Questions and Answers: EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program Visa Availability Approach
EB-5 Visa Petition Processing
Questions and Answers: Visa Availability Approach to Prioritizing Immigrant Petitions by Alien Investor (Form I-526).
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Q1. What is the visa availability approach to prioritizing adjudication of Form I-526?
Q2. How is a visa availability approach different from a strict first-in, first-out (FIFO) approach?
Q3. What petitions does this change affect?
Q4. Why is USCIS implementing this visa availability approach?
Q5. How often will USCIS assess visa availability throughout the year?
Q6. How will USCIS report Form I-526 processing times?
Q7. Agency priorities and resources may change. Does the new visa availability approach apply indefinitely or only for fiscal year 2020?
Q8. How will USCIS handle expedite requests for Form I-526 petitions when a visa is not immediately available or available soon?
Q9. How will USCIS respond to case inquiries for cases when a visa is not immediately available or is not available soon?
Q10. Has USCIS considered the impacts of the change to petitions submitted before this update?
Q11. How will USCIS handle cases where the investor may be eligible to charge his or her immigrant visa to a country other than the investor’s country of birth?
Q12. How many personnel were assigned to IPO at the beginning of FY2021?
Q13. The visa availability approach prioritizes the assignment of Form I-526 petitions for investors with an available visa or a visa that will be available soon. Currently, how does IPO generally organize its Form I-526 petition inventory based on this prioritization?
- A visa is available (or will be available soon); and
- The underlying project has been reviewed.
- A visa is available (or will be available soon); and
- The underlying project has been reviewed.
Workflows are generally managed in FIFO order when a visa is available or will be available soon. Please see this description (PDF, 238.48 KB) for more information.
Additionally, effective July 18, 2023, IPO began grouping petitions by new commercial enterprise (NCE) with filing dates on or before Nov. 30, 2019, within the workflow of petitions where the project has been reviewed and there is a visa available or soon to be available. These petitions are assigned by NCE using a FIFO methodology, namely, by date of the earliest filed petition in that workflow for each NCE. Given the large volume of petitions filed shortly before the EB-5 modernization rule (now vacated) had taken effect in November 2019 and because the project documents are often the same, assigning multiple petitions associated with the same NCE to the same adjudicator or adjudicators enables IPO to gain greater processing efficiencies, reduce the backlog and Form I-526 completion times, maximizes visa usage, and supports consistency and accuracy in adjudications, while maintaining fairness given the closeness in the filing dates of these petitions.
As of April 2024, we began extending the grouping of Form I-526 petitions to include petitions with filing dates up to March 2022. We found that we gained notable processing efficiencies on account of grouping petitions with filing dates on or before Nov. 30, 2019, and believe that extending this processing window to March 2022 will further capitalize on those efficiencies as we work diligently toward backlog reduction.
Q14. What methodology does USCIS currently use to calculate Form I-526 processing times?
- A14. See https://egov.uscis.gov/processing-times/more-info for more information.