The EB-5 Visa has become one of the most popular U.S. immigration pathways for Indians seeking permanent residency through investment. However, before investing a substantial amount, most applicants have the same questions: Who is eligible? How much investment is required? How long does the process take? And is the EB-5 Visa worth it? This guide explains everything you need to know, including eligibility, investment requirements, the application process, processing time, and the latest 2026 updates.
Key Takeaways
The minimum EB-5 investment is $800,000 for a Targeted Employment Area (TEA) project or $1,050,000 for a non-TEA project.
Your investment must create or preserve at least 10 full-time jobs for qualified U.S. workers.
Rural, High-Unemployment, and Infrastructure set-aside categories are currently visa-current for India, while the standard unreserved category faces a backlog.
Form I-526E processing generally takes 30–54 months, although Rural and other set-aside categories may move faster.
Regional Center EB-5 petitions filed by 30 September 2026 can qualify for grandfathering protection under the current program rules.
Incomplete or poorly documented source of funds is one of the most common reasons EB-5 applications are delayed or denied.
What Is the EB-5 Visa?
The EB-5 visa is a U.S. immigrant investor program created by Congress in 1990 to attract foreign capital and generate American jobs. Under this category, a foreign national can obtain a U.S. green card by investing in a qualifying new commercial enterprise that creates at least 10 full-time jobs for U.S. workers. Unlike the EB-2 or EB-3 categories, the EB-5 visa for Indians does not require a job offer, employer sponsorship, or a specific education level eligibility rests entirely on the investment and the job-creation requirement being met. Once the conditional green card is approved and the two-year conditional period is completed successfully, the investor and their qualifying family members receive a permanent green card.
How Does the EB-5 Visa Work?
An investor places capital into a new commercial enterprise either directly (Direct EB-5) or through a USCIS-designated Regional Center that pools capital from multiple investors into a single project (Regional Center EB-5). Most Indian investors choose the Regional Center route because it allows both direct and indirect job creation to count toward the 10-job requirement, which is significantly easier to satisfy than direct-hire job creation alone. Once the investment is made and the immigration petition (Form I-526 or I-526E) is filed and approved, the investor receives a conditional green card, either through consular processing in Mumbai or, if already in the U.S., through Adjustment of Status. After two years, the investor files Form I-829 to remove conditions and receive a permanent green card.
Who Is Eligible for an EB-5 Visa?
EB-5 visa eligibility is broader than most other U.S. immigration categories. There’s no requirement for a specific degree, work experience, English proficiency, or a job offer in the United States.
| Requirement | Details |
| Investment capital | $800,000 (TEA) or $1,050,000 (non-TEA), placed “at risk” |
| Job creation | Minimum 10 full-time jobs for qualifying U.S. workers |
| Source of funds | Capital must be lawfully earned and fully documented |
| Age / education | No minimum education, age, language, or business-experience requirement |
| Family inclusion | Spouse and unmarried children under 21 qualify as derivatives on the same petition |
Minimum Investment Required for an EB-5 Visa
The EB-5 visa minimum investment depends entirely on where the project is located. A Targeted Employment Area (TEA) either a rural area (population under 20,000, outside a metropolitan statistical area) or a high-unemployment area (unemployment at least 150% of the national average) qualifies for the reduced threshold of $800,000. Projects outside a TEA require $1,050,000. These amounts were set by the EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act (RIA) of 2022 and are scheduled for their first inflation-linked increase in 2027, so investing before that adjustment can matter for cost planning. Beyond the investment itself, Indian applicants should budget for Regional Center administrative fees (roughly $50,000–$100,000), immigration attorney fees ($25,000–$75,000), and USCIS filing fees of around $11,160 for Form I-526E plus a $1,000 RIA fee.
How to Apply for an EB-5 Visa for Indians: Complete Application Process
The EB-5 visa process for Indian investors generally follows these stages:
- Choose your investment structure and category. Decide between Direct EB-5 and Regional Center EB-5, and critically for Indian applicants between a Rural, High-Unemployment, Infrastructure, or Unreserved category, since this choice drives your visa wait time.
- Complete source-of-funds documentation. Compile at least five years of tax returns, bank statements, business records, and documentation for any asset sales or loans used to fund the investment.
- Make the qualifying investment. Transfer the required capital into the new commercial enterprise, following India’s Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) limits.
- File Form I-526 or I-526E. This is the core EB-5 petition, filed with USCIS along with evidence of the investment, its source, and the job-creation plan.
- Obtain conditional permanent residence. Once I-526/I-526E is approved, apply through consular processing in Mumbai, or file Form I-485 concurrently if already in the U.S. on a valid nonimmigrant visa.
- File Form I-829 to remove conditions. Filed roughly 90 days before the two-year conditional green card expires, confirming the investment and jobs met all requirements, after which permanent residency is granted.
Documents Required to Apply for an EB-5 Visa from India
| Document Category | Examples |
| Identity documents | Passports (current and prior), birth certificates, marriage certificate |
| Source-of-funds evidence | 5+ years of ITRs, bank statements, salary slips, business financials |
| Asset-sale documentation | Property sale deeds, capital gains records, gift deeds if funds were gifted |
| Remittance evidence | LRS remittance forms, Form A2, bank transfer records showing TCS deducted |
| Investment documentation | Subscription agreement, escrow confirmation, project offering documents |
Important Considerations for Indian Investors Before Applying for an EB-5 Visa
1. Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS)
Indian residents investing in the EB-5 program generally remit funds under the RBI’s Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS). Before transferring funds overseas, ensure you understand the applicable remittance limits and documentation requirements.
2. Source of Funds
USCIS requires detailed evidence showing that your investment funds were obtained legally. Property sales, business income, salary, gifts, or inheritances should all be supported with proper documentation.
3. FEMA & RBI Compliance
Your investment should comply with FEMA and RBI regulations. Working with professionals familiar with both Indian and U.S. regulations can help avoid unnecessary compliance issues.
4. Tax Planning
Receiving a U.S. Green Card may change your global tax obligations. Understanding India–U.S. tax rules before investing can help you plan efficiently.
EB-5 Visa Processing Time for Indians (2026)
EB-5 visa processing time for Indians depends heavily on which category you file under. This is the single biggest lever Indian investors have over their own timeline.
| Category | Visa Backlog for India | Approximate Total Timeline |
| Rural TEA (set-aside) | Currently visa-current | Roughly 2–4 years to conditional green card |
| High-Unemployment TEA (set-aside) | Currently visa-current | Roughly 3–5 years to conditional green card |
| Infrastructure (set-aside) | Currently visa-current | Similar to High-Unemployment TEA |
| Unreserved (non-TEA or general) | Multi-year backlog for India-born applicants | 7–8 years or longer |
Set-aside categories can retrogress as demand grows, so “currently current” is not a permanent guarantee, it’s a snapshot that can change with each Visa Bulletin. Regional Center petitions filed by 30 September 2026 lock in grandfathering protection under the RIA, meaning the case must be processed to completion even if the Regional Center Program itself is not reauthorized after its 30 September 2027 expiry.
Is the EB-5 Visa the Right Choice for Indians?
The EB-5 Visa is best suited for Indian entrepreneurs, business owners, professionals, and high-net-worth individuals who want to obtain U.S. permanent residency through investment rather than employer or family sponsorship. It offers greater control over the immigration process, but it also requires a significant financial commitment and patience throughout the application journey. Before applying, you should carefully evaluate your investment capacity, long-term immigration goals, and risk tolerance to determine whether the EB-5 program aligns with your personal and financial objectives.
Still deciding whether the EB-5 route is right for you? Our detailed EB-5 Visa for NRI: US Investor Visa Guide for Indians explains the program, its advantages, and how it compares with other immigration pathways available to NRIs.
Benefits of the EB-5 Visa for Indian Investors
- No employer sponsorship or labor certification required — the investor controls the timeline.
- Set-aside categories bypass the years-long EB-2/EB-3 backlog most Indian applicants face.
- Spouses and unmarried children under 21 are included on the same petition.
- Investors already in the U.S. can file for Employment Authorization and Advance Parole concurrently, often receiving work authorization within months.
- Leads directly to a green card, with eligibility for U.S. citizenship after five years.
EB-5 Visa Risks Every Indian Investor Should Know
- Capital is genuinely at risk. EB-5 requires an “at-risk” investment — there’s no guaranteed return, and in a weak project, principal can be partially or fully lost.
- Set-aside categories can retrogress. As more investors file in Rural and High-Unemployment categories, visa demand can outpace supply, extending future timelines.
- Regional Center Program uncertainty. The program’s authorization runs through 30 September 2027; congressional reauthorization isn’t guaranteed, though grandfathering protects petitions filed on time.
- Tax residency triggers on green card approval. Once your conditional green card is approved, you become a U.S. tax resident taxed on worldwide income, a major planning point for Indian investors with assets back home.
- FEMA and RBI compliance. Offshore loans, LRS remittance limits, and TCS deductions all need careful structuring to avoid compliance issues on the India side.
Common Reasons EB-5 Applications Get Delayed or Rejected
- Incomplete or poorly traced source-of-funds documentation the single most common reason for Requests for Evidence (RFEs) and denials.
- Filing in the wrong visa category for your country of birth, adding years to an otherwise straightforward case.
- Investing in a project that later fails to create the required 10 jobs.
- Gaps between the amount invested and the amount documented as coming from a lawful source.
- Errors or inconsistencies in LRS remittance paperwork from India.
Is the EB-5 Visa Worth It for Indians?
For Indian families who can comfortably commit $800,000+ in at-risk capital and want a green card outside the decade-plus EB-2/EB-3 queue, the EB-5 visa for Indians is one of the few immigration paths where eligibility is entirely within your control meet the investment and job-creation requirements, and the green card follows. It’s not the right fit for everyone: the capital is substantial and genuinely at risk, and the process demands rigorous documentation and patience even in the faster set-aside categories. For investors who’ve weighed the alternatives and value certainty over the size of a potential return, it remains one of the most predictable green card routes available to Indian nationals today.
Conclusion
The EB-5 visa for Indians has moved from a niche option to a mainstream green card strategy for Indian investors and professionals frustrated by employment-based backlogs. The keys to a smooth outcome are the same regardless of your profile: choose a set-aside category to avoid India’s unreserved backlog, prepare bulletproof source-of-funds documentation before you file, and work with EB-5-experienced counsel who understands both U.S. immigration law and India’s LRS and FEMA rules. Done right, it’s a controllable, document-driven path to a U.S. green card — not a lottery.
Thinking about the EB-5 route and want to understand what it means for your India-side taxes, FEMA compliance, and LRS remittance planning before you invest? Talk to our NRI tax team to map out your cross-border strategy before you file.
Disclaimer
The content published on NriTaxs is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Readers are encouraged to consult qualified professionals before making any decisions based on the information provided.


