EB5 Investment Loans: What Investors Should Note in 2026

  • Minh Lê
  • 29/06/2026
  • EB-5 Program: Immigrant Investor
EB-5 Investment Loans: What Should Investors Know in 2026?
EB-5 Investment Loans: What Should Investors Know in 2026?

In recent years, more and more Vietnamese people have been interested in getting a green card through EB5 investment. However, the minimum investment amount of up to $800,000 (TEA areas) or $1,050,000 (non-TEA areas) has led many investors to consider using an EB5 loan instead of gathering all the cash at once. Taking out a loan for EB5 investment opens up opportunities for those who don’t have immediate liquidity, but it also comes with a series of legal requirements — and if you prepare them wrong, your loan documentation can easily be hit with a Request for Evidence (RFE) or outright denial from USCIS. This article from Newland USA brings together the most important things investors need to know before filing their petition in 2026.

1. What Is an EB5 Investment Loan and Why Are Investors Interested?

Simply put, an EB5 investment loan means the investor uses borrowed money for part or all of their capital contribution to an EB5 project, instead of relying solely on personal savings. This is one of many funding sources accepted under U.S. law, alongside salary, business profits, proceeds from asset sales, inheritance, or gifts.

The reasons people consider this option are fairly straightforward. First, it allows investors to hold onto their liquidity for other needs instead of draining all their cash at once. Second, using an EB5 loan can avoid the need to rush-sell assets and trigger capital gains taxes. Third, for those who have lawful funds but face restrictions on transferring money abroad, borrowing can sometimes be a more flexible way to gather enough capital on time.

One thing to keep in mind: once the borrowed funds are disbursed and placed into the project, they must still meet the core principle of the EB5 investment program — capital must be “at risk” and cannot be secured by the assets of the business receiving the investment. In other words, the act of borrowing doesn’t change the risk nature of the investment itself.

Latest Regulations on Borrowing Funds for EB-5 Program Investment
Latest Regulations on Borrowing Funds for EB-5 Program Investment

2. Latest Regulations on EB5 Loans in the EB5 Investment Program

This is the part where investors tend to get confused the most. Before 2020, USCIS applied a policy requiring that all borrowed funds used in a project be collateralized by the investor’s personal assets, with the collateral value equal to the loan amount. Under this interpretation, cash obtained from an unsecured loan was considered “indebtedness” rather than “cash,” and many I-526 petitions were denied as a result.

The turning point came when the Federal Court of Appeals ruled that cash received from a loan is still “cash” and qualifies as capital under EB5 regulations. The court reasoned that the origin of cash — whether from salary, gifts, or a loan — does not change its nature once it is contributed to a business. This ruling effectively removed the mandatory collateral requirement for loan-based capital, opening the door for unsecured loans to be used as EB5 investment funds.

However, there’s one detail that 2026 investors need to be especially careful about: while the ruling is binding on USCIS, the agency’s Policy Manual has not always been updated consistently with the court’s decisions. So even though unsecured EB5 loans are legally accepted, in practice many attorneys still recommend preparing documentation as thoroughly as possible to reduce the risk of receiving an RFE.

Another very important point: whether the loan is secured or unsecured, it must not come from the business entity receiving the EB5 capital (the NCE), nor can it be secured by that entity’s assets. If this rule is violated, the funds will be treated as debt of the business, which would undermine the capital requirements of the petition.

3. Secured Loans vs. Unsecured Loans: What’s the Difference?

When looking into EB5 investment loans, investors will come across two common types, each with different documentation requirements.

With a secured loan, the investor uses personal assets (usually real estate, savings accounts, or other valuable assets) as collateral for the loan. Attorneys generally consider this type safer from a procedural standpoint, because the documentation has an extra layer of proof: the investor must show they are the lawful owner of the collateral, and that the collateral was acquired with lawful funds. An important note is that the collateral must belong to the investor personally — it cannot be an asset of the EB5 project.

With an unsecured loan, the investor borrows money based on creditworthiness or personal relationships (for example, a loan from a relative, from a business they own, or an unsecured loan from a financial institution) without pledging any collateral.

Regardless of which type you choose, there are some general principles investors should keep in mind: the interest rate should be at a reasonable market level (even for loans from relatives), the loan agreement should clearly state that the funds are permitted to be used for EB5 investment, and you must absolutely avoid any clause that prohibits using the loan proceeds for investment purposes. A contract that includes a clause barring EB5 use can be a direct reason for petition denial.

4. What Documents Are Needed to Prove the Loan?

This is the core part that determines whether your petition goes smoothly or not. Loan documentation isn’t just about the contract — it’s a connected chain of documents that allows USCIS to trace every dollar. As a rule, every USD going into the project must have its fund flow proven from its lawful origin all the way to the project’s escrow account.

A complete set of loan documentation typically includes the following groups of materials:

First is a properly signed loan agreement that clearly shows the loan amount, interest rate, term, repayment schedule, and purpose of use. This is the foundational document that establishes the borrowing relationship as real and legitimate.

Second is evidence of disbursement and the flow of funds: bank statements showing the loan proceeds deposited into the investor’s account, and then transferred to the project. This part is often called the “path of funds,” and includes international wire transfer records, intermediary bank statements, and foreign currency exchange receipts.

Third is proof that the lender’s funds are lawfully sourced. For an EB5 loan, USCIS doesn’t just look at the investor — they also scrutinize the lender. The money being lent must come from a lawful source. As a result, the lender may need to provide income documentation, tax records, or similar business records.

Fourth, if the loan is secured, you’ll also need to include documents proving ownership of the collateral, an asset appraisal, and evidence that the collateral was purchased with lawful funds.

Finally, all documents not in English must have certified English translations. For an I-526E petition, the source of funds section alone can run into hundreds or even thousands of pages. This is why investors should start preparing early and work with an experienced EB5 attorney.

Common Mistakes Investors Make When Deciding to Use Loan Funds for EB-5 Investment in 2026
Common Mistakes Investors Make When Deciding to Use Loan Funds for EB-5 Investment in 2026

5. Common Mistakes That Get EB5 Investment Loan Petitions Denied

During the EB5 investment loan process, certain mistakes come up again and again, leading to RFEs or denials from USCIS. Knowing about these mistakes ahead of time helps investors avoid them:

  • Gaps in the fund trail. When there’s a period where money “disappears” from bank statements or moves without proper banking documentation, USCIS will question the transparency of the loan.
  • The lender can’t prove the source of funds. Many investors prepare their own documentation very carefully but forget that the lender also needs to demonstrate lawful fund sources. This is a common weakness in unsecured loans from relatives.
  • The loan agreement has a clause prohibiting EB5 use, or doesn’t clearly state that the funds may be used for EB5 investment.
  • Borrowing from the business receiving the investment, or using the EB5 project’s assets as collateral — this mistake distorts the “cash” nature of the funds and causes them to be treated as business debt.
  • Inconsistent paperwork. When tax returns, bank statements, and source-of-funds documents tell different “stories” about the same flow of money, the petition will be questioned.
  • Missing certified translations. Vietnamese-language documents without proper English translations can delay or disrupt the adjudication process.

6. Key 2026 Timelines That EB5 Investors Should Watch Closely

The year 2026 has a few important deadlines that anyone considering EB5 investment should be aware of, as they directly affect EB5 loan strategy.

The first milestone relates to the “grandfathering” deadline. Under current rules, Regional Center petitions filed before September 30, 2026 are considered a significant benchmark, because petitions filed before this date have a basis to continue being reviewed under the current legal framework — even if the Regional Center program faces reauthorization changes. This creates a strong incentive within the investor community to file early.

The second milestone is the inflation-based adjustment to minimum investment amounts. The 2022 RIA law requires investment thresholds to be adjusted every five years, and the first adjustment is expected on January 1, 2027. Many market analyses forecast that the minimum EB5 investment amount could increase by approximately $100,000–$150,000, pushing the TEA threshold to around $900,000 and the standard threshold to roughly $1.2 million. The key point: investors who file their I-526E petition before the adjustment date typically lock in the lower investment threshold for that petition.

These two milestones have clear implications for anyone using an EB5 loan: the higher the investment threshold goes, the larger the loan needed, which means higher interest costs and repayment pressure. For those who already have a plan in place, preparing loan documentation and filing early in 2026 is the approach many experts are recommending.

7. Advice for Investors Using EB5 Loans in 2026

To use an EB5 investment loan safely in 2026, investors may want to consider the following guidance.

Prepare your documentation as thoroughly as possible. Even though unsecured loans are accepted in principle, the gap between court rulings and USCIS’s internal manual means that thorough preparation of source-of-funds documentation remains the best way to reduce risk.

Don’t overlook the lender’s side. For an EB5 loan, the lender’s documentation is just as important as the investor’s own. Collect the lender’s proof of lawful funds right from the start.

Review the loan agreement before signing. Make sure the contract allows the funds to be used for EB5 investment, states a reasonable interest rate, and doesn’t violate the “no borrowing from the receiving entity” rule.

Factor in timing. Since the September 30, 2026 and January 1, 2027 milestones could both affect investment thresholds and how petitions are reviewed, investors should build a clear disbursement timeline showing when remaining capital will be completed.

Work with an experienced EB5 attorney and advisory firm. A proper set of loan documentation often runs hundreds of pages and requires absolute consistency across all documents. This is a part of the process where having an expert by your side from the planning stage is essential.

Tips to Help Investors Minimize RFE Risks When Using Borrowed Funds for EB-5 Investment
Tips to Help Investors Minimize RFE Risks When Using Borrowed Funds for EB-5 Investment

8. Conclusion

Using a loan for EB5 investment provides genuine flexibility for investors who don’t have all the cash available right away — especially as EB5 investment thresholds are trending upward. However, the key lies in preparing solid loan documentation and keeping a close eye on the important 2026 timelines. When prepared correctly and early, an EB5 loan can absolutely become a tool that brings investors one step closer to their goal of settling in the United States.

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