Analyzing EB-5 Project Documents
A structured overview of the key analytical steps when reviewing an EB-5 Regional Center offering.
EB-5 due diligence is not a checklist — it is an integrated assessment. Each step compounds the others: a thin job cushion combined with construction delays creates a fundamentally different risk profile than either condition alone. A strong job cushion provides little reassurance when the EB-5 capital sits in a junior mezzanine loan position within the project. The following structure outlines some of the core areas of scrutiny any investor or advisor should apply when reviewing an EB-5 offering.
USCIS Petition Status & Regional Center Standing
The Form I-956F is the USCIS-approved Exemplar Petition for the specific project offering. Confirming its status is the first gatekeeping step — without an approved I-956F or a credible pending one, the project carries significant regulatory risk for the investor’s I-526E.
- Verify whether I-956F has been filed and obtain the receipt notice (I-797)
- Confirm approval date and RFE history (if any) and examine USCIS responses
- Confirm the offering is consistent with the approved exemplar — amendments or material changes require re-filing
- Check I-956 Regional Center designation is current and not terminated or suspended
- Assess TEA designation type (Rural vs. HUA) and its impact on visa queue for the investor’s country of birth
- Note any concurrent or prior I-956F filings for related tranches
Key Documents
Construction Status & Development Risk
In development loan-based projects, construction progress defines whether a project will generate the jobs required, complete on schedule, and start generating revenue needed for stabilization and eventual loan repayment. EB-5 investors need projects that are shovel-ready or actively under construction — delays may also threaten job creation timelines, causing issues at the I-829 stage.
- Confirm building permit status, zoning approvals, environmental clearances, and any pending litigation
- Review construction contract: GMP vs. cost-plus; contractor bonding and insurance
- Assess construction completion timeline vs. projected I-829 filing window for investor
- Check status of works on-site (webcams, site progress photos)
- Review construction draw schedule and alignment with EB-5 capital deployment milestones
- Confirm development team experience — past projects, defaults, or litigation history
Key Documents
Capital Stack & Security Analysis
Understanding where EB-5 capital sits in the project’s capital stack is critical to assessing repayment risk. Senior debt, mezzanine debt, preferred equity, developer equity, and EB-5 loan or equity positions all have different repayment priority and recourse profiles in a project default scenario.
- Map the full capital stack: senior loan, PACE funding, mezzanine, EB-5 loan, and developer equity
- Determine type of EB-5 financing: debt (NCE loan to JCE) vs. equity (direct NCE equity contribution to JCE)
- Review loan agreement terms: interest rate, maturity date, prepayment, and default provisions
- Assess collateral and security: first lien, second lien, or unsecured; guarantees if any
- Evaluate loan-to-value (LTV) and loan-to-cost (LTC) ratios
- Confirm project budget is fully funded and assess funding gap or contingency reserves
Note on PACE Financing
PACE (Property Assessed Clean Energy) financing is government-backed and repaid as a property tax assessment, making it super-senior to all other debt — including the first mortgage. Unlike conventional debt, PACE obligations cannot be accelerated on a missed payment. With PACE in the stack, EB-5 investors must understand that the senior lender’s effective lien position is junior to the PACE obligation, which may compress the equity cushion protecting the EB-5 loan.
Note on Senior vs. Mezzanine Debt
Priority of repayment is determined by lien position, not funding order. The senior lender holds a first-priority lien and is paid in full before any junior creditor receives a dollar. EB-5 capital most commonly occupies the mezzanine position, making it junior to the senior loan and subject to loss if the project fails and asset value does not cover the senior balance. When EB-5 is purported to be senior, investors should scrutinize conditions under which the JCE can raise additional capital and subordinate that position.
Key Documents
Job Creation Analysis
Each investor must be attributable to at least 10 full-time equivalent U.S. jobs. For Regional Center projects, this is typically demonstrated through projected direct, indirect, and induced jobs via a USCIS-accepted economic methodology at the I-956F approval stage. The cushion between projected and required jobs is a core risk metric.
- Review the economist’s report: methodology used and underlying assumptions
- Calculate the jobs-per-investor ratio and the overall job cushion (projected ÷ required)
- Identify job creation triggers: construction, operations, employment phases
- Assess sensitivity: what happens to job count if construction is delayed or projections miss?
- Confirm methodology in the I-956F filing and approval
- Evaluate realistic timeline for job creation relative to investor’s I-829 filing window
Key Documents
Market Feasibility & Revenue Assumptions
A credible, independent market study substantiates the economic basis for the project — occupancy assumptions, absorption rates, and revenue projections that underpin both the financial model and job creation calculations. Weak market support is often a leading indicator of project failure.
- Confirm market study is from a qualified, independent third party (not developer-affiliated)
- Assess recency — outdated studies may not reflect current market conditions
- Review comparable property analysis: absorption rates, vacancy rates, and lease-up timelines
- Evaluate demand drivers: population growth, employment trends, competitive supply pipeline
- Cross-check revenue assumptions in the financial model against market study conclusions
- For hotel/hospitality: review STR data, RevPAR projections, and flag market vs. stabilized assumptions
Key Documents
Exit Strategy & Capital Return Path
EB-5 investors must keep their investment “at risk” throughout the required sustainment period. USCIS currently interprets this period as beginning when the full investment amount is made to the NCE and placed at risk. Developers generally require long-term capital, with loan terms of 3–5 years plus optional extensions. Investors must understand that return of capital is not the NCE’s legal commitment, and their claim is derivative in nature.
- Identify the declared exit mechanism: refinance, asset sale, or operating cash flow
- Review loan maturity date relative to investor’s sustainment period timeline
- Review lock-up and loan term and extension provisions: how many extensions are permitted, be very careful with any lock-up periods and subsequent redeployment
- Evaluate sale and refinance scenario: stabilized cap rate, LTV assumptions, projected NOI
- Review any guarantees on repayment of capital — to avoid “at risk” violations risking USCIS denial
- Examine investor redemption rights and capital repayment provisions
Key Documents
Conflicts of Interest & Principal Background
A conflict of interest exists when the principals controlling the NCE (the issuer raising EB-5 capital) are the same as, or affiliated with, the JCE (the borrower or developer receiving EB-5 funds). Such conflicts must be disclosed and may constitute a significant red flag: if the NCE manager has no independent incentive to enforce loan terms or negotiate at arm’s length, investor interests are materially at risk.
- Map ownership and control of the NCE: managing member(s), general partner, and key principals
- Map ownership and control of the JCE / developer entity and compare against NCE principals for overlap
- Identify any shared principals or common beneficial owners across NCE and JCE control groups
- Review PPM for conflict of interest disclosures
- Run principal names against SEC enforcement actions, FINRA BrokerCheck, and USCIS debarment records
Key Documents