AIIA FOIA Series: Pending I-526 and I-829 petitions by country

11th March, 2023

The data AIIA received through a FOIA request shows the number of pending I-526 and I-829 petitions by country revealing the backlog of EB-5 petitions waiting to be processed by USCIS. The information can be used to estimate visa wait times for EB-5 investors.

AIIA FOIA Series_ Pending I-526 and I-829 petitions by country

Background: Last year, AIIA filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for data from USCIS on various topics that concern immigrant investors. These included staffing levels at the IPO, up-to-date inventories of pending petitions by country of chargeability, administrative policies on I-829 processing criteria, and implementation of the Reform and Integrity Act of 2022. This particular blog deals with the pending inventory of various EB-5 petitions by country.

AIIA Members are entitled to a full copy of the government’s FOIA response. If you would like to receive the full copy, reach out to us through our contact form

In our most recent review of USCIS’s response, we examined communications within USCIS just before the Reform and Integrity Act (RIA) was passed in March 2022. Included in these communications was a request for the number of I-526, I-924, and I-829 petitions in the backlog and the nationalities of these petitioners broken down by number.  A response from the Immigrant Investor Program Office (IPO) at USCIS on March 7, 2022 reveals the following data:

I-526 pending with USCIS around Feb-Mar 2022

Country/Region Regional Center Direct
China 4576 247
India 1718 457
South Korea 1010
Vietnam 973 55
Taiwan 579
Mexico 55
Canada 27
Rest of the World 3120 386
Total 11976 1227

 

I-829 pending with USCIS around Feb-Mar 2022

Country/Region Regional Center Stand Alone
China 5748 592
India 730 132
South Korea 516 31
Vietnam 614
Taiwan 428 46
Venezuela 32
Rest of the World 2138 333
Total 10399 1166

 

These never-before-seen statistics provide a picture of how large the pending I-526 petition backlog has become, especially among large volume countries such as China, India, Vietnam, and South Korea. This information helps to calculate the EB-5 backlog as of March 2022 – a critical date, because the law changed in March 2022. EB-5 investors with priority dates up to March 2022 are now in a queue for “unreserved” visas (68% of the EB-5 annual allowance), while investors after March 2022 will probably join the new queues for “reserved” visas (remaining 32% of annual EB-5 allowance). 

USCIS does not publicly report country-specific I-526 data, although it’s critical for estimating visa availability and wait times. However, the visa wait time for EB-5 investors from China, Vietnam, and India can be roughly estimated using a formula like this for each country:

VIsa Wait Time Calculation

Per-country pending I-526 data helps fill a missing piece in this formula. AIIA is computing the data we have been able to obtain for each of these variables for priority dates up to March 2022, and compiling a detailed chart on the wait time estimations for pre-RIA investors from China, India, and Vietnam. AIIA is looking to release this in the near future. However this is a tricky and time consuming process. With the limited resources and time that our staff and board continue to devote to such initiatives, we ask you, the EB-5 stakeholders, to support us any way that you can with our efforts. 

Estimations are complicated by unknowns and variables. For example, even knowing pending I-526 from various times, we need to estimate future denial rates and family members (derivative applicants) per I-526 petition. Visa-stage (post I-526 approval) demand is an estimate pieced together from reports of approved I-526 without visas available, applicants registered at the National Visa Center, and hints from Visa Bulletin movement and other sources. Each priority date needs its own calculation, because people who invested at different times have different positions in the backlog and thus different wait time outlooks.

The supply of unreserved visas is also in question. From AIIA’s FOIA response, we reviewed  communications from USCIS staff discussing that many unused EB-5 visa numbers from FY-2022 were slated to carryover into FY-2023 for petitioners to claim. Yet, we do not see those numbers in the annual numerical limits report. Only 14,000 visas were allotted for the 2023 fiscal year, which does not include the 6,384 unclaimed “reserved category” visas from 2022. In fact, that report states explicitly, “the employment chart does not include numbers carried over from the previous fiscal year in the EB-5 category.” We await clarification as to when the government will carry over unused reserve EB-5 visa numbers as required by RIA (or whether it will continue to follow the directive that assigns all unused EB-5 visas to EB-1/EB-2 and then to family-based categories in the following year).

It is evident that the I-526 and I-829 backlog totals up to 22,000+ petitions that are awaiting processing by the agency, a total which amounts to millions in adjudication costs, and millions in filing fees that were collected without adjudication. As noted in our previous blog post, USCIS supposedly does not receive sufficient funding to continue to sustain operations and will quickly run out of agency funding. Their current fee proposal proposes to dramatically raise EB-5 fees, but only plans fees to cover the cost of adjudicating new petitions, not to address the backlog or to reduce processing times. This situation is alarming for investors with pending petitions.

Our organization is still receiving responses to our FOIA requests. We expect to receive more of these documents in the near future and will release further summaries of our findings that will be useful to all within the EB-5 community. These requests and the information which we glean from USCIS’s responses allow us to continue tailoring our advocacy efforts and better use our resources to remedy issues investors have faced for years.

Members who wish to receive further information on the FOIA response and associated data, please reach out to us through our contact form. We will continue to receive incremental updates to our original FOIA requests in the months to come, and will promptly update our AIIA community with more useful information.

Please consider donating to our organization so we can continue our efforts in fighting for transparency in the US immigration system and equality of opportunity for all EB-5 investors across the world. You can support our organization through a donation of any amount here.

Directory of Professionals
Directory card

AIIA has curated a list of the top professionals from attorneys, investment specialists, to business plan writers to support all EB-5 stakeholders.

View Directory of Professionals

Leave your comments

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Responses (0)

    Recommended Resources

    The Issue of Aging Out in EB-5
    The Issue of Aging Out in EB-5

    The Child Status Protection Act (CSPA) helps freeze a child’s age on EB-5 petitions, but long visa backlogs still risk...

    Read More
    The Sale of EB-5 Securities Offerings
    The Sale of EB-5 Securities Offerings

    EB-5 securities sales often use Regulation D (U.S. investors) and Regulation S (foreign investors) exemptions to avoid SEC registration while...

    Read More
    Choosing between Direct vs Regional Center EB-5 financing
    Choosing between Direct vs Regional Center EB-5 financing

    Direct EB-5 suits single investors creating direct jobs; Regional Center EB-5 pools multiple investors, counting direct and indirect jobs for...

    Read More

    Recent Blog Posts

    We Won The EB-5 Fee Increase Lawsuit
    We Won The EB-5 Fee Increase Lawsuit

    AIIA successfully won its lawsuit against USCIS’s April 2024 EB-5 fee increases, with a federal judge ruling that the agency...

    Learn More
    One Year Left to Invest in a EB-5 Regional Center Project
    One Year Left to Invest in a EB-5 Regional Center Project

    AIIA warns that EB-5 Regional Center investors will lose protection after Sept. 30, 2026 unless they file I-526E petitions before...

    Learn More
    Trump Gold Card: A New Green Card Pathway Competing with EB-5
    Trump Gold Card: A New Green Card Pathway Competing with EB-5

    Trump’s new $1M “Gold Card” visa plan competes directly with EB-5 and raises serious legal concerns, as it lacks statutory...

    Learn More
    August 2025 Update on the Sustainment Period Lawsuit – What EB-5 Investors Need to do
    August 2025 Update on the Sustainment Period Lawsuit – What EB-5 Investors Need to do

    AIIA opposed IIUSA’s lawsuit to extend the EB-5 sustainment period, filing an amicus brief that helped secure a ruling from...

    Learn More

    Get In Touch With Us

    If you have any questions, inquiries, or collaboration proposals, please don’t hesitate to reach out to us.

    Get In Touch