Congress Close to Raising the EB-5 Program from the Dead: 8 Recent EB-5 Reforms that Real Estate Developers and Project Sponsors Should Know


In the evening hours of March 9, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a $1.5 trillion spending bill that would fund the U.S. government through the rest of the fiscal year and provide $13.6 billion to respond to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Buried in the 2,700-page bipartisan legislation is a 39-page EB-5 immigrant investment reform bill that will restart the EB-5 Regional Center Program.

The EB-5 program was established in 1990 to attract foreign money into U.S. projects while creating U.S. jobs and stimulating the economy. In return, foreign investors receive immigrant visas for themselves and their families. The program has been successfully utilized by real estate developers and other project sponsors as an alternative financing vehicle. However, the Regional Center portion of the EB-5 program (which made up over 95% of EB-5 investments) lapsed in June 2021 when Congress failed to renew it. Assuming the Senate passes the spending bill and is subsequently signed into law by President Biden, the EB-5 Regional Center will once again be open for business through 2027.

The EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act includes the following meaningful changes to the program:

Investment Amounts 

High unemployment TEAs are to be determined only by USCIS (and not state or local authority) and are valid for two years from project exemplar filing, renewable in two-year increments.

Reserved EB-5 Visas

Indirect Job Limits

Project Requests

Increased Regional Center Oversight and Regulations

Integrity Fund

I-829 Changes

Filing Fees

The reauthorization of the EB-5 Regional Center Program will attract billions of foreign investment dollars each year for U.S. projects while providing a low-cost financing vehicle for U.S. sponsors.


© 2025 Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP
National Law Review, Volume XII, Number 69