Listing off the requirements of obtaining an EB-5 visa is
fairly easy. The immigrant must invest capital of $1,000,000 (or in certain areas
$500,000); create 10 full time jobs through their investment; and create a new
commercial enterprise where they have a managerial role in the business. Seems
simple enough right, have the money and the idea and hey the US will let you
have a green card? Each criteria has several little requirements that make it a
bit tougher to obtain a green card.
The first criteria is pretty simple. Got a million bucks?
Good you can invest where ever you want. However, the USCIS allows for a lesser
investment of $500,000 in targeted employment areas or rural areas. A targeted
employment area (TEA) is an area that is experiencing unemployment of at least
150 percent of the national unemployment average. As investors choose where to invest their
money they have to be aware of where possible TEAs are because a TEA can be in
the middle of the city or on the outskirts of a city or out in the rural
country. Most states have an agency that keeps track of the TEAs and you can
ask if a certain plot of land is within a TEA.
The investment can be in the form of assets that total the
amount needed ($1 million or $500,000 depending where the entrepreneur wants to
build his investment). All assets will
be valued according to the fair market value in United States dollars. All funding must come from legal sources, if
any of the funding for the investment came by unlawful means it will not be
counted toward the amount for the investment. Money obtained from a bank robbery will not
help you get a green card in the US. All
money used for EB-5 purposes needs to have a paper trail of where it came from
in order to prove its legitimacy.
The second criteria needed for an EB-5 visa is the
enterprise must create or preserve 10 full-time jobs. The jobs created or preserved are to be filled
by a qualified employee which is someone who is a US citizen, legal permanent
resident, or foreigner on a work visa; anyone who is authorized to work in the
US is a qualified employee. If the
investor is saving a troubled business they can count the preserved jobs towards
the job creation requirement, however if the enterprise has more than ten jobs
then all the jobs need to be saved in order to qualify for the investor visa. A troubled business is one that has been
existence for at least two years and has suffered a net loss for the last 12 to
24 months.
The third criteria that investors
need in order to gain an EB-5 visa is to create a new commercial enterprise. “Commercial enterprise” means any for-profit
activity formed for the ongoing conduct of lawful business. “New” means after November 29, 1990. An investor can also save a troubled business
that was created before November 29, 1990 as long as it is restructured in a
way that creates a new commercial enterprise or that it is expanded so that
there is a 40 percent increase in net worth.
A commercial enterprise can be in the form of a sole proprietorship,
partnership, holding company, joint venture, corporation, business trust, or
other business entity privately or publicly held. As an investor, the alien must have a managerial
role in the company and have some control over the investment. The commercial enterprise cannot be a passive
investment for the purposes of an EB-5 visa.
(More information can be found at: http://www.uscis.gov/working-united-states/permanent-workers/employment-based-immigration-fifth-preference-eb-5/eb-5-immigrant-investor.)
There you have it, the three steps to getting a green card
through investment. If you have any questions about the process please contact
me directly.
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