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EB5 Status

EB-5 vs. E-2 Treaty Investor Visa

EB-5 and E-2 are both investor-based U.S. visa categories, but they differ in fundamental ways: permanence, cost, country eligibility, and investment structure. This page provides a side-by-side comparison.

Key Differences

CriteriaEB-5E-2
Visa typeImmigrant (green card)Nonimmigrant (temporary)
Minimum investment$800,000 (TEA)No statutory minimum (~$100K+ typical)
Country restrictionNoneTreaty countries only
Job creation requiredYes (10 jobs)Must create jobs (no specific number)
Official Data|INA \u00A7 203(b)(5) (EB-5); INA \u00A7 101(a)(15)(E)(ii) (E-2)

Permanence

The most significant difference is that EB-5 leads to permanent residence (a green card) and E-2 does not. E-2 is a temporary visa that must be renewed, typically every two to five years. There is no limit on renewals, but the holder never receives permanent residence through E-2 alone.

This means E-2 holders remain in a temporary status indefinitely. If they stop operating the business or leave the United States, the visa expires. Children of E-2 holders lose their dependent status at age 21 and must find their own immigration status.

EB-5 provides conditional permanent residence upon approval, then unconditional permanent residence after I-829 approval. After five years of permanent residence, the investor is eligible for U.S. citizenship.

Country Eligibility

E-2 is only available to nationals of countries that maintain a qualifying treaty of commerce and navigation (or bilateral investment treaty) with the United States. As of 2026, approximately 80 countries have qualifying treaties.

Notable exclusions from E-2 eligibility include China, India, Vietnam, and Brazil — four of the largest EB-5 investor populations. For nationals of these countries, EB-5 is the primary investor pathway to the United States because E-2 is not available.

EB-5 has no country-of-citizenship requirement. Any nationality may file.

Official Data|9 FAM 402.9; State Dept E-2 Treaty Country List

Investment Structure

E-2 requires the investor to invest in and actively direct a real, operating commercial enterprise. The investment must be “substantial” relative to the total cost of the business. There is no statutory dollar minimum, but investments under $100,000 are rarely approved unless the business is low-cost.

EB-5 requires a minimum investment of $800,000 (TEA) or $1,050,000 (non-TEA) in a new commercial enterprise. For regional center investments, the investor does not need to actively manage the business — passive investment is permitted.

This distinction matters for investors who do not wish to operate a business in the United States. EB-5 regional center investments allow passive participation. E-2 requires active direction and control.

When E-2 May Be Preferable

E-2 may be more appropriate than EB-5 when the investor is from a treaty country, wants to enter the U.S. quickly (E-2 processing is typically 2–4 months), prefers a lower capital commitment, plans to actively operate a U.S. business, and does not need permanent residence immediately.

Some investors use E-2 as a bridge — entering the U.S. quickly on E-2 while simultaneously pursuing EB-5 for permanent residence.

When EB-5 May Be Preferable

EB-5 may be more appropriate when the investor is from a non-treaty country (China, India, Vietnam, Brazil), permanent residence is the goal, the investor prefers passive investment without managing a business, or the investor wants a path to U.S. citizenship.

Frequently Asked Questions

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Related Pages

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