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EB5 Status

EB-5 vs EB-2: Which Employment-Based Green Card Is Right for You?

Both EB-5 and EB-2 lead to a permanent green card, but they differ fundamentally in eligibility, cost, timeline, and risk. This comparison uses official government data to help you evaluate which path fits your situation.

EB-5 vs EB-2 at a Glance

FactorEB-5 (Investment)EB-2 (Employment)
EligibilityInvestment of $800K (TEA) or $1.05MAdvanced degree OR exceptional ability
Employer Required?No (self-petitioned)Yes (except NIW)
Minimum Cost~$870K–$1.2M total~$2K–$15K out of pocket
Investment at Risk?Yes ($800K–$1.05M)No

What Is EB-5?

The EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program was created to stimulate the U.S. economy through job creation and capital investment. It offers a direct, self-petitioned path to permanent residency without requiring employer sponsorship or proof of extraordinary academic ability.

EB-5 Eligibility

Foreign nationals must invest a minimum of $800,000 into a project located within a Targeted Employment Area (TEA) or $1.05M into a standard project. This investment must create and sustain at least 10 full-time U.S. jobs. The vast majority of investors fulfill this requirement passively by investing through USCIS-approved Regional Centers.

EB-5 Cost

EB-5 requires substantial upfront capital. The total estimated out-of-pocket cost is between ~$870,000 to $1.2M, including the investment minimum, non-refundable Regional Center administration fees, and immigration attorney fees. You can use our Cost Calculator to itemize the exact breakdown. If the project succeeds, the $800,000 or $1.05M principal is typically returned.

EB-5 Timeline

The primary timeline hurdle is processing the initial I-526E petition, which historically takes 24 to 40 months. However, the RIA of 2022 introduced expedited processing for Rural TEA projects, dramatically lowering these processing estimates to 12 to 24 months.

What Is EB-2?

The Employment-Based Second Preference (EB-2) visa is designed for foreign nationals who hold an advanced degree (Master's or higher) or demonstrate exceptional ability in the sciences, arts, or business. It is the primary vehicle for highly skilled corporate immigration to the United States.

EB-2 Eligibility

Unless applying for a National Interest Waiver (NIW), an EB-2 petition strictly requires employer sponsorship. The employer must complete the stringent PERM labor certification process to prove that there are no qualified U.S. workers available for the position before filing Form I-140.

EB-2 Cost

Financially, EB-2 is exceptionally accessible for the employee. U.S. law dictates that employers must pay all costs associated with the PERM labor certification. The employer typically covers the I-140 petition costs as well. A sponsored employee may only have to pay nominal out-of-pocket costs ($2,000–$5,000) for personal Adjustment of Status (I-485) filings. Self-petitioned NIW candidates typically pay $10,000 to $15,000 in total.

EB-2 Timeline

The initial hurdle is overcoming the Department of Labor timeline. The prevailing wage determination and PERM certification currently take 12 to 18 months. Subsequent I-140 petition processing takes 4 to 12 months, though Premium Processing can accelerate it. The true length of EB-2, however, is heavily dependent on country-specific visa backlogs.

The Critical Difference: Wait Times by Country

U.S. immigration law dictates that no single country can receive more than 7% of all employment-based visas issued annually. Because demand from highly populated nations like India and China drastically exceeds this cap, applicants born in these countries are forced into retrogression backlogs spanning years or decades. This is where the EB-5 vs EB-2 comparison mathematically splits based on nationality.

NationalityEB-2 StrategyEB-5 Strategy (Rural)
India
10–15+ Years
2–4 Years
China
5–8 Years
2–4 Years
Rest of World
Current
Current
Timeline estimates include processing + Visa Bulletin wait.

India
Derived

The mathematics overwhelmingly favor EB-5. The EB-2 backlog for Indian nationals is functionally generational, projected at 10 to 15+ years. Because the RIA created a new 20% visa set-aside pool for Rural EB-5 investments, an Indian national can bypass the Unreserved EB-5 line entirely. This rural set-aside currently takes an estimated 2 to 4 years, rendering EB-5 3 to 5 times faster than employer-sponsored categories. Publicly available industry data indicates that Rural EB-5 petitions are processing faster, with 39% of filings already approved as of July 2025. HUA petitions face a larger backlog (91% still pending). Source: IIUSA. See our detailed Indian investor analysis.

China
Derived

Rural EB-5 is faster, but Unreserved EB-5 is similar to EB-2. Chinese nationals utilizing the Rural set-aside can expect wait times roughly equivalent to India (2 to 4 years). However, Chinese investors selecting Unreserved (standard) EB-5 projects face wait times of 6 to 10+ years, making standard EB-5 longer or somewhat equivalent to the 5 to 8 year wait in the EB-2 category. See our detailed Chinese investor analysis.

Rest of World (ROW)
Official Data

The mathematics overwhelmingly favor EB-2. For individuals born in countries outside of India and China, the EB-2 category is almost always "Current" on the Visa Bulletin. Because there is no visa backlog to skip, EB-2 is simply cheaper and faster than EB-5. EB5Status strongly recommends that ROW applicants pursue EB-2, provided they can secure employer sponsorship or qualify for an NIW.

Risk Comparison

EB-5 Risks

To satisfy USCIS requirements, your minimum $800,000 investment must remain "at risk". A poorly structured Regional Center project can result in total capital loss or failure to sustain the required 10 jobs per investor. You also face the risk of unexpected visa retrogression, or missing the legislative Grandfathering Deadline and 2027 CPI-U Adjustment. However, these risks have been mitigated by robust new investor protections and SEC oversight mandated by the RIA of 2022.

EB-2 Risks

EB-2 risk is not financial; it is rooted in employment dependency and time. During a 15-year backlog, an Indian H-1B holder faces the catastrophic risk of job loss, requiring them to find a new employer willing to sponsor an I-140 within 60 days, or risk deportation. They also face the severe risk of their children "aging out" at 21 years old while waiting in the backlog, separating the family.

Hybrid Strategy: Can You Do Both?

Yes. Many advanced-degree professionals utilize a "belt and suspenders" strategy. They maintain their EB-2 process to secure an early priority date at their employer's expense (providing free baseline insurance). Simultaneously, they file an EB-5 I-526E petition to act as a timeline accelerator. If the EB-5 priority date becomes current faster, they switch tracks using the concurrently filed I-485 forms. They maintain H-1B status throughout until their EB-5 EAD eliminates their employer dependency.

Decision Framework

Choose EB-5 If:

✔ You have legal access to $800,000 to $1.05M in capital.

✔ You were born in India or China and face a 6+ year EB-2 backlog.

✔ You want total freedom to start your own business without sponsorship ties.

✔ Your children are nearing age 21 and risk aging out of H-4 status.

Choose EB-2 If:

✔ You were born in a Rest of World (ROW) country with no visa backlog.

✔ You have a willing corporate sponsor for the PERM process.

✔ You meet the high bar for an NIW and can bypass PERM entirely.

✔ Raising $800,000 would cause severe financial distress.

Consider Both If:

✔ You are heavily backlogged (Indian/Chinese) but already hold an approved I-140.

✔ You have the capital, but want your employer's EB-2 processing as fallback insurance in case an EB-5 Regional Center project fails.

EB-5 vs EB-2 FAQ

EB5Status does not sell EB-5 investments or provide legal advice. This comparison is based on publicly available government data. We recommend EB-2 when the data supports it.

The data and timelines presented are estimates and do not constitute legal advice. Visa bulletin movement and USCIS processing times fluctuate. Always consult a qualified U.S. immigration attorney for advice specific to your situation. View our wait time methodology.