Under U.S. immigration law, 10,000 immigrant visas per year are available to qualified
individuals seeking permanent resident status on the basis of their engagement
in a new commercial enterprise. These individuals are often called "alien investors."
Of the 10,000 investor visas (i.e., EB-5 visas) available annually, 5,000 are
set aside for those who apply under a pilot program involving a "Regional Center"
designated by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS).
A "Regional Center:"
- Is an entity, organization or agency that has been approved as such by USCIS;
- Focuses on a specific geographic area within the United States; and ,
- Seeks to promote economic growth through increased export sales, improved
regional productivity, creation of new jobs, and increased domestic capital
investment.
"Alien investors" must:
- Demonstrate that a "qualified investment" is being made in a new commercial
enterprise located within an approved Regional Center; and,
- Show, using reasonable methodologies, that 10 or more jobs are actually
created either directly or indirectly by the new commercial enterprise through
revenues generated from increased exports, improved regional productivity,
job creation, or increased domestic capital investment resulting from the
pilot program.