For many entrepreneurs and business owners already operating in the United States, a natural question arises:
“Can I use my existing business to qualify for the EB-5 investor visa?”
The short answer is yes—in many cases, you can invest into your own U.S. business and pursue a Direct EB-5. But doing so requires meeting a very specific—and often challenging—set of requirements. The viability of this approach depends entirely on whether your business can organically generate and sustain 10 new full-time W-2 jobs as a direct result of your investment.
This article explains how Direct EB-5 works when using an existing business, the requirements you must meet, the risks involved, and when it may be smarter to pursue a Regional Center project instead.
Are you new to EB-5? Learn more with our EB-5 Visa Investment Guide
USCIS allows Direct EB-5 capital to be invested into:
This flexibility means that many entrepreneurs can absolutely use their existing business—provided that the business can expand in a credible way that leads to the creation of 10 new, full-time positions for U.S. workers.
Using your own business can be attractive because:
But EB-5 immigration requirements are strict, and the stakes are high, so careful planning is essential.
The cornerstone of any Direct EB-5 investment is job creation. For your business to qualify, it must create ten new, permanent, full-time W-2 positions that:
This requirement is often far more difficult than investors assume.
If your business cannot confidently support ten additional W-2 employees, your immigration petition becomes vulnerable.
This is the ideal case. Examples include:
If your business already has strong revenue and predictable growth, creating 10 jobs may be straightforward.
A “troubled business” may qualify if:
Instead of creating 10 new jobs, you may preserve 10 existing jobs.
This is a niche scenario and requires substantial documentation.
A common misconception is that Direct EB-5 requires the investor to play an active managerial role.
This is not true.
Direct EB-5 investors may be passive so long as they hold a policy-making position, which is satisfied by:
A local operational partner or management team can run the business entirely.
This is helpful for investors abroad or investors who simply prefer a passive role.
Read our FAQs on the key differences between Direct EB-5 and Regional Center EB-5.
This is essential and must include:
This document becomes the blueprint USCIS uses to determine whether job creation is realistic.
You must prove:
To remove conditions, USCIS requires proof, not projections:
This is why the business must have strong operational fundamentals.
The 2022 Reform Act introduced several important limitations on Direct EB-5 that entrepreneurs often overlook.
Direct EB-5 projects are now strictly single-investor only.
If a project includes more than one EB-5 investor, it must be sponsored through a Regional Center.
To use the $800,000 TEA minimum investment:
For businesses with multiple branches or operations, this is a significant limitation.
Most investors end up focusing on a single, easily verifiable TEA location to keep the filing clean.
These rules were designed to simplify Direct EB-5 but also significantly reduce flexibility.
If your business grows more slowly than expected—or contracts due to market conditions—you may fail to generate the required 10 jobs.
This is one of the most common reasons Direct EB-5 petitions fail.
If the business cannot sustain payroll, the investor will be forced to inject more capital to meet EB-5 requirements.
A slowdown in sales, staffing issues, or a temporary closure can interfere with job maintenance.
Direct EB-5 relies only on precise, documented headcount—not economic modeling.
For many investors, particularly those whose businesses are:
—choosing a Regional Center EB-5 project is simply a safer immigration strategy.
A Regional Center allows you to:
Many investors ultimately decide to secure their Green Card through a Regional Center project and then invest additional capital into their own business afterward without immigration pressure.
Click here to see our currently available Regional Center EB-5 project.
Using your existing U.S. business as a Direct EB-5 investment is absolutely possible—but only when the business is healthy, scalable, and capable of creating 10 new direct jobs in a reliable and sustainable way.
If your business cannot confidently support that level of expansion, a Regional Center project provides a far safer, more predictable route to securing U.S. permanent residency. Once permanent residency is secured, you remain free to grow your business on your own timeline without the burden of EB-5 job-creation requirements.
Yes. Investors may invest EB-5 capital into their own existing business if the business can credibly create 10 new full-time W-2 positions and meet all USCIS documentation requirements, including a compliant business plan and job creation timeline.
No. Direct EB-5 investors do not need to run the day-to-day operations. They only need a policy-making role, which is typically satisfied through voting rights, LLC membership, or a limited partnership structure, allowing an operating partner to manage the business.
The minimum investment is $800,000 if all job-creating activity occurs in a Targeted Employment Area (TEA), and $1,050,000 otherwise. Under the 2022 Reform Act, investors cannot mix TEA and non-TEA locations within the same Direct EB-5 project.
No. Direct EB-5 relies exclusively on direct, full-time W-2 employees. Contractors, part-time staff, or jobs created at third-party vendors do not count toward the required 10 positions.
No. The EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act of 2022 prohibits pooling of Direct EB-5 investors. Any project with more than one EB-5 investor must be sponsored through a USCIS-designated Regional Center.