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EB-5 Green Card and Residency

Path to U.S. Citizenship After EB-5: Naturalization Requirements and Timeline

11 min readUpdated 2026-02-23EB-5 citizenship
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After obtaining your EB-5 permanent green card, you can eventually become a US citizen through naturalization. This article explains the path to citizenship, requirements, and timeline.

Basic Eligibility Requirements#

To naturalize as a US citizen after EB-5 green card, you must:

Time Requirements:

  • Standard: 5 years as permanent resident
  • Expedited: 3 years if married to US citizen
  • Military: 1 year if serving in US military

Residency Requirement:

  • Must have resided in the US for required time period
  • Continuous residency (explained below)
  • Physical presence in US for at least half the required time

Moral Character:

  • No felony convictions
  • No crimes of moral turpitude
  • No human trafficking or smuggling convictions
  • No prostitution or related crimes

English Ability:

  • Read, write, and speak English
  • Exceptions for age 50+ with 20 years permanent residency
  • Exceptions for age 55+ with 15 years permanent residency

Civics Knowledge:

  • Understanding of US government and civics
  • Pass civics exam (typically 6 of 10 questions)
  • Exceptions available for age and disability

Good Moral Character:

  • No criminal conduct
  • Pay taxes on time
  • Follow laws
  • No fraud or deception

Year-by-Year Timeline#

Year 0-2: Conditional green card period

  • File I-829
  • Remove conditions
  • Obtain permanent green card

Year 2-5: Permanent green card holding period

  • Maintain US residency
  • Avoid criminal conduct
  • Prepare for naturalization
  • Gather required documents

Year 5: Eligible to apply for citizenship

  • File N-400 application
  • Pass English and civics tests
  • Interview with USCIS
  • Oath of Allegiance ceremony

Year 5-7: Naturalization process

  • N-400 processing (typically 6-12 months)
  • Interview and decision
  • Oath ceremony
  • Citizenship certificate issued

Total time from EB-5 investment to citizenship: Approximately 7-8 years.

What Is Form N-400?#

The N-400 is the official application for naturalization. It asks about:

  • Your background and personal information
  • Your residence and travel history
  • Your employment and income
  • Your moral character
  • Your understanding of civics
  • Your willingness to take the oath

Filing Requirements#

You must file N-400:

  • At USCIS field office in your jurisdiction
  • By mail or online (online is now available)
  • With required supporting documents
  • Filing fee (approximately $640 in 2026)
  • Biometric fee (approximately $85)

Where to File#

Determine your jurisdiction:

  • USCIS website has local field office information
  • File at office serving your residential area
  • Can file at any office, but local is typical
  • Online filing may be available in your jurisdiction

What Documents to Include#

Required supporting documents typically include:

  • Birth certificate
  • Original or certified green card
  • Passport and travel documents
  • Marriage certificate (if applicable)
  • Divorce decrees (if applicable)
  • Tax returns (typically last 5 years)
  • Employer letters verifying employment
  • Proof of residence (utility bills, lease, property tax)
  • Police certificate (if you've lived abroad)
  • Medical certificate (for disability accommodations)

What Is Continuous Residence?#

Continuous residence means you:

  • Maintained permanent resident status throughout required period
  • Did not abandon US residence
  • Did not make trips that interrupted your continuous residence

Breaks in Residence#

Your continuous residence is broken if you:

  • Leave the US for extended trip without returning
  • Generally, absence exceeding 6 months raises questions
  • Absence exceeding 1 year is presumed to break continuous residence

Preserving Continuous Residence#

To maintain continuous residence:

  • Keep primary residence in the US
  • File tax returns showing US residence
  • Don't be outside US for extended periods (>6 months)
  • If traveling extended, file Form N-470 "Application to Preserve Status as Permanent Resident"
  • Return to US before continuous residence is broken

Form N-470#

If you must be outside the US for extended period:

  • File N-470 to preserve continuous residency
  • Allows absences up to 2-3 years without breaking residency
  • Must intend to return and establish US residence
  • Useful for work assignments or family issues abroad

What Is Physical Presence?#

You must have been physically present in the US for:

  • Standard applicant: At least 30 months out of 60-month period (2.5 of 5 years)
  • Spouse of US citizen: At least 18 months out of 36-month period

Physical presence means actually being in the United States, not just maintaining residence.

Calculating Physical Presence#

To meet physical presence requirement:

  • Count days you were actually in the US
  • Each trip/visit counts
  • Temporary trips abroad count against you
  • Form N-400 requires month-by-month documentation

How to Document Physical Presence#

Provide evidence:

  • Passport stamps showing entries/exits
  • Tax returns showing US residence
  • Employer records showing work days
  • School records for children
  • Utility bills showing residence
  • Bank statements showing US deposits

What Prevents Naturalization#

Criminal conduct can bar naturalization:

  • Felony conviction: Bars naturalization indefinitely
  • Crime of moral turpitude: Bars naturalization
  • Drug-related felony: Automatic bar
  • Human trafficking: Permanent bar
  • Prostitution or related crime: Bar for 5 years after conviction
  • Murder: Permanent bar (no citizenship possible)

Crimes of Moral Turpitude#

Examples include:

  • Theft or larceny
  • Fraud or embezzlement
  • Assault
  • Sexual abuse
  • Prostitution
  • Some drug crimes

Even misdemeanor convictions for moral turpitude can be problematic.

Minor Offenses#

Minor violations that don't bar naturalization:

  • Traffic violations (generally)
  • Minor drug possession (depending on state)
  • Small theft or shoplifting (minor cases)
  • DUI (under some circumstances)

If you've had criminal issues, consult immigration attorney before filing N-400.

Waiver of Moral Character Issues#

Some bars to naturalization can be waived:

  • Bars based on youth (crimes committed as minor)
  • Some waivers available for specific crimes
  • Waiver applications are discretionary
  • Immigration attorney can advise on waiver eligibility

English Test#

USCIS will test your English ability:

  • Speaking: Conversation with interviewer during N-400 interview (tested automatically)
  • Reading: Read one out of three sentences correctly
  • Writing: Write one out of three sentences correctly
  • Listening: Demonstrated through interview conversation

English Test Examples#

Reading Example: You must read one of:

  • "I like to eat bread and butter"
  • "Where is the nearest hospital?"
  • "How many colors are in the American flag?"

Writing Example: You must write one of:

  • "We like to eat apples"
  • "I am taking the civics test"
  • "California is on the West Coast"

English Test Accommodations#

Exceptions and accommodations include:

  • Age 50+ with 20 years permanent residency: Exempt from English test
  • Age 55+ with 15 years permanent residency: Exempt from English test
  • Disability: May receive accommodations or exemption with medical evidence
  • Native language: Can take test with interpreter assistance in some cases

English Preparation#

If English is weak:

  • Take English classes through community college or adult education
  • Prepare by reading and writing regularly
  • Practice with sample civics materials
  • Interview preparation materials available

What Is the Civics Test?#

USCIS will test your knowledge of US government and civics:

  • Format: Oral questions asked during interview
  • Score needed: Pass 6 out of 10 questions
  • Topics: US government, Constitution, rights, responsibilities
  • Difficulty: Designed for typical high school civics knowledge

Sample Civics Questions#

Examples of civics test questions:

  • "What is the highest law of the United States?" (Constitution)
  • "How many branches does the US government have?" (Three)
  • "Who is the President?" (Current president)
  • "What are the two parts of Congress?" (Senate and House of Representatives)
  • "What do we call the first ten amendments to the Constitution?" (Bill of Rights)
  • "What is the capital of the United States?" (Washington, D.C.)

Full Civics Test Questions#

USCIS publishes all 100 possible civics test questions and answers publicly. You can study all possible questions.

Civics Test Accommodations#

Exceptions and accommodations:

  • Age 65+ with 20 years permanent residency: Exempt; take simpler civics test
  • Disability: May receive accommodations (extra time, large print, etc.)
  • Medical condition: Medical documentation may be required

Civics Preparation#

To prepare for civics test:

  • USCIS publishes all 100 possible questions and answers
  • Study materials available for free online
  • Community colleges offer civics preparation courses
  • Civics test study guides available from USCIS website
  • Take practice tests to identify weak areas

What Happens at the Interview#

At your N-400 interview:

  • USCIS officer reviews your application
  • Officer asks questions about your background
  • English and civics testing occur
  • You take oath of allegiance
  • Approval or further action is determined

Interview Preparation#

Before the interview:

  • Review all information on N-400 application
  • Practice civics questions
  • Review English reading/writing
  • Gather all supporting documents
  • Arrive early with required identification
  • Bring original documents requested

Interview Topics#

Officer may ask about:

  • Your background and family
  • Your residence and travel
  • Your employment
  • Your taxes and finances
  • Civics knowledge
  • Your commitment to US values
  • Any inconsistencies in your application

Oath of Allegiance#

At the interview or ceremony, you take oath: "I hereby declare, on oath, that I absolutely and entirely renounce and abjure all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince, potentate, state, or sovereignty of whom or which I have heretofore been a subject or citizen; that I will support and defend the Constitution and laws of the United States of America against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I will bear arms on behalf of the United States when required by the law; that I will perform noncombatant service in the Armed Services of the United States when required by the law; that I take this obligation freely without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; so help me God."

Certificate of Naturalization#

Upon approval, you receive:

  • Certificate of Naturalization
  • Official document proving US citizenship
  • Required for passport applications
  • Keep in safe place permanently

US Passport#

After naturalization:

  • Apply for US passport
  • No longer need to renew green card
  • US passport valid for 10 years (adult)
  • US passport valid worldwide

Loss of Previous Citizenship#

Naturalization typically means:

  • Your original country's citizenship is lost (varies by country)
  • Some countries allow dual citizenship (varies by country)
  • Check your home country's laws about dual citizenship
  • Some countries restore citizenship even after naturalization

Sponsoring Family Members#

As US citizen:

  • You can petition for immediate relatives:
    • Spouse
    • Unmarried children under 21
    • Parents (if you're over 21)
  • Relatives can immigrate more quickly than through EB-5

Year 0: Invest $1.05M, file I-526E

Year 1-2: I-526E approved, receive conditional green card

Year 2-3: File I-829, receive permanent green card

Year 3-5: Hold permanent green card, maintain residency

Year 5: File N-400 application

Year 5-6: USCIS processes N-400

Year 6: Pass civics/English tests, take oath

Year 6: Receive Certificate of Naturalization

Year 6+: Apply for US passport, fully naturalized citizen

Total time: Approximately 6-7 years from investment to citizenship.

Discretionary Nature of Naturalization#

Naturalization is not guaranteed:

  • USCIS can deny N-400 application
  • Denial typically based on moral character issues or test failure
  • Appeals are available
  • Consult attorney if issues exist before filing

Cost of Naturalization#

N-400 application costs:

  • Filing fee: Approximately $640
  • Biometric fee: Approximately $85
  • Attorney fees: $500-$1,500 if using attorney
  • Total cost: $640-$2,500

Optional Nature#

Citizenship is optional:

  • You can remain permanent resident indefinitely
  • No requirement to naturalize
  • Some people maintain permanent status while remaining citizens of home country
  • Decision depends on personal circumstances

The path from EB-5 investment to US citizenship takes approximately 6-7 years and includes several important milestones: I-829 approval, permanent green card status, N-400 application, and citizenship testing. By planning ahead, preparing for civics and English tests, and avoiding moral character issues, you can successfully achieve US citizenship after your EB-5 investment.

Educational content only. Not legal advice. Not investment advice. For personalized guidance, consult with qualified professionals.