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EB5 Status
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EB-5 for Brazilian Investors

Current visa status, filing considerations, and key data for Brazilian EB-5 investors.

Official Data
Source: U.S. Department of State, USCIS

Unreserved FAD

Current

Reserved Categories

Current

Investment Minimum (TEA)

$800,000

Grandfathering Deadline

Sep 30, 2026

Brazil EB-5 Overview — March 2026

Brazilian nationals have no EB-5 visa backlog. All categories — unreserved, rural, high unemployment area (HUA), and infrastructure — remain "Current" as of March 2026, meaning visa numbers are immediately available upon petition approval. Filing volume from Brazil has grown significantly since 2022.

Brazil's Central Bank (Banco Central do Brasil) regulates outbound capital flows through the foreign exchange market. Individuals can remit funds for overseas investment through authorized financial institutions with proper documentation. There is no annual per-person quota comparable to China's SAFE limits, though remittances must be reported and documented for tax compliance with the Receita Federal (Brazilian IRS).

Brazilian EB-5 investors must demonstrate source of funds through documentation that may include Imposto de Renda (income tax returns), business registration documents, property sale records, and bank statements. Brazilian tax law requires reporting of overseas assets on the annual tax return once the investment is made.

For Brazilian investors, the EB-5 program offers permanent U.S. residence without the employer sponsorship required by H-1B or other work visas. The absence of visa backlogs means the timeline is driven primarily by USCIS processing speed rather than visa supply constraints.

The reserved visa categories under the EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act of 2022 provide additional options. Rural TEA projects receive a 20% visa set-aside with priority processing from USCIS, while HUA projects are allocated 10%. Both pathways remain Current for Brazilian nationals.

Processing timelines follow general USCIS patterns: approximately 18–28 months for I-526E adjudication, with rural TEA projects potentially seeing faster processing. For Brazilian nationals already in the United States on other visa types, concurrent filing allows I-485 submission alongside I-526E, providing work and travel authorization during the pendency period.

The September 30, 2026 grandfathering deadline preserves current investment minimums ($800,000 TEA / $1,050,000 non-TEA) for petitions filed before that date. Post-deadline amounts are expected to increase per CPI-U adjustments scheduled for January 2027.

Official Data
Source: U.S. Department of State Visa Bulletin, USCIS FOIA data through July 2025

Brazil EB-5 FAQ

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