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Survey: 89 Percent of Regional Centers Report Full RIA Compliance as January 2026 Deadline Approaches

Source: IIUSA

The Integrated Immigrant Services University released survey results on December 15, 2025 indicating that 89 percent of USCIS-approved regional centers report full compliance with Regional Investment Authority operational requirements as of early December 2025. The survey of 642 active regional centers, with an 68 percent response rate, examined compliance across capitalization standards, audit procedures, project evaluation protocols, and reporting requirements.

Regional centers reported that enhanced capitalization reserves and annual third-party audit procedures, while administratively burdensome, have become well-integrated into operational workflows. Most centers indicated that hiring dedicated compliance officers and upgrading information technology systems occurred earlier in 2025, enabling smooth transition to full RIA compliance. The remaining 11 percent of centers reported substantial compliance but noted minor items requiring final resolution by the January 15, 2026 compliance deadline.

Regional center operators expressed cautious optimism regarding the RIA framework, noting that enhanced compliance standards appear to be reducing fraudulent activity and strengthening investor protection. However, survey respondents also noted concerns about ongoing compliance cost burden and expressed hope that USCIS would carefully calibrate future regulatory additions to avoid excessive administrative overhead. The strong compliance levels reported suggest that the RIA transition period is nearing successful conclusion.

Who Is Impacted

EB-5 investors and petitioners, regional center operators

What to Watch

  • The survey of 642 active regional centers, with an 68 percent response rate, examined compliance across capitalization standards, audit procedures, project evaluation protocols, and reporting requirements.
  • However, survey respondents also noted concerns about ongoing compliance cost burden and expressed hope that USCIS would carefully calibrate future regulatory additions to avoid excessive administrative overhead.

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Disclaimer

News summaries are editorial in nature and do not constitute official guidance or legal advice. Consult primary sources directly and speak with qualified immigration attorneys or advisors before making any decisions. This dashboard is for informational purposes only.