Direct Investment vs. Regional Center EB-5 in 2026
EB-5 investors choose between two investment vehicles: direct investment, where the investor owns or manages the new commercial enterprise, and regional center investment, where capital is pooled through a USCIS designated regional center. Each path has distinct requirements for job creation, management involvement, and compliance.
Last updated: April 3, 2026
Side by Side Comparison
| Dimension | Direct Investment | Regional Center |
|---|---|---|
| Investment Vehicle | NCE owned or managed by the investor | Pooled investment through a USCIS designated regional center |
| Job Creation Counting | Only direct W-2 employees count toward the 10 job requirement | Indirect and induced jobs count via approved economic impact models |
| Management Role | Day to day management required, or delegation to a qualified manager | Passive investment; no management involvement required |
| Filing Form | I-526 | I-526E |
| Processing Time | Variable; no priority processing available | 11 to 52 months by category; rural filings receive USCIS priority |
| Administrative Fees | None (though legal and business setup costs may be higher) | $20,000 to $80,000 administrative fee paid to the regional center |
| Market Share | Approximately 5% of EB-5 filings | Approximately 95% of EB-5 filings |
| Post RIA Compliance | Standard compliance requirements | Fund administration, annual audits, and integrity fund contributions required |
Key Differences
Control vs. Convenience
Direct investment gives the investor full ownership and operational control over the new commercial enterprise. This appeals to entrepreneurs who want to build or acquire a business in the United States and run it themselves. The tradeoff is significant: the investor is responsible for hiring, payroll, compliance, and ensuring the business creates the required 10 direct jobs.
Regional center investment is passive by design. The investor contributes capital to a project managed by the regional center and its affiliated entities. There is no requirement for the investor to participate in daily operations. For investors who prefer to focus on their immigration outcome rather than running a business, the regional center path offers simplicity and professional project management.
Job Counting Mechanics
The most consequential difference between the two vehicles is how jobs are counted. Direct investments can only count direct employees: individuals hired by the new commercial enterprise and placed on its payroll as full time W-2 workers. Each investor must demonstrate that at least 10 such positions were created.
Regional center investments may count indirect and induced jobs generated by the investment, as demonstrated through an approved economic impact model (typically RIMS II or IMPLAN). This makes it significantly easier to meet the 10 job threshold, especially for large construction or development projects where the economic ripple effects generate hundreds of modeled jobs per investor.
Risk Profile
Direct investment risk is concentrated. The investor's capital and immigration outcome depend on a single business that they own and operate. If the business underperforms or fails to create the required jobs, both the investment and the immigration petition are at risk.
Regional center risk is shared across the project. Large scale developments often involve multiple investors, institutional financing, and professional management. However, the investor gives up control: they cannot influence business decisions, hiring, or the project timeline. If the regional center is terminated or the project fails, the investor has limited recourse despite the RIA's grace period protections.
What This Means
The regional center model dominates EB-5 with approximately 95% market share. This reflects the practical advantages of indirect job counting, passive investment, and professional project management. For most investors, the regional center path is simpler, more predictable, and better suited to their goals.
Direct investment remains a viable option for a small number of investors who want operational control and are prepared to manage a U.S. business. It eliminates administrative fees and third party dependency, but requires genuine entrepreneurial commitment and the ability to hire at least 10 qualifying employees.
Investors approaching the September 30, 2026 grandfathering deadline should factor processing time into their decision. Regional center filings in the rural category currently benefit from USCIS priority processing. See the Grandfathering Deadline guide for current timeline details.
Frequently Asked Questions
Direct vs Regional Center FAQ
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