject to a backlog.

At 15.3%, “rest of world” applicants—investors from countries other than those in the top 10—also hit one of their highest numbers in FY2019, indicating more diversification. The EB-5 program works best when a relatively small number of investors from each country participate, as that way, the country doesn’t exceed its roughly 700 EB-5 visa limit per fiscal year.

All in all, it’s clear that China remains the leader in the EB-5 program, but if current trends continue, the Chinese lead may be challenged. EB-5 investors from more and more countries are realizing the advantages of this relatively quick and easy path to U.S. permanent resident status, suggesting a more diverse EB-5 program in the future.

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Debunking Common Misconceptions about the EB-5 Program

The EB-5 program has found itself embroiled in bad press amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, largely due to false rumors that President Trump would bring sweeping changes to the EB-5 program as part of a coronavirus relief bill. Though Senator Lindsey Graham, purported to have pushed for the changes, has vehemently denied the rumors, it was too late to save the EB-5 program from the barrage of negative press that followed. Now, the EB-5 program has fallen victim to another scheme: a May 7 letter to President Trump from four U.S. senators urging the suspension of many employment-based immigration programs, including the EB-5 program.

While the majority of the letter focuses on the temporary abolition of the H-1B, H-2B, and OTP programs, with the senators arguing that bringing in unnecessary foreign workers will prevent U.S. citizens and residents from obtaining much-needed jobs following the COVID-19 crisis, they also specifically touch on the EB-5 program near the end of the letter. In reference to Trump’s April 27 presidential proclamation to temporarily suspend most forms of immigration, the senators request that the president remove EB-5 investors from those exempted.

The senators—Tom Cotton, Ted Cruz, Josh Hawley, and Chuck Grassley—back up their argument to suspend EB-5 immigration using common misconceptions about the program: that it’s “plagued by scandal and fraud” and works as a “pay-for-citizenship scheme.” Fortunately for EB-5 investors, they’re completely wrong.

The EB-5 Program Employs Strong Anti-Fraud Measures

While there has been fraud in the EB-5 program before, the vast majority of EB-5 project developers are honest entrepreneurs looking for a way to foster their business. Unfortunately, the negative stories are the only ones that make it into the media.

To address the rare cases of fraud, United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has ramped up its anti-fraud measures in recent months. With extra training and more cooperation with external agencies, the Immigrant Investor Program Office (IPO) is working hard to wipe out fraud.

The introduction of the EB-5 Modernization Rule in November 2019 also helps ensure the EB-5 program fulfills the objectives for which it was created. The rule helps funnel EB-5 capital into the areas that need it the most with the intention of creating much-needed jobs.

EB-5 Is an Investment, Not a Purchase

The idea that the EB-5 program is a “pay-for-citizenship scheme” is not just purported by the four senators who penned this letter but is a common misconception among EB-5 critics. However, it is far from the truth.

EB-5 investors are required to keep their EB-5 investment capital at risk for the duration of the investment period, which has led to some investors losing significant portions or even all of their investment. Simply making an at-risk investment is not enough, either: To receive a U.S. green card, an investor must demonstrate that their investment will create or has created 10 new full-time jobs for U.S. workers.

Far from being a pay-for-citizenship scheme, the EB-5 program pours billions of dollars into the U.S. economy, fostering new businesses and creating new jobs. EB-5 investors have poured more than $37 billion in foreign capital into the United States since 2008, funding countless projects after the 2008 recession.

Only Successful EB-5 Investors Receive Green Cards

USCIS doesn’t hesitate to deny the petitions of investors who don’t fulfill EB-5 program requirements. In addition to demonstrating the creation of 10 new full-time jobs, investors must also provide evidence that they have sourced their EB-5 capital lawfully. That means the EB-5 program accepts lawfully earned foreign capital and uses it to create new jobs in the United States, boosting the economy at no cost to U.S. taxpayers.

EB-5 Investors Are the Best and Brightest

The people who immigrate to the United States through the EB-5 program are wealthy and successful. They bring their money to the United States through not only their EB-5 investment but also business activities they undertake in the United States. They are a boon to the U.S. economy even outside of their EB-5 investment.

The Senators Should Prop Up EB-5, Not Tear It Down

If the senators who signed the letter want the best for the U.S. economy and U.S. citizens, they should be propping up EB-5 instead. Fixing the visa backlog could revitalize the program, attracting more investors interested in adding their capital to the U.S. economy. The program would create countless jobs for U.S. workers at a time when they are desperately needed. The EB-5 program could be exactly what the United States needs in the aftermath of the pandemic, if only more senators recognized its many merits.

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USCIS Updates the National Historical Average Processing Time for I-526 Petitions

United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has updated the historical national average processing times for I-526 petitions to include February 2020, with processing times increasing to 12.9 months from 12.6. Despite the increase, the national historical processing time remains at a five-year record low, indicating a faster I-526 processing period for EB-5 investors.

The truly interesting update will come in June, when the data for March 2020 is added. March was the first month of the COVID-19 lockdown in the United States, with USCIS shutting its offices to the public and suspending routine visa services at embassies and consulates around the world. Anecdotal accounts suggest processing times have decreased, but only the data will provide the true picture.

It is also important to note the discrepancies between the national historical processing times page and the USCIS case processing page. USCIS’s estimated range of 31 to 50.5 months is at a minimum more than double the length indicated in the national historical average processing page. While the low average processing times are good news, EB-5 investors must bear in mind that their actual processing time could be far longer.

The I-526 petition is the first petition an EB-5 investor files. It is essentially an application for the EB-5 program, with EB-5 investors required to demonstrate evidence of the legal source of their funds, proof that they have invested it in a qualifying new commercial enterprise (NCE), and the business plan of the NCE, including its hiring schedule and economic projections.

In exchange for a qualifying investment that creates at least 10 new full-time jobs for U.S. citizens or residents, the EB-5 program grants investors and their immediate family members permanent resident status in the United States. The minimum required investment amount is $1.8 million unless the EB-5 project is in a targeted employment area (TEA), in which case it is lowered to $900,000.

Despite the current USCIS office closures to curb the spread of COVID-19, the organization continues to adjudicate I-526 petitions and other petitions related to the EB-5 program. The closure of embassies and consulates worldwide means EB-5 investors residing overseas are currently unable to apply for an EB-5 visa, but those residing in the United States on a different visa may receive their permanent resident status more quickly because the overseas investors are unable to claim theirs.

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The EB-5 Job-Creation Potential the U.S. Government Refuses to See

As COVID-19 sweeps through the United States and the rest of the world, it has left a path of shuttered businesses and unemployment behind it. As an employment-based immigration program that creates jobs for the everyday U.S. worker, the EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program could be ideal to help the U.S. economy get back up and running. Unfortunately, the U.S. government does not seem to recognize the powerful ways in which the EB-5 program could aid in the economic aftermath of COVID-19.

Immigration has been a hot topic in Washington in the midst of the pandemic. On April 22, President Trump signed an executive order suspending most forms of immigration for 60 days, although EB-5 investors were among the exemptions due to the many jobs they create for U.S. workers. However, much of the immigration activity has not been in the EB-5 program’s favor, from unfounded rumors of major changes to the EB-5 program in coronavirus relief bills to a letter from senators urging Trump to expand the immigration suspension to EB-5 investors and other employment-based immigration.

So far, no concrete actions have been taken against the EB-5 program, but the threat looms in the air. The unpredictable circumstances could bring hardships to the EB-5 program or, conversely, offer benefits to EB-5 investors, since the lack of other visas being issued could work in EB-5 investors’ favor. At the same time, given that Congress created the EB-5 program in 1990 specifically to stimulate the U.S. economy through job creation, it’s a mystery that it isn’t being promoted. The EB-5 program may be exactly what the United States needs in the aftermath of COVID-19.

Lack of Political Support for the EB-5 Program

While the EB-5 program could provide massive benefits to the U.S. economy and U.S. workers as the country prepares to exit the lockdowns and resume normal life, politicians largely aren’t on board. Rather than look at the objective facts of EB-5’s job-creation potential, many politicians prefer to stubbornly stick to their talking points. With Republicans fixated only on the negative aspects of immigration and Democrats edging ever closer to socialist policies and away from business interests, the EB-5 program doesn’t fit within either party’s narrow scope.

The EB-5 program could help struggling businesses survive and regain the jobs they had to terminate, and it could offer thousands of newly unemployed Americans fresh employment opportunities, all while bringing in successful upper-middle-class or upper-class foreign investors ready to spend their disposable income and tax dollars in the United States. It would be good for Republicans, saving businesses, and for Democrats, helping vulnerable people regain their jobs. Unfortunately, neither party seems to see these benefits.

The EB-5 Program’s Undeserved Poor Reputation

The EB-5 program generally does not have a positive public image, largely thanks to negative press coverage. A successful EB-5 investment would not be newsworthy, but a fraudulent scandal makes headlines across the nation, which ensures the general public associates EB-5 with fraud, even though EB-5 fraud is extremely rare. Then, government officials, who ought to know better, are forced to fall in line with the mob to maintain popularity.

The EB-5 industry must fight bad press with good press. If the U.S. public realized what the program actually does—that each investor’s approval is contingent on the creation of at least 10 new full-time jobs for U.S. workers—they would be far more likely to support it. If people knew that each investment had to be at least $1.8 million—or $900,000, if the project is in a targeted employment area (TEA)—they would be far more likely to rally behind it. The EB-5 program’s economic potential is obscured by the industry’s poor public relations.

The IPO’s Failings

Amidst all the difficulties the EB-5 program is currently facing, the Immigrant Investor Processing Office (IPO), which oversees the EB-5 program, is not helping EB-5’s cause, either. To work properly and provide the economic stimulation it was intended to, the program needs to be run efficiently, with I-924 petitions processed quickly to establish new regional centers and foster promising EB-5 projects and I-526 petitions traveling through the pipeline quickly to ensure EB-5 investors trust the program and don’t become discouraged and withdraw.

At present, this is mere fantasy. The IPO seems to be doing the exact opposite, taking four to six years to adjudicate I-924 petitions and as long as three years for I-526 petitions. Its recent string of EB-5 regional center terminations also hurt the program’s ability to help jumpstart the U.S. economy after COVID-19. The IPO has been shutting down regional centers that fail to maintain a robust investment pipeline and frequent activity, which naturally disproportionately affects regional centers in rural and high-unemployment areas. In this way, the IPO is actively disincentivizing investors from pouring capital into the areas that need EB-5 the most.

EB-5 Needs an Image Change

The EB-5 program is poised to significantly aid the United States in its economic recovery following the pandemic, but the media, Congress, and even the IPO are hampering its potential. With all the troubles the EB-5 program is facing, some potential investors are instead opting for immigrant investor visas from Canada, Australia, and other countries instead of investing their valuable capital into the United States. Congress and the IPO need to make some changes to the EB-5 program to increase its viability.

The path to a better EB-5 may be through alterations to its public image. EB-5 users can help the cause by signing IIUSA’s open letter to Congress.

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What to Consider When Selecting an EB-5 Project

The EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program is one of the fastest and easiest ways foreign nationals can immigrate to the United States, provided they have the necessary investment funds. An investment must satisfy several EB-5 criteria before the investor can receive a U.S. green card, so prospective investors are urged to conduct meticulous due diligence when selecting an EB-5 project for investment.

EB-5 investors must carefully assess any prospective EB-5 project to ensure low financial and immigration risk, which necessitates wide-ranging due diligence that examines various aspects of the project and its developer. Here are some of the top things EB-5 investors should consider when selecting a project.

Immigration Track Record of the Developer and Regional Center

EB-5 investors can fall victim to inexperienced, unprepared, and sloppy project developers or regional centers as well as outright malicious and fraudulent ones. To ensure the project developers and regional centers they work with are reputable, EB-5 investors should determine how much experience the entities have and what their track records are. Investors should identify whether they are well known in the EB-5 industry and check how many of their previous I-526 and I-829 petitions have been approved or denied.

Financial Track Record of the Developer and Regional Center

While most EB-5 project developers and regional centers are trustworthy, EB-5 investors should be aware of the ever-present threat of fraud. To avoid being duped out of their hard-earned capital and a chance at life in the United States, investors should look at whether the project developer and regional center have returned capital to investors in previous projects. It’s also important to note how many earlier projects the developer and regional center were successfully completed.

Projected Number of Jobs

To fulfill the EB-5 program requirements and receive permanent resident status, an EB-5 investor must demonstrate that their investment has funded the creation of at least 10 new full-time jobs in the United States. Therefore, investors are urged to investigate a project’s job creation methodology and hiring schedule, as well as how many jobs have already been created. An ideal EB-5 project has a job buffer—more jobs than necessary for all the EB-5 investors in the project.

Project Funding

An EB-5 investor’s investment will be for naught if the project cannot secure enough other funding and cannot move forward with its plans. EB-5 investors should carefully examine a prospective project’s additional funding sources, including bridge loans and other equity sources, to make sure the developer can complete the project even if they do not receive the desired amount of EB-5 capital from other investors.

Earnings Potential

A high return on investment is not necessary for every EB-5 investor—many investors are primarily concerned with immigration and wish simply not to lose money on the investment. Investors should first clearly identify their financial goals and then examine the potential of the investment accordingly. For many EB-5 investors, accepting a lower return on investment in exchange for lower immigration risk is worth it.

Transparency and Trustworthiness

EB-5 investors should avoid any project developer or regional center who is not transparent about its financials or anything else that concerns investors. Investors should look for developers and regional centers that communicate frequently with investors and charge honest administrative fees. EB-5 investors should work with their immigration attorneys to determine whether developers and regional centers are presenting the necessary information and documentation for the investors to be successful.