EB-5 Visa Backlog and Outlook as of 2025
February 21, 2025 22 Comments
5/21/2025 UPDATE: Please see the new version of this post based on more recent data: EB-5 Visa Backlog and Outlook as of 2025 — UPDATED
–ORIGINAL POST–
The EB-5 “investor visa” program obviously depends on visas. It’s tough to get a handle on the EB-5 visa outlook, considering spotty data, moving parts, and disincentives to recognize a threat. I keep working on analysis, because it’s so practically important for EB-5 issuers and investors to assess the visa incentive. I keep hesitating to publish, because conclusions are controversial and tough to fully qualify. But EB-5 is in a visa crisis that keeps getting more severe, and too dangerous not to address as best we can.
I’ve now updated the EB-5 Timing Page by publishing the current fruit of my on-going labor – a detailed Excel model that carefully patches together available facts, adds assumptions step by step, and builds a responsive model for assessing current backlogs and visa wait times. This article gives the tip of the analysis iceberg. For full detail you can download the EB-5 Visa Supply and Demand Analysis Excel model and make your way through it, following the sources and formulas and adjusting assumptions as needed to reach your own conclusions. As time permits, I may put up additional articles to discuss portions of the analysis in detail. And my paid timing consultations are now available again for those who’d like to discuss one-on-one.
EB-5 already has more pipeline visa applicants than annual visas in the Unreserved, High Unemployment, and Rural categories. This means retrogression coming in each category. I dare say that every analysis of available data leads to that general conclusion. The debatable question is who will be affected, when, and to what extent.
Table 1 gives an estimate of the total pipeline backlog going into 2025, while Table 2 gives the timing predictions that result from one detailed comparison of the existing backlog with forthcoming visa supply. As a base case, I populated the model with assumptions that I consider conservative, and erring on the side of optimism regarding processing speed and retention rates.
| TABLE 1: Estimated EB-5 backlog size compared with supply as of FY25 | China visa applicants (qualified or in the pipeline as of 10/2024) | India | Rest of World | Estimated total qualified plus pipeline visa applicants as of 10/2024 | Compare visas available in FY2025 | Compare annual visas available in FY2026 and beyond |
| Unreserved | 33,300 | 3,200 | 8,100 | 44,600 | 11,470 | 6,800 |
| Rural | 3,900 | 1,050 | 1,275 | 6,225 | 4,427 | 2,000 |
| High Unemployment | 3,970 | 1,490 | 3,160 | 8,620 | 2,214 | 1,000 |
| Infrastructure | ? | ? | ? | ? | 443 | 200 |
| Total | 41,170 | 5,740 | 12,535 | 59,445 | 18,554 | 10,000 |
Key assumptions behind Table 1 estimates: an average 2-to-1 ratio of visas to I-526/I-526E filings for post-RIA investors (assuming average 2.5 family size and 80% approval rate), accurate NVC records for pre-RIA investors, and minimal visa-stage attrition. “Pipeline backlog” means qualified visa-stage applicants plus future visa applicants coming up from I-526/I-526E processing. Key data behind Table 1 estimate: NVC wait list as of May 2024, pending I-485 as of October 2024, pre-RIA I-526 pending as of July 2024, recent I-526 denial rates and family sizes, post-RIA I-526 and I-526E filed through September 2024, post-RIA filings by country and category through July 2024.
| TABLE 2: EB-5 timing estimates | Who may get a visa in FY2025? (optimistic best-case scenario for China and India) | Estimate for when an investor with a 2025 priority date might expect a visa number in this category |
| Unreserved China | Priority dates up to September 2016 (best case for China assuming ROW visas are limited by processing constraints) | After 2033 (considering the existing pre-RIA backlog and assuming that ROW demand continues neither much higher nor much lower than in 2024) |
| Unreserved India | Priority dates up to July 2019 (assuming FIFO order) | After 2030 (considering existing pre-RIA backlog) |
| Unreserved ROW | Up to 9,800 applicants in theory, but likely about 4,000 due to processing constraints | After 2026 (considering existing pre-RIA backlog) |
| Rural China | Priority dates up to March 2024 (best case if maximum FY25 visas issued, and no visa bulletin limit until year-end) | 2032 (assuming maximum FY25 visas issued, and that ROW demand continues as in 2024) |
| Rural India | Priority dates up to March 2024 (best case if maximum FY25 visas issued, and no visa bulletin limit until year-end) | 2029 (assuming maximum FY25 visas issued, and that ROW demand continues as in 2024) |
| Rural ROW | Whichever priority dates can get processed in time to claim a FY25 visa | As soon as processing times permit |
| High Unemployment China | Priority dates up to April 2023 (Best case if maximum FY25 visas issued, and no visa bulletin limit until year-end. November 2022 would be worse case if ROW visas can be maximized.) | After 2033, when pre-RIA Unreserved backlog clears making Unreserved visas also available to post-RIA applicants (theoretical worst-case if HU investors limited to HU visas: 2102) |
| High Unemployment India | Priority dates up to April 2023 (Best case if maximum FY25 visas issued, and no visa bulletin limit until year-end. November 2022 would be worse case if ROW visas can be maximized.) | After 2030, when pre-RIA Unreserved backlog clears making Unreserved visas also available to post-RIA applicants (theoretical worst-case if HU investors limited to HU visas: 2053) |
| High Unemployment ROW | Priority dates up to May 2023 (Scenario if F25 visas are FIFO with no visa bulletin limit on China/India. January 2024 would be best case for ROW if swift processing allows maximizing ROW visas in FY25) | After 2026, when pre-RIA Unreserved backlog clears making Unreserved visas also available to post-RIA applicants (worst-case if limited to HU visas is 2030) |
| Infrastructure | Unknown | Unknown |
Key assumptions behind Table 2 base estimates: That all available FY2025 visas will be issued, with no limits imposed yet on China or India Rural or High Unemployment in FY2025. (In the likely event that this optimistic assumption is not realized, worse visa wait times would result for China and India.) That the backlog entering FY2025 is as described in Table 1 (and as detailed by priority date in the supporting Excel). That new EB-5 demand in 2025 and future years will mirror the volume and TEA/category distribution of EB-5 demand in FY2024. (To the extent that this proves not true, actual wait times for China Unreserved, China Rural, and India Rural could be less than estimated in Table 2.) That qualified Rest-of-World High Unemployment and Rural applicants are likely to take High Unemployment and Rural visas at least in 2025 (considering that they are first-in-line for Rural and HU visas while thousands of earlier pre-RIA ROW applicants still stand in the way of access to an Unreserved visa), but that Rural and High Unemployment investors from all countries are likely to request/be assigned Unreserved visas as soon as the pre-RIA Unreserved visa backlog clears for their country. That visas are generally assigned in priority date order. (As discussed in the previous post, exceptions to this general rule mean that individual experience can turn out to be faster or more delayed than the average, even assuming that the times in Table 2 are on-target as averages.)
| Table 3. Potential annual additions to the EB-5 pipeline backlog (if current/future years mirror the number of I-526/I-526E filings in FY2024) | China | India | ROW | Total estimated new pipeline visa applicants resulting from one year of investments (FY2024) | Compare annual visas available in FY2026 and beyond |
| Unreserved/Other | 100 | 50 | 150 | 300 | 6,800 |
| Rural | 2,600 | 700 | 1,000 | 4,300 | 2,000 |
| High Unemployment | 2,200 | 800 | 1,800 | 4,800 | 1,000 |
| Infrastructure | ? | ? | ? | ? | 200 |
| Total | 4,900 | 1,550 | 2,950 | 9,400 | 10,000 |
Tables 1 and 3 highlight the basic EB-5 visa predicament: that we’re in a deep and rapidly deepening visa hole. EB-5 entered 2025 with about five times more pipeline visa applicants than base annual visas. 2024 alone brought in 2.3x as many Rural investors and nearly 5x as many High Unemployment investors as can reasonably get visas in a year with their families in a normal year under category limits.
Table 2 summarizes attempts to quantify when investors could dig out of that hole and secure visas. (See individual tabs in the Excel model for sources and derivations for the estimates in this table. And you can use the worksheets to try the effect of different assumptions.)
Table 2 is a reminder that if something doesn’t give, the only new EB-5 investors in 2025 who can expect to get a green card this decade may be Unreserved and Rural investors from “Rest of World” countries, and possibly Rural investors from India. The supply/demand imbalance in High Unemployment is already large enough to create retrogression for applicants from every country in 2026 (or earlier if USCIS increases processing volume), and to measure theoretical wait times for China and India in lifetimes (though less in practice assuming Unreserved visas can be allocated to post-RIA investors as soon as the pre-RIA Unreserved backlog clears).
Could actual wait times be even worse than the Table 2 estimate? Theoretically yes, if low-volume I-526/I-526E processing continues to hinder visa issuance, if on-going Rest-of-World visa demand increased from 2024 levels, and if family sizes and/or approval rates beat historical averages.
Actual visa wait times could also turn out less than estimated in Table 2, so long as visa demand proves less or supply proves greater than modeled in the Excel workbook. Maybe thousands of the pre-RIA China and India applicants registered at the National Visa Center have withdrawn or will give up or get denied, thus hastening the day when post-RIA applicants can start to access Unreserved as well as set-aside visas. (Visa Bulletin dates may signal this possibility for India – I’ll be interested to see the forthcoming updated NVC waitlist.) Maybe recent applicants will prove to have a high rate of project and/or evolutionary failure, resulting in a visas-to-I-526E ratio of much less than 2.0 for Rural and High Unemployment. Maybe the EB-5 market will shortly collapse over uncertainty around visas, sustainment, and reauthorization, thus stemming the incoming tide of Rest-of-World demand that would otherwise limit future visa supply to China and India. Or maybe politicians will realize that they love the visa category that has given the U.S. innumerable jobs, measurable economic growth, and immigrants such as Elon Musk, and decide to allocate more visa numbers to EB-5.
As illustrated in Tables 1 and 3, stabilizing the EB-5 visa situation could require a one-time infusion of around 40,000 visas to clear the existing backlog, or alternatively about 2.3x more rural visas and 4.9x more high unemployment visas on an annual basis to support ongoing demand potential. There were just under 5,000 EB-5 investments made in 2024, which could be nearly sustainable for a program with 10,000 annual visas — if not for the EB-5 backlog blocking paths for new investors and blocking access to 68% of those visas. Alternatively, wait times could stabilize at a tolerable level (for those few who can persist) if the EB-5 market contracts by at least half, and/or about half of past Unreserved and High Unemployment investors give up.
Something is certain to give, when theoretical wait times become intolerably long. Consider this exercise: “100 people arrive for breakfast at a restaurant that can serve 20 customers per hour. How long will customer #101 wait for breakfast?” The real-life answer is not “100/20=5 hours” but rather “however long she/others are willing to wait for breakfast before giving up and going to eat somewhere else.” Ideally the restaurant owner is smart enough to rustle up more staff and tables in time to accommodate the profitable crowd, and to avoid discouraging new customers.
In cell D42 of the HU tab of the model, you’ll find a formula 5,252/70=75. The China high unemployment pipeline backlog is on track to be 75x greater this year than annual HU visa supply under country caps. But of course, no Chinese HU investor will wait anywhere near 75 years for a visa. The gap between demand and supply will inevitably close somehow, to reduce wait times to tolerable levels. I sincerely hope that supply-side relief is what ultimately closes the gap, making many more visas available across categories such that HU investors from all countries can get timely access to a HU or Unreserved visa. But for now, please “mind the gap” or risk unexpected failure.
As time permits, I may write additional posts to discuss the methods and thinking baked into the Excel model behind this post, and to walk through using and modifying the model. As time permits, I may redo the model when Department of State publishes the November 2024 NVC Waitlist and the 2024 Report of the Visa Office, and as new processing reports from USCIS and DOS help clarify possible visa issuance this year. If you benefit from the considerable effort that I’ve put into this otherwise thankless analysis, please consider making a contribution to support the work. If you’d like to pay for a consultation to discuss the model and your EB-5/timing questions individually, please book a meeting here.
I would like to thank Lee Li of IIUSA, Connor Chen of EB5 Sir, and Joey Barnett and Charlie Oppenheim of WR Immigration for responding to my requests for advance review of this analysis. And I welcome any additional corrections and feedback to the EB-5 Visa Supply and Demand Analysis model. You can email me at suzanne@lucidtext.com.
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Just want to add, based on analyzing the patterns on micro level last from few weeks, it seems I-526 updates only happening on Fridays, during Biden use to be daily M-F. But now approvals or any decisions get notified on Friday’s.
Could you please share your Excel model?
I do have different estimation.
Yes, my model is shared. It’s linked in the post and on this page https://blog.lucidtext.com/eb-5-timing/. Please take a look, and also share where your estimates differ.
Number of I-526 Approved Employment-Based Petitions Awaiting Visa Availability
China 13549
India 205
Pending I-526 LEGACY
Global 3744
Source: USCIS
Why you put 33,300 for China and 33,300 for india
On the Unreserved tab in my Excel, I put the actual data and formulas behind my total Unreserved calculation. The calculation is based on the NVC waitlist, I-485 pending, and I-526 pending data. For data sources, see the separate Data excel file also shared on the EB-5 Timing page. The data in your comment is from a report that covers a small segment of the pipeline backlog. As stated, that report records I-526 petitions (meaning it counts investors only, not total applicants) that are approved (i.e. not counting people with I-526 still pending) and awaiting visa availability (i.e. not counting everyone with priority dates that could get visas according to the visa bulletin — meaning that it doesn’t include most of the India backlog, and doesn’t include any of the ROW backlog.). It’s tough to draw conclusions from that report, given its limits, except to compare reports quarter-to-quarter to get a sense of the effect of visa bulletin date movement. (In the Pre-RIA Data tab in the Data Excel linked to my timing page, starting in Row 277, I include a log of these reports over time.)
Final Update:
Hopefully this is help everyone else.
Applied
I-526 (direct) unreserved India
PD: March 10, 2022
RFE Request: 2nd week of Aug, 2024
RFE Response Received: 1st week of Nov, 2024
I-526 Approved: February 21, 2025
I have been using Lawfully app, it seems to be very accurate. The AI of it shows decision in 119 days, so approx in the timeframe I got this approval.
For some reason, it still shows pending, but today when I checked USCIS website got this great news 🙂
Anyway, I suggest use this app, get free 3 days trial & it will calculate your timeline.
Good luck to everyone, it was a long..very long wait. Having a good lawyer is a must, as RFE is not something anyone can do, it requires experience. Now will start the next phase of Consular processing, I could do inside US, but without work, it is not easy, will rather wait.
If RFE is done correctly, expect update in about 120 days.
Based on current pattern, cases are updated on Friday’s.
So now, you can add India 206…lol
I am expecting approx 1-1.5 months, India will be current, in all categories.
Thank you for sharing this experience, Ram, and best of luck for next steps!
Thank you for posting the great analysis. For Pre-IRA China, the withdrawn rate is a significant factor. It will be great if the USCIS can publish this info. (From what I hear the withdrawn rate is around 40%)
But anyway, thanks for your sharing.
IIUSA was able to get country-specific I-526 denial rates for the first half of FY2024 via FOIA request to USCIS. Denial+withdrawals were 60% of pre-RIA China completions in that period, so that’s the assumption I used in the backlog analysis model when calculating the visas-from-I-526 portion of the pre-RIA China pipeline estimate. All the past approval/denial rate detail that I’ve collected can be found in the data Excel linked to the EB-5 Timing page.
Thank you for your reply. I just wonder for the pre-RIA China how the number of “Applicants registered at NVC as of 5/2024” is calculated. Is this number also factored in the withdrawn rate?
“Applicants registered at NVC as of 5/2024” is copied from here (Table 1 on pg. 3): https://iiusa.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Insights-from-DOS-Recap-of-2024-IIUSA-EB-5-Forum-1.pdf
For discussion of how the waiting lists get counted, see the previous annual report here: https://travel.state.gov/content/dam/visas/Statistics/Immigrant-Statistics/WaitingList/WaitingListItem_2023_vF.pdf
Department of State just counts registered applicants, without guessing how many will ultimately drop out or get denied in the future. The only data source I have for visa-stage denials is this GAO study https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-23-106452 According to GAO, an average 7.4% of DS-260 for China ended in refusal for the period 2016-2021. I chose not to include a visa-stage denial rate assumption in the model because the documented historical rate is so low (lower than I’d realistically expect since 2021 and going forward), and because I’m interested in modeling a “what if we assume success” scenario. But you can try to modify the model with the addition of visa-stage denial assumptions.
Thank you for providing the information!
Recall that you can access my data library any time in the data file liked here: https://blog.lucidtext.com/eb-5-timing/ The sources I mentioned in the comment are all saved with links in the data Excel.
It takes about 6 months to get your approved petition to move from USCIS to NVC and additional 2-3 or more depending on how fast your are able to submit documents and fees to get DQ’ed. Most of the consulates require additional 9-12 months to schedule Interview before you can claim your visas. This stop gap delay pauses the rush to obtain visas and thus mitigate retrogression for India for all Pre-RIA investors.
Maybe this is not true in all cases but my petition was approved in Feb-2024 , File transfer to NVC in Jul-2024, DQ’ed – Aug-2024 and now waiting for my interview.
Good points. This delay between I-526 approval and visa interview is one reason that I’m hesitant to discount the apparent size of the India pipeline backlog, or to assume that someone with a 2017 or 2018 priority date who doesn’t have a visa already must have given up and dropped out. With 2017 and 2018 priority dates still getting I-526 approvals as of 2023 and even 2024, followed by a 1-2-year visa-stage process, it’s possible that many old India priority dates are still fairly fresh as visa applicants, or not even yet qualified.
Jay, what was the priority date for your I-526E? Are you from capped country such as India or an uncapped country?
Which country are you currently in that’s making you wait this long for the interview?
Thanks for your analysis. If you could make a prediction, i.e. China, rural, submission date in September 2024, how long does it take to get a temporary green card if processed domestically. Thank you!
Timeline to help people reading
i526e – Reserved Rural RC Project: Filed end Feb’24; Approved end Jan’25 (11 months)
EAD – Approved in about 3 months
AP – Still Pending (12 months at this point)
Hoping the I465 gets picked and approved in the next 3-6 months
Jonathan, are you from a capped or uncapped country?
India (not sure if that falls under capped or uncapped with a PD of Feb’24 under rural post RIA)
I assume (from table 2) that “Rural ROW” would be the fastest path for an investor from a low-volume country (not China or India).
How long (or range of time) would you estimate it would take from filing the I-526E in 2025 until the consulate gives the visa for entry to the U.S., for this “Rural ROW” investor from a low-volume country?
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