EB-5 for Taiwanese Investors
Taiwan is a separate chargeability area from mainland China and has no EB-5 visa backlog in any category. Taiwanese nationals bypass the nine year China unreserved wait and qualify for concurrent I-485 filing upon I-526E approval.
Last verified: April 9, 2026. Sources: U.S. Department of State Visa Bulletin, USCIS Quarterly Statistics.
Key Takeaways
- 1Taiwan is classified as a separate chargeability area from mainland China. Taiwanese investors are not subject to the 9+ year backlog that affects mainland Chinese EB-5 applicants.
- 2Taiwan has zero EB-5 visa backlog in every category. Both the unreserved and all three reserved set-aside categories remain Current, allowing immediate visa availability upon petition approval.
- 3Taiwanese investors can file I-485 concurrent with I-526E, enabling work authorization (EAD) and travel privileges (Advance Parole) while the petition is pending.
- 4Taiwan has no restrictive foreign exchange regime comparable to China's SAFE system. The Central Bank of the Republic of China (Taiwan) regulates outbound transfers, but the process is relatively straightforward for EB-5 investment capital.
- 5With approximately 680 I-526E receipts in FY2025, Taiwan's filing volumes remain modest, placing the country well below retrogression thresholds at current filing rates.
Unreserved FAD
Current
Reserved Categories
Current
FY2025 I-526E Receipts
680
Chargeability
Separate
separate from mainland China
Taiwan EB-5 Landscape: 2026 Analysis
Taiwan has three things working in its favor for EB-5: the unreserved category is Current, all three reserved set-aside categories (Rural, High Unemployment Area, and Infrastructure) are Current, and the country is classified as a separate chargeability area from mainland China. That third point matters most. Taiwanese investors are not affected by the 9+ year backlog that mainland Chinese EB-5 applicants face. A Taiwanese investor who receives I-526E approval in 2026 will have immediate visa availability.
The separate chargeability classification is based on place of birth. Under U.S. immigration law, visa allocation is determined by the applicant's country of birth, not citizenship. A person born in Taiwan who later obtained citizenship in another country is still charged to Taiwan. The reverse also applies: a person born in mainland China who later relocated to Taiwan is charged to mainland China's queue. This distinction affects a specific subset of investors in mixed residency situations, and cross chargeability rules add further complexity when spouses are born in different chargeability areas.
Much of Taiwan's EB-5 capital comes from its semiconductor sector. The industry generates substantial wealth among executives and business owners, particularly in the Hsinchu Science Park corridor. TSMC, MediaTek, and the broader electronics supply chain have created a class of high net worth individuals with both the capital and professional mobility to pursue permanent U.S. residency. Real estate appreciation in Taipei and tech sector stock options are common sources of EB-5 investment funds from Taiwanese applicants.
The source of funds process for Taiwanese investors is considerably less complex than for their mainland Chinese counterparts. Taiwan does not operate a centralized foreign exchange quota system like China's State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE). The Central Bank of the Republic of China (Taiwan) regulates international capital flows, but outbound remittances for investment purposes are processed on a transaction basis without the same degree of bureaucratic friction. For most Taiwanese investors, the documentation timeline runs 3 to 6 weeks from initial gathering to escrow confirmation.
Filing volumes from Taiwan are growing but remain modest. USCIS data shows approximately 680 I-526E receipts from Taiwanese nationals in fiscal year 2025, up from roughly 310 in FY2022. This growth reflects increased awareness of the EB-5 program among Taiwanese professionals and business owners, particularly those with children approaching U.S. university age. The filing volume is well below the threshold that would trigger retrogression, giving Taiwanese investors a comfortable margin of visa availability for the foreseeable future.
The grandfathering deadline (September 30, 2026) matters for Taiwanese investors as a cost consideration, not as a source of filing urgency. Because there is no visa backlog, a Taiwanese investor filing after the deadline still receives immediate visa availability. The difference is financial: the $800,000 TEA minimum is projected to increase to approximately $900,000 after January 1, 2027. For investors near the minimum threshold, this represents a meaningful incremental cost. For investors with substantial capital, the timing pressure is minimal.
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Explore ProUnderstanding Taiwan's EB-5 Position
Separate Chargeability from Mainland Chinaआधिकारिक डेटा|DOS Visa Bulletin
The Department of State publishes EB-5 priority dates for Taiwan as a separate line item from mainland China. This classification reflects the longstanding U.S. policy of treating Taiwan as a distinct chargeability area for immigration purposes. While mainland Chinese EB-5 applicants face wait times exceeding 9 years in the unreserved category, Taiwanese investors face no wait at all.
Chargeability is determined by place of birth. A Taiwanese national born in Taipei is charged to Taiwan regardless of where they currently reside. A person born in Shanghai who later moved to Taiwan remains charged to mainland China. This distinction is fixed at birth and cannot be changed through naturalization or relocation. The only flexibility comes through cross chargeability, which allows a married applicant to elect their spouse's country of birth for visa allocation purposes.
For investors in mixed chargeability marriages (one spouse born in Taiwan, the other born in mainland China), the cross chargeability election becomes a strategic decision. Electing mainland China chargeability subjects the petition to China's multi-year backlog. Electing Taiwan chargeability provides immediate visa availability. The election is made at the time of visa adjudication and should be evaluated carefully with immigration counsel.
Zero Backlog Across All Categoriesआधिकारिक डेटा|DOS Visa Bulletin
Taiwan has Current status in every EB-5 filing category. The unreserved category, the rural set-aside, the high unemployment area set-aside, and the infrastructure set-aside are all immediately available. This eliminates the category selection calculus that investors from backlog countries must navigate. A Taiwanese investor does not need to weigh the rural set-aside's faster priority date movement against its narrower project options. They can select any qualifying project and proceed.
The absence of backlog also simplifies concurrent filing strategy. Because visa numbers are immediately available, a Taiwanese investor already present in the U.S. (on an H-1B, L-1, F-1, or other nonimmigrant status) can file I-485 simultaneously with I-526E. This concurrent filing triggers eligibility for an Employment Authorization Document and Advance Parole, providing work flexibility and travel freedom during the petition adjudication period. For tech professionals on H-1B status in Silicon Valley or other technology hubs, this dual filing option matters.
Filing Volume and Retrogression Outlookआधिकारिक डेटा|USCIS Statistics
Taiwan's EB-5 filing volumes have approximately doubled between FY2022 and FY2025, growing from roughly 310 petitions to 680. While the trajectory is upward, the absolute numbers remain well below retrogression thresholds. The annual per country limit for EB-5 visas is approximately 700 unreserved visas, plus the reserved set-aside allocations. Taiwan's current filing volume is approaching but has not yet exceeded these limits.
Compared to Vietnam (1,680 filings in FY2025) and South Korea (2,450 filings), Taiwan's filing volume is modest. This lower volume provides a wider margin before retrogression becomes a concern. However, investors should not treat current availability as permanent. If Taiwanese filing volumes continue to grow at current rates, priority dates could begin to retrogress within 3 to 5 years. Monitoring the Visa Bulletin monthly remains advisable.
Source of Funds for Taiwanese Investors
Regulatory Environment and CBC Oversightआधिकारिक डेटा|Central Bank of the Republic of China (Taiwan)
Taiwan's regulatory framework for outbound investment is fundamentally different from mainland China's. The Central Bank of the Republic of China (Taiwan), commonly known as the CBC, oversees international capital flows. Unlike China's SAFE system, which imposes annual individual foreign exchange quotas and requires multi-layered approval for large transfers, Taiwan's system processes outbound remittances on a transaction basis. Transfers for direct investment abroad, including EB-5, are subject to reporting requirements but generally proceed without the delays and bureaucratic complexity that Chinese investors encounter.
For transfers exceeding $500,000 USD equivalent, Taiwanese banks typically require a declaration of purpose and supporting documentation. The investor's bank will report the transaction to the CBC, but approval is administrative rather than discretionary. This contrasts sharply with the SAFE process in China, where individual applicants are limited to $50,000 per year in foreign exchange and must use alternative structures to accumulate the full $800,000 investment amount.
Common Source of Funds Documentation for Taiwanese Investors
- Business Income: Corporate tax filings from the Ministry of Finance, audited financial statements, bank records showing dividend or profit distributions, and corporate registration documents establishing ownership stake.
- Tech Industry Compensation: Employment contracts, stock option exercise records, RSU vesting statements, brokerage account records showing stock sales proceeds, and personal income tax filings.
- Real Estate Sales: Property ownership deed (land or building), sales contract, buyer's payment records, and documentation of the deposit of proceeds into the investor's bank account.
- Savings and Investment Portfolios: Five year bank account history showing accumulation, brokerage statements, and fixed deposit or time deposit maturity records.
- Inheritance or Gift: Court issued inheritance certificate or notarized gift agreement, estate tax filing or gift tax documentation, and bank statements showing the deposit of received funds.
Transfer Timeline and Processव्युत्पन्न|EB5Status analysis
Taiwanese investors typically complete the full source of funds documentation and transfer process within 3 to 6 weeks. This is faster than the 6 to 12 week timeline that mainland Chinese investors often require for SAFE compliance and structured transfers. The process follows a predictable sequence:
| Step | Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Gather documentation (income, property, stock records) | 1 to 3 weeks | Tax filings, bank statements, brokerage records, deeds |
| Translation and notarization | 1 to 2 weeks | Certified English translations of Mandarin documents |
| Bank declaration and wire transfer | 3 to 7 business days | CBC reporting declaration; international wire to U.S. escrow |
| Escrow confirmation | 3 to 5 business days | Receipt and verification by U.S. escrow agent |
Total elapsed time: approximately 3 to 6 weeks. For more detail on source of funds requirements, see our Source of Funds Guide. Taiwanese investors with complex fund structures (multiple businesses, inheritance, or cross border holdings) should consult an attorney experienced in Taiwanese EB-5 cases.
Grandfathering Deadline Impact for Taiwanese Investors
September 30, 2026: A Soft Deadline for Taiwanव्युत्पन्न|INA section 203(b)(5)(C)(ii)
The grandfathering deadline operates differently for Taiwanese investors than for those from backlog countries. For a mainland Chinese investor, the deadline carries dual urgency: filing before it locks in the lower investment minimum while also securing a priority date before the queue lengthens further. For a Taiwanese investor, the deadline is a straightforward cost optimization decision. There is no visa queue to worry about.
Grandfathering Deadline Implications for Taiwan
- Investment Amount Lock-in: Filing I-526E before September 30, 2026 locks in the current $800,000 TEA minimum and $1,050,000 non TEA minimum. After January 1, 2027, thresholds are projected to increase to approximately $900,000 and $1,150,000 respectively under the CPI-U inflation adjustment.
- No Visa Wait Penalty: A Taiwanese investor who files on October 15, 2026 (after the deadline) still receives Current visa availability. The only cost is the higher investment minimum. Unlike Chinese or Indian investors, there is no compounding penalty from missed priority dates or extended backlog.
- Decision Framework: For investors close to the $800,000 minimum threshold, the projected $100,000 increase is material. For investors with substantial capital reserves, the timing is less consequential. The decision should be driven by financial readiness and project quality, not by deadline pressure.
For a complete analysis of the grandfathering provision and investment threshold projections, see our Grandfathering Deadline Guide. To discuss your filing timeline and prepare your petition, consult an EB-5 attorney who specializes in Taiwanese investor cases.
Taiwan EB-5 Data
How Taiwan compares to China
China has the longest EB-5 backlog of any country, with the unreserved Final Action Date approximately nine and a half years behind the current filing window. Taiwan is a separate chargeability area from mainland China and carries zero backlog in every EB-5 category. Taiwanese applicants never enter the China unreserved queue regardless of their citizenship status. See the full China analysis for context on the set aside strategy that Chinese nationals are using to bypass the backlog.
Compare reserved categories across countries →Frequently Asked Questions
EB-5 by country
Compare EB-5 filing strategy across the six countries that drive the program. Each country has distinct priority date behavior, source of funds considerations, and diaspora context.
EB-5 for China
Longest EB-5 backlog in the program, around nine and a half years in the unreserved category. Reserved set asides remain Current.
EB-5 for India
Four year unreserved backlog at May 1, 2022. All reserved set asides are Current. RBI LRS quota shapes funding strategy.
EB-5 for Vietnam
Zero backlog in every category. Fastest growing EB-5 origin country, with filings tripling between fiscal year 2022 and 2025.
EB-5 for South Korea
Zero backlog. Overtook China as the leading EB-5 visa issuance country starting in April 2025. Strong E-2 to EB-5 pipeline.
EB-5 for Brazil
Zero backlog across all categories. Largest Latin American EB-5 source country. E-2 treaty eligibility provides a temporary alternative.
Related Resources
Data
Visa Bulletin
Monthly priority date tracking for all EB-5 categories.
Data
Processing Times
Current USCIS adjudication timelines for I-526E and I-829.
Guide
Grandfathering Deadline
September 30, 2026 deadline explained: what it means for your filing.
Tool
Timeline Calculator
Estimate your EB-5 timeline based on country and filing category.
Tool
Cost Calculator
Calculate total EB-5 investment costs including fees and expenses.
Guide
Concurrent Filing
File I-485 alongside I-526E for work authorization while your petition is pending.
Country
China
EB-5 guide for Chinese investors: visa backlog, SAFE compliance, set-aside strategy.
Guide
Source of Funds
How USCIS evaluates the lawful path of your investment capital.
Directory
All Country Guides
EB-5 analysis for every major investor country.
Articles for Taiwanese Investors
- EB-5 for Taiwanese Investors
Complete guide to EB-5 strategy for Taiwanese nationals
- EB-5 Visa Bulletin Explained
How separate chargeability affects your EB-5 filing
- EB-5 Processing Times in 2026
Current processing time ranges for all EB-5 form types
- EB-5 Concurrent Filing Guide
How to file I-485 with I-526E when visa numbers are current
Free Downloadable Guide
Download the Visa Bulletin Guide
Learn how to read final action dates, interpret filing charts, and track priority date movement. Essential for understanding Taiwan's separate chargeability status and maintaining zero backlog awareness.
Professional Resources for Taiwanese EB-5 Investors
Selecting the right attorney and regional center are two of the most consequential decisions in the EB-5 process. These resources can help Taiwanese investors begin their evaluation.
Find EB-5 Attorneys for Taiwanese Investors
Browse attorneys who specialize in Taiwan investor cases on eb5attorneys.com
How to Choose an EB-5 Attorney
10 evaluation criteria, red flags, and interview questions
Regional Center Directory
Browse USCIS designated regional centers by state, industry, and status
How to Evaluate a Regional Center
Due diligence framework, compliance checks, and warning signs
ताइवानी निवेशक मामलों में विशेषज्ञ वकील खोज रहे हैं?
ताइवान चार्जेबिलिटी मुद्दों, CBC ट्रांसफर दस्तावेज़ और ताइवानी नागरिकों के लिए फाइलिंग रणनीति में अनुभवी प्रमाणित EB-5 वकीलों को ब्राउज़ करें।
ताइवान मामलों के वकील ब्राउज़ करेंHow this data was calculated
This page combines official data from the U.S. Department of State Visa Bulletin (monthly priority dates), USCIS published statistics (quarterly filing volumes and processing times), and EB5Status analysis (chargeability classification, growth projections, and retrogression risk modeling). All derived figures use disclosed methodology.
Related Resources
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