admin
January 23, 2026

This is one of the most common questions I hear from Indian investors exploring U.S. immigration:
“Is anyone from India eligible for the EB-5 visa program?”
The honest answer is no.
While Indian nationals can apply for EB-5, not everyone qualifies. The EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program is not designed for all aspirational applicants. It is a highly regulated financial and legal process, and eligibility depends on much more than just having money.
Let’s break this down clearly and realistically.
The EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program allows foreign nationals to obtain a U.S. Green Card by investing in a U.S. business that creates jobs for American workers.
As per current regulations, an investor must:
Invest USD $800,000 in a Targeted Employment Area (TEA) project
Ensure the investment leads to the creation of 10 full-time U.S. jobs
However, investment amount alone does not determine eligibility.
To be eligible for EB-5, an Indian investor must satisfy three critical requirements. Missing even one can result in denial.
This is the single biggest hurdle for Indian applicants.
USCIS requires complete transparency regarding:
The source of funds
The method of earning
The path of funds from India to the U.S.
Acceptable sources may include:
Business profits
Salary and professional income
Sale of property or assets
Inheritance
Gifts from immediate family members
Every rupee must be traceable, documented, and explainable.
Cash-heavy transactions
Undocumented income
Informal loans
Funds rotated through friends’ or relatives’ accounts
No matter how wealthy the investor is, undocumented money equals ineligibility.
Even clean money must be transferred legally under Indian law.
Indian investors must comply with:
LRS (Liberalised Remittance Scheme)
FEMA regulations
RBI-approved banking channels
If the remittance structure violates Indian regulations, USCIS can—and often does—question or reject the application.
Many EB-5 cases fail not because of USCIS rules, but because Indian remittance planning was done incorrectly or too late.
Not every U.S. real estate or business project qualifies for EB-5.
A compliant EB-5 project must:
Meet EB-5 regulatory requirements
Demonstrate creation of 10 full-time U.S. jobs per investor
Have a credible business plan and job-creation methodology
A poorly structured project can derail even the strongest applicant with clean funds and perfect documentation.
This is why project due diligence is critical, and glossy brochures should never drive decisions.
No.
EB-5 is suitable only for investors who have:
Lawfully earned, traceable funds
Proper documentation
A legal fund transfer strategy
A well-vetted EB-5 compliant project
The program is designed for financially structured investors, not emotional or rushed buyers.
If you are serious about the EB-5 program, here is the right order to proceed:
Do not start with agents
Do not start with projects
Start with a confidential source-of-funds eligibility review
In nearly 90% of EB-5 cases, the outcome is determined before the application is ever filed.
Most importantly, consult a U.S. immigration attorney who specialises exclusively in EB-5. This is not an area for general practitioners or sales-driven advisors.
EB-5 is a long-term, high-value decision.
Your first step should always be legal strategy and compliance — not marketing presentations.