EB-5 Visa Bulletin

Monthly cutoff dates published by the U.S. Department of State for each EB-5 category and chargeability area.

Last updated February 12, 2026 at 12:00 PM ET

Most recent: March 2026
Official DOS Bulletin ↗

Chargeability Area

EB-5 Unreserved

Current

Mar 2026

Rural Set-Aside

Current

Mar 2026

High Unemployment Area

Current

Mar 2026

Cutoff Date History

Final action dates by month

MonthUnreservedRuralHUA
Mar 2026CurrentCurrentCurrent
Feb 2026CurrentCurrentCurrent
Jan 2026CurrentCurrentCurrent
Dec 2025CurrentCurrentCurrent
Nov 2025CurrentCurrentCurrent
Oct 2025CurrentCurrentCurrent

Source: U.S. Department of State Visa Bulletin. Dates shown are Final Action Dates.

Understanding EB-5 Cutoff Dates

What does 'Current' (C) mean in the visa bulletin?

A 'Current' designation means no backlog exists for that category and chargeability area — a visa number is immediately available for all applicants regardless of their priority date.

What is a priority date?

Your priority date is the date USCIS received your I-526 or I-526E petition. It determines your place in line for a visa number. When the monthly cutoff date advances past your priority date, you become eligible to proceed with immigrant visa processing.

Why do China and India have cutoff dates when other countries are Current?

EB-5 visas are subject to per-country limits — no single country may receive more than 7% of available visas in a given year. China and India historically have more EB-5 applicants than this limit allows, creating a backlog. Most other countries file far fewer applications and remain Current.

What happens if the cutoff date retrogresses (moves backward)?

Retrogression occurs when USCIS receives more applications than expected, causing the cutoff date to move to an earlier date. This can temporarily prevent applicants whose priority dates were previously current from proceeding. Retrogression is unpredictable and underscores the importance of monitoring the bulletin monthly.

About the Visa Bulletin Process

What is the difference between Final Action Dates and Dates for Filing?

Final Action Dates are when USCIS will approve an immigrant visa application. Dates for Filing (when announced by USCIS) allow applicants to submit adjustment of status applications earlier, even before a visa is immediately available. USCIS announces monthly whether the Filing Date chart may be used.

How often is the visa bulletin updated?

The State Department publishes a new bulletin each month, typically in the third week of the preceding month. For example, the March 2026 bulletin is published in February 2026. EB5 Status updates cutoff data immediately after each bulletin is released.

What is the EB-5 set-aside program?

The EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act of 2022 reserved 20% of annual EB-5 visas for rural projects, 10% for high unemployment area (HUA) projects, and 2% for infrastructure projects. Set-aside visas have separate cutoff dates and historically remain Current even for countries with Unreserved backlogs.

About This Data

The EB-5 visa bulletin is published monthly by the U.S. Department of State and governs when EB-5 investors may proceed with immigrant visa applications. Cutoff dates represent the earliest priority date eligible for a visa number in a given month.

EB5 Status tracks all published bulletins since the EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act of 2022, which introduced set-aside categories (Rural, HUA, Infrastructure) with separate cutoff dates. Data is parsed directly from the official DOS bulletin within hours of publication.

Historical data and trend analysis help investors and attorneys forecast potential wait times and plan filing strategies. This data is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice.

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