Rural vs. Urban vs. Infrastructure EB-5
The EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act of 2022 created reserved visa categories for rural, high unemployment area (HUA), and infrastructure projects. Each category receives a dedicated allocation of EB-5 visas and has distinct geographic requirements, processing timelines, and backlog profiles. This comparison uses current 2026 data.
Last updated: April 3, 2026
Category Comparison
| Dimension | Rural (20%) | HUA (10%) | Infrastructure (2%) | Unreserved |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Visa Set-Aside | 20% of EB-5 visas | 10% of EB-5 visas | 2% of EB-5 visas | Remaining visas |
| Investment Minimum | $800,000 | $800,000 | $800,000 | $1,050,000 (non TEA) |
| Processing Priority | USCIS priority commitment | Standard processing | Standard processing | Standard processing |
| Current Processing Time | 11 to 17 months | 24 to 36 months | 24 to 36 months | 36 to 52 months |
| Visa Backlog | Current for all countries | Current for all countries | Current for all countries | China ~9.5 year, India ~4 year backlog |
| Geographic Requirement | Outside MSA, population under 20,000 | Census tract at 150%+ national unemployment | Government owned project (any location) | Any location (non TEA eligible) |
| Filing Volume | Highest growth category | Moderate filing volume | Lowest filing volume | Legacy filings and non TEA projects |
| Risk Profile | Smaller communities; development risk in less established markets | Urban locations; established markets with higher competition | Government backing; limited project supply | Higher investment threshold; longest wait times |
Category Analysis
The Rural Advantage
Rural EB-5 has emerged as the most advantageous category since the RIA took effect. Three factors drive this: the largest visa set-aside (20%), USCIS processing priority resulting in 11 to 17 month adjudication, and current visa availability for all nationalities with no backlog. For Chinese and Indian nationals facing multi-year waits in the unreserved category, rural offers a dramatically faster path.
The rural filing volume has grown rapidly as investors and their counsel recognize these advantages. This growth raises questions about whether the 20% set-aside will face pressure in future fiscal years, though it has not been exhausted to date.
When HUA Makes Sense
High unemployment area projects offer a middle ground. They qualify for the $800,000 reduced investment amount and the 10% visa set-aside (currently with no backlog), while being located in urban or suburban areas with established infrastructure, labor pools, and real estate markets.
For investors who prefer urban project locations or have concerns about rural development risk, HUA provides the TEA investment threshold and reserved visa benefits without the geographic constraints of the rural category. Processing times are longer than rural (24 to 36 months) but shorter than the unreserved category.
Infrastructure: The Smallest Category
The infrastructure category receives only 2% of EB-5 visas and requires the project to be owned by a governmental entity. This combination of limited supply and strict eligibility results in very few qualifying projects being available to investors.
When infrastructure projects are available, they may offer distinctive advantages: government ownership can reduce default risk, and the small allocation means less competition for visa numbers. However, the scarcity of qualifying projects makes infrastructure a niche category that most investors will not encounter in their project search.
What This Means
The RIA's reserved visa categories have fundamentally reshaped EB-5 strategy. Before 2022, TEA designation primarily affected the investment amount. Now, category selection determines processing speed, backlog exposure, and visa availability, factors that can mean the difference between an 11 month and a 52 month timeline.
For most investors in 2026, the decision framework is straightforward. Rural offers the strongest combination of benefits: fastest processing, largest set-aside, and no backlog. HUA provides a reasonable alternative for those who prefer urban projects. Infrastructure is rarely available. The unreserved category carries the highest cost ($1,050,000) and the longest waits, making it the least attractive option absent specific circumstances.
Investors approaching the September 30, 2026 grandfathering deadline should weigh processing time heavily in their category selection. See the Grandfathering Deadline guide and Processing Times dashboard for current data.
Frequently Asked Questions
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