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EB-5 Wait Times for Chinese Investors: Backlog Analysis and Alternatives

China has the longest EB-5 backlog of any country. The unreserved category final action date is September 1, 2016, representing approximately 9.5 years of accumulated demand. China has historically been the dominant EB-5 source country with 6,888 total receipts. However, reserved categories remain Current for Chinese investors, making rural and HUA projects the primary strategy for avoiding multi-year waits. The SAFE transfer timeline from China is typically 4 to 8 weeks due to foreign exchange regulations.

Official Data|DOS Visa Bulletin, April 2026; USCIS Quarterly Statistics

Key Takeaways

  • 1China's unreserved EB-5 final action date is September 1, 2016, representing approximately 9.5 years of backlog, the longest of any country.
  • 2All reserved categories remain Current for Chinese nationals: rural (11 to 17 months), HUA (24 to 36 months), and infrastructure.
  • 3China has 6,888 total receipts, making it the largest historical EB-5 source country by a wide margin.
  • 4SAFE regulations require 4 to 8 weeks for compliant fund transfers from mainland China.
  • 5Legacy I-526 petitioners cannot switch to reserved categories and must wait for unreserved visa numbers.

China’s EB-5 Backlog: Scale and History

China became the first country to experience EB-5 visa retrogression in 2014, when demand from mainland China born investors overwhelmed the annual per country allocation. Between FY2014 and FY2017, Chinese investors filed thousands of I-526 petitions annually, creating a backlog that has persisted for over a decade.

At its peak, the EB-5 program was overwhelmingly Chinese: in some fiscal years, Chinese nationals accounted for more than 80% of all EB-5 petition filings. This concentration created a structural imbalance that the per country limit (approximately 7.1% of total EB-5 visas, or roughly 700 visas per year for any single country) could not absorb.

The current final action date of September 1, 2016 means that only Chinese investors who filed on or before that date can receive an unreserved EB-5 visa. Every investor filed after that date must wait for the final action date to advance to their priority date. Given the size of the accumulated queue, this represents approximately 9.5 years of wait.

Official Data|DOS Visa Bulletin archives; USCIS I-526 receipt data

Current Wait Time Snapshot

MetricValue
Unreserved Final Action DateSeptember 1, 2016
Estimated Unreserved Backlogapproximately 9.5 years
Reserved Category StatusCurrent (no wait)
Visa Bulletin MonthApril 2026
Total Chinese Receipts6,888
SAFE Transfer Timeline4 to 8 weeks
Investment Minimum (TEA)$800,000
Official Data|DOS Visa Bulletin, April 2026; USCIS Statistics

Why China’s Backlog Is the Longest

China’s EB-5 backlog is the product of three converging factors: extraordinary demand, structural per country limits, and a decade of accumulated queuing.

  • Historical demand dominance. From FY2010 through FY2020, Chinese investors filed the majority of all EB-5 petitions globally. In peak years (FY2014 to FY2017), thousands of Chinese families entered the queue each year.
  • Per country visa limits. U.S. immigration law limits any single country to approximately 7.1% of total EB-5 visas (roughly 700 per year). When demand from a single country exceeds this allocation, a backlog forms. China has exceeded this threshold continuously since 2014.
  • Compounding effect. Each year that demand exceeded supply added to the queue. Because the backlog accumulated over more than a decade, the wait time grew to approximately 9.5 years. Even if new Chinese filing volumes dropped to zero, it would take years to clear the existing queue.
Derived|EB5Status analysis of DOS and USCIS historical data

Reserved Categories: The Path Around the Backlog

The EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act of 2022 created reserved visa categories that operate independently of the unreserved backlog. For Chinese investors, this represents the most significant structural change to the EB-5 environment since the program began. Reserved categories bypass the approximately 9.5 years unreserved wait entirely.

CategoryVisa AvailabilityProcessing TimeEstimated Total Wait
Rural (20%)Current11 to 17 months11 to 17 months
HUA (10%)Current24 to 36 months24 to 36 months
Infrastructure (2%)CurrentLimited dataLimited data
Unreserved (68%)September 1, 201636 to 52 monthsapproximately 9.5 years + processing

The difference is stark. A Chinese investor filing under the rural category today can expect a total timeline of 11 to 17 months. The same investor filing in the unreserved category faces a total wait exceeding 10 years (approximately 9.5 years of backlog plus 36 to 52 months of processing time).

Official Data|DOS Visa Bulletin, April 2026; USCIS Processing Times

SAFE Transfer Regulations and Source of Funds

China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) imposes strict controls on outbound capital transfers. Individual Chinese citizens are limited to $50,000 per person per calendar year under normal remittance channels. Since EB-5 investments require a minimum of $800,000 for TEA projects, investors must use structured, compliant transfer methods.

Common compliant approaches include transferring through approved banks with supporting documentation, using funds already held outside mainland China (such as in Hong Kong), or liquidating overseas assets. The total transfer timeline is typically 4 to 8 weeks, though this can vary based on the specific bank, the transfer method, and the current regulatory environment.

USCIS scrutinizes source of funds documentation from Chinese investors carefully. The petition must trace the lawful origin of every dollar invested, including tax documentation, business records, property sale contracts, and bank transfer receipts. The source of funds analysis for Chinese investors often involves multiple generations of capital tracing (for example, from business income to personal account to investment vehicle to escrow).

Editorial|EB5Status Editorial; SAFE regulations; USCIS Policy Manual

How the Legacy I-526 Queue Affects Chinese Investors

Thousands of Chinese investors filed I-526 petitions before the Reform and Integrity Act took effect on March 15, 2022. These legacy petitioners are in a unique position: many have approved I-526 petitions but cannot receive their immigrant visas because the unreserved final action date has not advanced to their priority date.

Legacy I-526 petitioners cannot switch to the I-526E form or access the reserved categories created by the RIA. The set aside system applies exclusively to I-526E petitions filed after March 15, 2022. This means legacy Chinese petitioners are locked into the unreserved queue regardless of whether they would prefer a reserved category project.

The legacy I-526 pending caseload is declining as USCIS works through remaining adjudications. As this queue shrinks, it frees processing capacity for I-526E petitions, which could marginally improve processing times for new filers.

Official Data|USCIS Quarterly Statistics; RIA transition rules

South Korea’s Rise and China’s Changing Position

Since 2024, South Korea has overtaken China as the leading country for EB-5 visa issuances in several months. This shift reflects both South Korea’s growing EB-5 demand (South Korean investors face no backlog in any category) and the structural constraint that limits Chinese visa issuances to the per country ceiling.

China’s share of new EB-5 filings has also declined from its historical dominance. While Chinese investors still represent a large share of the total pending backlog, new I-526E filings from China are no longer the majority of global filings. India, South Korea, and Vietnam have each grown as source countries, diversifying the EB-5 investor base.

For Chinese investors, this geographic shift is largely neutral. The unreserved backlog remains deep regardless of what other countries do. The reserved category pathway remains the primary strategic option.

Derived|EB5Status analysis of DOS visa issuance statistics

What This Means for Investors

  • 1Chinese investors in the unreserved category face approximately 9.5 years of visa backlog, the longest wait in the EB-5 program. Reserved categories eliminate this wait entirely.
  • 2Rural projects offer the shortest total timeline: 11 to 17 months from filing to approval, with no visa availability delay.
  • 3SAFE transfer regulations add 4 to 8 weeks to the preparation timeline. Begin the fund transfer process well before the planned filing date.
  • 4Legacy I-526 petitioners are locked into the unreserved queue and cannot access reserved categories. New investors should file I-526E under a reserved category to avoid this constraint.
  • 5The September 30, 2026 grandfathering deadline creates urgency to file under the current $800,000 minimum before the projected increase.

What Could Change Next

  • China's unreserved backlog could modestly improve if new Chinese filing volumes remain below historical peaks, allowing the final action date to advance slowly.
  • Reserved categories could face retrogression if global demand (from China, India, and other countries) exceeds the allocated visa numbers.
  • The investment threshold will likely increase after September 30, 2026 due to the CPI adjustment mechanism, adding urgency to file at the current level.
  • SAFE regulations could tighten or loosen, affecting the fund transfer timeline and compliance requirements for mainland China investors.
  • Congressional immigration reform could alter per country limits or increase total EB-5 visa allocations, which would benefit Chinese investors disproportionately.

Frequently Asked Questions

Related Resources

Priority date movements, processing time changes, and policy updates.

How this data was calculated

China specific backlog estimates are derived from the DOS Visa Bulletin final action dates and USCIS quarterly receipt data. Processing times are from the USCIS online processing times tool. Historical filing data is from USCIS annual and quarterly statistical reports.

Trust tier: OfficialLast updated: 2026-04-08Source: DOS Visa Bulletin; USCIS Quarterly StatisticsFull methodology