About EB-5

What is EB-5 ?

The EB-5 Immigrant Investment Program was created by Congress in 1992 to add growth and employment to the US Economy.

  • Foreign investors must invest at least $500,000 into a Targeted Employment Area (TEA) project, or $1,000,000 in a non TEA project, that will create and sustain 10 Full Time jobs
  • In return, Foreign Investors and their family members under age 21 receive a Green Card (Permanent Residency) in the United States.

Benefits

  • Expedited way to obtain U.S. Green Card for the investors, their spouses, and children under 21 years of age
  • Education. Children can attend US universities & colleges and pay lower tuition rates
  • One Investment. Investors, their spouses, and children under 21 years of age can receive U.S. green cards by         funding a single project with a single investment.
  • Flexibility. Live, work, and retire anywhere in the U.S., and travel easily to other countries.
  • Healthcare. Gain access to the same high-quality healthcare available to U.S. citizens.
  • Passive Investment. Third parties manage your investment and all aspects of the project.
  • No Language Requirement. Proficiency in English is not necessary to participate in the EB-5 program.

The U.S. government created the EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program to encourage foreign investment in U.S. businesses. In exchange for investing in a business that creates jobs for U.S. workers, foreign nationals and their families are eligible to become permanent residents of the United States. The program’s name, “EB–5”, comes from the visa category for which immigrant investors apply – the Employment-Based Immigration: Fifth Preference EB-5.

 

While the program has evolved considerably since its creation in 1990, there are currently two ways for foreign investors to obtain an EB-5 Visa:

 

​1. Direct investment in a new or existing commercial enterprise that creates jobs, or

2. Investing capital through a “Regional Center”, a government-approved firm that actively manages investor

    funds and the immigration approval process

 

Investing capital through a Regional Center provides several major benefits to immigrants seeking U.S. residency through the EB-5 program. One of the most important advantages is the ability to count both direct and indirect jobs; whereas under the Direct Investment Program, immigrants can only count direct jobs. Direct job creation is a result of an investment which has created and sustained ten new actual identifiable jobs over a two-year period. Under the Regional Center program, however, investors can satisfy the job requirement by also showing the indirect job creation from pooled funds of all investors in the project. These jobs can be created collaterally or as a result of capital invested in a commercial enterprise affiliated with a Regional Center. In other words, the investor does not need to show that he or she directly hired any employees and the burden of proving job creation is passed onto the Regional Center. Our team demonstrates the jobs created – both direct and indirect – as a result of the project through economic analysis performed by our world-class economists.

 

Regardless of which option an investor chooses, the minimum investment amounts are the same. Each EB-5 Visa applicant must invest a minimum of $1,000,000 in a job-creating venture. If the business receiving capital is located in a Targeted Employment Area (TEA) – defined as a rural area or a region with high unemployment – the minimum investment amount is reduced to $500,000. All of EB5 Capital’s investment opportunities are located in TEAs.

EB-5 ?

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