EB-5 vs. Gold Card Visa
In early 2025, the Trump administration announced the concept of a “Gold Card” visa — a premium residency program for high-net-worth individuals willing to make a substantial payment to the U.S. government. As of March 2026, the Gold Card program remains a policy proposal without enacted legislation or final regulations.
This page compares the Gold Card concept (based on publicly available statements and proposals) with the existing EB-5 program (based on enacted law and current regulations). Because the Gold Card does not yet exist as a functioning program, all Gold Card details should be understood as proposed and subject to change.
Current Status
| Program | Legal Status | Can File Today? |
|---|---|---|
| EB-5 | Enacted law (INA § 203(b)(5)) | Yes |
| Gold Card | Proposed / executive concept | No |
The EB-5 program has been enacted law since 1990 and was reauthorized and reformed through the EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act of 2022. It has established regulations, application forms, processing infrastructure, and decades of administrative precedent.
The Gold Card program, as described in public statements, would require either new legislation from Congress or an executive order with regulatory implementation. Neither has occurred as of this writing. Potential applicants cannot file for the Gold Card program today.
Key Differences (Based on Available Information)
Cost
The Gold Card has been discussed at a reported price point of $5 million — a direct payment to the U.S. government, not an investment in a business. EB-5 requires a minimum investment of $800,000 (TEA) or $1,050,000 (non-TEA) in a job-creating commercial enterprise. The EB-5 investment is intended to be returned to the investor after conditions are removed.
The distinction between a payment (non-refundable) and an investment (potentially returnable) is fundamental. Under EB-5, the $800,000 is placed at risk in a business — if the business succeeds, the capital is returned. Under the Gold Card as described, the $5 million would be a fee paid to the government with no return mechanism.
Job Creation
EB-5 requires the creation of at least 10 full-time jobs per investor. This requirement connects the immigration benefit to economic activity. The Gold Card, as described, has no job creation requirement.
Pathway
EB-5 provides conditional permanent residence (two-year green card), followed by removal of conditions (I-829), followed by eligibility for naturalization. The Gold Card has been described as providing permanent residence directly, without a conditional period. The details remain unspecified.
What This Means for EB-5 Investors
Investors considering EB-5 should evaluate the program based on current law, not proposed alternatives. The Gold Card does not exist as a filing option today. Even if legislation is introduced, the rulemaking and implementation process typically takes one to three years.
Investors facing the September 30, 2026 grandfathering deadline should make decisions based on existing EB-5 law. Waiting for a program that may or may not materialize risks missing the deadline and the current investment minimum. See the Grandfathering Deadline guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
EB-5 vs Gold Card FAQ
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Track EB-5 processing times and the September 2026 grandfathering deadline.
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