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EB5 Status

What happens if the project fails after I've invested?

Project failure has distinct immigration and financial consequences that depend on when the failure occurs relative to the investor's position in the EB-5 process.

If the project fails before I-526E approval, USCIS will likely deny the petition, as the investment can no longer create the required jobs. The investor would need to find a new project and file a new petition, establishing a new priority date.

If the project fails after I-526E approval but before the I-829 conditions-removal stage, the investor faces a more complex situation. USCIS may revoke the I-526E approval if the project can no longer demonstrate the required job creation. However, some projects may have already created sufficient jobs before failure, which could preserve the immigration case.

If the project fails during the I-829 stage, the investor must demonstrate that the investment was sustained and jobs were created during the conditional residence period. A late-stage failure does not necessarily doom the I-829 if the job creation requirement was met.

In all scenarios, the financial investment may be partially or fully lost. EB5Status tracks project-level outcomes where public data is available but does not provide legal advice on individual cases.

Editorial|8 CFR § 216.6; USCIS Policy Manual Vol. 6, Part G, Ch. 5; AAO precedent decisions; EB5Status analysis

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