EB-5 for Mexican Investors
Mexican nationals face no EB-5 visa backlog in any category. All EB-5 visa types are "Current" as of March 2026, and geographic proximity to the United States makes consular processing straightforward. Capital transfers comply with Banco de Mexico and SAT regulations through Mexico's established banking infrastructure.
Unreserved FAD
Current
Reserved Categories
Current
Investment Minimum (TEA)
$800,000
Grandfathering Deadline
Sep 30, 2026
Mexico EB-5 Overview, March 2026
Mexican nationals face no EB-5 visa backlog. All categories (unreserved, rural, high unemployment area (HUA), and infrastructure) are "Current" as of March 2026, meaning visa numbers are immediately available upon petition approval.
Geographic proximity to the United States makes consular processing at the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City or U.S. Consulate in Ciudad Juarez straightforward. Both posts handle a high volume of immigrant visa cases, and scheduling for EB-5 immigrant visa interviews is generally efficient.
Capital transfers from Mexico require compliance with Banco de Mexico regulations and SAT (Servicio de Administracion Tributaria, Mexico's tax authority) reporting. Mexico's financial system supports international wire transfers for investment purposes. Banks in Mexico routinely process large international transfers, though documentation of the transaction purpose and supporting compliance filings are standard requirements.
Source of funds documentation must trace the lawful origin of capital through business records, employment documentation, property sales, or other verifiable sources. Mexican tax returns (declaraciones anuales), business financial statements, and property transaction records form the core documentation package for most Mexican EB-5 investors.
The reserved visa categories under the EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act of 2022 provide additional pathway options for Mexican investors. Rural TEA projects receive a 20% visa set aside with priority processing from USCIS, while HUA projects are allocated 10%. Both categories remain Current for Mexican nationals.
Processing timelines follow standard USCIS patterns: approximately 18 to 28 months for I-526E adjudication, with rural TEA projects potentially benefiting from faster processing. For Mexican nationals already in the United States on other visa types, concurrent filing (I-526E with I-485) enables work authorization and travel permission 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.
Mexico EB-5 FAQ
Related Resources
Data
Visa BulletinMonthly cutoff dates for all EB-5 categories.Data
Processing TimesI-526E, I-829, and I-485 estimated wait times.Guide
Grandfathering DeadlineSeptember 30, 2026 deadline analysis and filing impact.Tool
Timeline CalculatorEstimate your EB-5 timeline based on country and category.Tool
Cost CalculatorCalculate total EB-5 investment costs including fees.Guide
Concurrent FilingFile I-485 alongside I-526E for work authorization while pending.Guide
Source of FundsHow USCIS evaluates the lawful path of your investment capital.Guide
Program BasicsInvestment requirements, job creation, and the path to a green card.Directory
All Country GuidesBrowse EB-5 data by country of chargeability.Articles for Mexican Investors
Other Country Guides
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