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Conditional vs Permanent Green Card: What EB-5 Investors Need to Know
EB-5 investors don't immediately receive permanent green cards. Instead, you initially get a conditional green card valid for 2 years. At the end of the 2-year period, you must file an I-829 petition to remove conditions and obtain permanent status.
A conditional green card is a valid green card with a 2-year expiration date. It allows you to:
- Legally reside in the United States
- Work and travel abroad
- Bring family members
- Access most benefits of permanent residence
However, the green card's conditional status means USCIS will review job creation at the end of 2 years before converting it to permanent status.
Initial Approval to Conditional Green Card (Months 0-12)#
When your I-526E is approved and visa is available:
- I-485 is approved
- Medical examination completed
- Background check cleared
- You are sworn in as conditional permanent resident
- Conditional green card is issued (valid 2 years)
Conditional Period (Years 1-2)#
During the 2-year conditional period:
- You live and work in the United States as a permanent resident
- Conditional status is temporary and will be reviewed
- Job creation from your investment must be documented
- You must maintain continuous residency requirements
I-829 Filing (Months 18-24)#
In your second year:
- You must file Form I-829 to remove conditions
- I-829 must be filed 90 days before your green card expires
- Timing: File I-829 between months 18-24 of conditional period
- I-829 includes evidence that job creation requirements were met
Removal of Conditions (Years 2-3)#
After I-829 approval:
- Conditional status is removed
- Permanent green card is issued
- Permanent green card is valid for 10 years
- You are a permanent resident with no conditions
| Aspect | Conditional | Permanent |
|---|---|---|
| Duration | 2 years | 10 years |
| USCIS review | Yes (at 2-year mark) | No (automatic renewal) |
| Conditions | Subject to job creation proof | No conditions |
| Employment | Fully authorized to work | Fully authorized to work |
| Travel | Must maintain residency | Must maintain residency |
| Derivative benefits | Yes, similar to permanent | Yes, indefinite |
| Cost of renewal | Included in I-829 | Standard green card renewal |
| Risk of revocation | Can be revoked if conditions not met | Difficult to revoke (requires fraud) |
Employment#
- Work for any employer (not just project)
- Change jobs freely
- Start your own business
- Work across all industries
Travel#
- Travel abroad and return with valid passport and green card
- Must maintain US residence to preserve permanent residency claim
- Cannot abandon residence for more than 6 months
- Re-entry permit may be needed for extended stays
Benefits#
- Social Security benefits (if eligible)
- Medicare at age 65
- Medicaid and state benefits
- Financial aid for education
- College tuition for state residents
Family#
- Spouse and dependent children included on conditional green card
- Petition for parents (as immediate relatives)
- Petition for siblings after becoming permanent resident
- Family benefits continue with permanent status
Residency#
- Must maintain US residence
- Cannot be away more than 6 months without documentation
- Abandonment of residence could terminate conditional status
What Is Form I-829?#
Form I-829 is the "Petition by Entrepreneur to Remove Conditions on Permanent Resident Status." It proves that your investment created the required jobs.
I-829 Requirements#
Your I-829 petition must demonstrate:
- Job Creation: Your $1.05M investment created at least 10 full-time jobs
- Job Quality: Jobs are legitimate, full-time positions
- Job Existence: Jobs still exist at time of I-829 filing
- Job Documentation: Evidence that jobs were actually created
I-829 Evidence Needed#
Typical documentation includes:
- Business records: Company payroll, tax returns, W-2s
- Employee verification: Letters from employer confirming employment
- Job descriptions: For each job position created
- Employee lists: Showing names, positions, hire dates, wages
- Organizational charts: Showing how jobs fit in company
- Independent verification: Accountant's letter confirming job creation
I-829 Filing Timeline#
Month 18: Begin gathering documentation Month 18-24: Continue evidence collection and preparation Month 20: File I-829 petition (recommend filing earlier than deadline) Month 24: Green card expires; I-829 must be filed before this date Month 24-36: USCIS processes I-829 petition Month 36: I-829 approved; permanent green card issued
You can file I-829 starting month 18, but must file before month 24 (green card expiration).
Job Creation Failure#
The Risk: Jobs you claimed in your investment don't actually exist
- Project failed to create required jobs
- Jobs didn't meet full-time criteria
- Jobs were temporary (construction only)
- Job documentation is inadequate
I-829 Outcome: Petition denied; green card revoked; you must leave US
Inadequate Documentation#
The Risk: You cannot adequately document that jobs were created
- Employer records are incomplete
- Employees can't be located
- Employment cannot be verified
- Job documentation doesn't meet USCIS standards
I-829 Outcome: Request for Evidence (RFE); must supplement documentation; may result in denial if insufficient
Job Loss Between Investment and I-829#
The Risk: Jobs existed when created but were eliminated before I-829
- Project failed after initial job creation
- Company laid off workers
- Business operations were reduced
Important Note: Some job loss is acceptable. Jobs don't need to exist indefinitely—they must exist at the time of I-829 filing. Temporary job loss and re-hiring is acceptable if jobs exist at filing.
Change in Immigration Status#
The Risk: You become deportable for another reason during conditional period
- Criminal conviction (even minor)
- Fraud or misrepresentation discovered
- Security concerns identified
- Immigration status revoked for unrelated reason
I-829 Outcome: Cannot file I-829 or petition is denied due to ineligibility
Maintain US Residency#
During the 2-year conditional period:
- Maintain a primary residence in the United States
- Do not abandon your residence
- Travel outside US is allowed if temporary
- Absences exceeding 6 months may jeopardize status
Avoid Criminal Conduct#
Any criminal conviction can trigger deportation:
- Felonies automatically trigger removal proceedings
- Even misdemeanors can result in deportability depending on type
- DUI, domestic violence, theft, and drug offenses are particularly problematic
- Maintain clean record throughout conditional period
Comply With All Laws#
- Tax obligations: File federal income taxes
- Traffic laws: No major violations
- Immigration laws: Comply with all requirements
- State laws: No criminal violations
Maintain Green Card Properly#
- Keep green card with you when traveling
- Renew green card if lost or damaged
- Report changes of address to USCIS
- Update name changes through USCIS
Keep Job Creation Documentation#
- Maintain records of job creation
- Preserve employee documentation
- Keep payroll records and tax returns
- Document any job changes or separations
Permanent Green Card Issuance#
After I-829 approval:
- You receive a new green card valid 10 years
- Green card has no conditions
- Permanent resident status is full and indefinite
- No further EB-5 reviews or petitions
Renewal of Permanent Green Card#
Your 10-year permanent green card must be renewed:
- File I-90 (Application to Replace Permanent Resident Card)
- Renew approximately 6 months before expiration
- Renewal is routine if you remain a permanent resident
- Continue to maintain US residence
Path to Citizenship#
After achieving permanent green card status, you can:
- Naturalize (become US citizen) after 5 years as permanent resident
- Some categories allow naturalization after 3 years
- Naturalization requires civics and English test
- Citizenship is optional (you can remain permanent resident)
Immediate Consequences#
If USCIS denies your I-829:
- Conditional green card is revoked
- You lose permanent resident status
- You are no longer authorized to remain in United States
- You must leave the US
Legal Options#
If denied, you can:
- Appeal the denial decision
- File motion to reopen
- Pursue other immigration relief options (if eligible)
- Consult immigration attorney immediately
Can You Remain in US?#
After I-829 denial, you cannot legally remain in the US unless:
- Appeal is pending (you remain in status during appeal)
- You obtain other immigration status or relief
- Your attorney identifies another option
Many immigrants denied I-829 are required to depart the United States.
Ensure Strong Job Creation#
During project development:
- Ensure project actually creates required jobs
- Document job creation thoroughly from the beginning
- Keep detailed records of all employment
- Use accountant to verify job numbers
Prepare Documentation Early#
Don't wait until I-829 filing to gather evidence:
- Request documentation from project every year
- Verify jobs exist and are legitimate
- Update job creation records annually
- Correct discrepancies early
Consult Professionals for I-829#
- Hire EB-5 immigration attorney 6-12 months before filing
- Work with accountant to prepare financial documentation
- Gather all evidence in organized fashion
- Prepare strong I-829 petition
Communicate With Regional Center#
- Ensure regional center is tracking job creation properly
- Request job creation verification annually
- Clarify any discrepancies early
- Confirm their plan for your I-829
Year 0: Invest $1.05M, file I-526E
Year 1-2: I-526E approved, I-485 approved, conditional green card issued
Years 1-2: Live and work as conditional permanent resident; maintain documentation
Year 2: File I-829 petition (between months 18-24)
Years 2-3: USCIS processes I-829
Year 3: I-829 approved; permanent green card issued
Year 3-5: Live as permanent resident with no conditions
Year 5+: Eligible to naturalize and become US citizen
Total time from investment to permanent green card: approximately 3 years.
The conditional green card is not your final immigration status—it's a temporary gateway to permanent residency. The key to permanent status is demonstrating at your I-829 filing that your investment created the required jobs.
Begin planning for your I-829 during the conditional period. Maintain thorough documentation of job creation. Consult with professionals 6-12 months before filing. Strong preparation ensures successful I-829 approval and permanent green card status.
Educational content only. Not legal advice. Not investment advice. For personalized guidance, consult with qualified professionals.