I've seen investors with several million dollars in net worth get stuck on one surprising point. Not because they lacked money. Their money was simply working elsewhere, in real estate, stock portfolios, or operating businesses.
Pulling $800,000 out in cash often means selling assets at a bad time and triggering a capital gains bill you never needed to pay. The EB-5 loan model exists to solve exactly that problem: it lets you fund the investment with borrowed money while your portfolio stays intact.
The law permits it. The execution is where families win or lose.
In this article I'm going to tell you how the EB-5 loan process works, what USCIS actually checks, which loan types get approved in real filings, and one loan structure you should stay away from right now.
⚠ Disclaimer
Immigration laws and financial requirements can change anytime, and this article is not intended as legal or financial advice. Before making any decision, please feel free to contact the High Net Worth Immigration team for a free consultation.
Yes. USCIS accepts both secured and unsecured loans as a lawful source of funds for the EB-5 visa. The 2022 EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act requires only that the loan is given in good faith and that the loan proceeds come from a bank or another lawful source.
To USCIS, cash is cash. Once borrowed funds land in your account and you can trace where they came from, they count the same as personal savings. That flexibility is the entire point of financing an EB-5 investment with a loan.
One bit of history surprises people, though. Unsecured loans weren't always safe. USCIS used to deny petitions built on them, investors took the agency to court, and the government lost. So unsecured EB-5 loans are permitted today, but officers still read those loan agreements line by line. Expect scrutiny, not rejection.
The EB-5 loan model is a funding strategy where an investor borrows part, or occasionally all, of the required $800,000 investment instead of paying entirely from liquid savings. The borrowed funds pass through the investor's personal account, get documented in a source of funds report, and then move into the EB-5 project.
The process usually runs like this.
Apply and go through underwriting.
Credit check, income and background review clear.
Source of funds section of the I-526E built around the loan.
The immigration clock starts.
Your loan-funded petition clears USCIS review.
Two-year residency for you, your spouse, and children under 21.
Jobs verified, conditions removed. The loan's payoff date never decides this.
Honestly, the loan itself is the easy part. The documents are where the real work happens.
Four things, mainly.
This trips up more people than you'd expect. Many online lenders and loan marketplaces include language barring the use of proceeds for investments. If your sanction letter restricts the funds to some other purpose, you have a problem before you even file.
Every dollar of the $800,000 must be personally attributable to you. Borrowing against the very project you're investing in defeats the at-risk requirement, and that rule traces back to the earliest precedent decisions in the program's history.
If the loan doesn't come from a licensed bank, the lender needs to document their own lawful source of funds. A private lender who won't share that paperwork is a lender you can't use.
Officers have started questioning applicants whose income looks thin next to their debt load. If your household earns $250,000 a year and you're carrying heavy loan obligations, expect questions about how you'll service that debt. Many attorneys now suggest keeping unsecured personal loans to no more than $150,000 to $200,000 of your total funding.
You prove source of funds for an EB-5 loan with the executed loan agreement, documentation of any collateral and how you originally acquired it, evidence of the lender's lawful funds, and a complete paper trail showing the money moving into your personal account and then into the project.
Think of your attorney as a financial detective. They'll pull two to three years of bank statements, tax records, and pay stubs, then trace every dollar back to its origin. Some literally go through statements with a highlighter so the USCIS officer can follow the money without effort. The legal preparation typically takes around six weeks.
Borrowed money must flow into your account first. It cannot jump straight from the lender into the project's escrow.
The path of funds matters just as much as the source. Borrowed money must flow into your account first. It can't jump straight from the lender, or from a relative abroad, into the project's escrow. USCIS wants proof that you personally directed the investment. If you somehow skip that step, it means you skipped a requirement.
Whatever your situation, book a completely free and confidential meeting today. High Net Worth Immigration brings 15+ years of experience helping clients secure second passports, residency, and cross-border asset protection.
Different family profiles reach for different tools. These are the ones that show up most often in successful filings.
If you own property that has appreciated, a HELOC lets you borrow against the equity, interest-only, at rates that have recently run around 8.5 to 10 percent and often up to 80 percent of the home's value. USCIS treats it as one of the cleanest sources because it's secured by a hard asset you own. Budget four to six weeks for appraisal and funding, and be ready to show how you bought the property originally along with its payment history. A cash-out refinance works on the same logic with slightly different mechanics.
Investors with stock portfolios can borrow against them without selling a single share. Rates can be excellent, sometimes below prime, with loan-to-value typically between 50 and 70 percent depending on how volatile the holdings are. A diversified index portfolio borrows at the higher end. A concentrated single-stock position borrows lower. One practical warning: choose a proper line of credit over a margin loan. A margin loan can force automatic selling if the market dips, while an SBLOC gives you a cure period to add collateral instead.
A current employer's 401(k) allows a loan of up to $50,000 per spouse, with the interest going back into your own account. Smaller money, but fast. Funds sitting in a former employer's 401(k) can sometimes be redirected in full through a self-directed IRA structure without tax or penalty, though that route is technically a rollover rather than a loan and only works for the primary applicant. Get personalized tax advice before touching retirement funds.
Banks and credit unions offer these, and they're fully permitted. Keep the amount modest relative to your income, read the permitted-use clause carefully, and favor lenders willing to confirm in writing that investment use is allowed.
Allowed, and approvals happen regularly. Two catches. The person lending to you becomes a mini applicant themselves: their tax returns, bank statements, and accumulation history go under the same microscope as yours. And within the US, the loan can't be interest-free. It needs a genuine repayment schedule and at least the IRS-prescribed minimum interest rate. Several experienced attorneys actually prefer structuring family support as an irrevocable gift instead, since a documented gift raises fewer questions than an informal loan. Either way, pick someone who won't get cold feet when the attorney asks for their financial records.
For international families, borrowing against real estate at home has become a strong option. In India, Pakistan or Bangladesh, for example, several major banks lend against non-agricultural property with a structure on it, and the property can even belong to a parent or relative who then gifts you the proceeds through documented channels. Some investors have used inherited gold as collateral. The same tracing rules apply everywhere: lawful source, clear path, funds through your own account.
Over the past couple of years, some regional centers set up affiliated lending entities offering investors unsecured loans of roughly $300,000 to $400,000 to close funding gaps. The terms were genuinely attractive: interest-only payments, two-to-three-year repayment windows, no collateral required. A meaningful number of petitions using these loans were approved.
When the project's own affiliate funds your investment in that project, is your money truly at risk?
Then in Sept 2025; USCIS began issuing strict requests for evidence, and in some cases notices of intent to deny, to investors who used certain regional center financing structures. The agency's apparent concern is circularity: when the project's own affiliate funds your investment in that project, is your money truly at risk? Several programs have since paused while the industry works through it. Until USCIS publishes clearer guidance, the conservative move is to fund through conventional sources. A HELOC, a securities-backed line, a bank loan, or documented family support all remain fully reliable.
If anyone offers you a loan tied to the same project you're investing in, slow down and get independent legal advice before signing.
Most third-party EB-5 loans are benchmarked against the WSJ prime rate with a spread of roughly 1 to 3 percent. Secured loans price lower because collateral reduces the lender's risk. Unsecured loans price higher. The amount you borrow and the length of the term both move the rate.
Collateral reduces the lender's risk.
No collateral, so more risk to the lender.
A loan term shorter than the EB-5 investment period works in your favor. If you're obligated to repay in two or three years while the project runs five, you're clearly on the hook personally, which is exactly the picture USCIS wants to see. A loan you'd only repay out of the project's own repayment invites the argument that you never truly invested your own capital.
Two dates are shaping every EB-5 conversation this year.
Petitions filed on or before this date are grandfathered under the current rules, even if Congress lets the regional center program lapse afterward. File by that date and your case proceeds under the framework you signed up for.
The minimum investment amounts adjust for inflation for the first time under the 2022 law. Market projections point to the TEA minimum rising from $800,000 to somewhere around $900,000 or more.
For a family financing part of the investment, that gap means a larger loan, higher interest costs, and heavier repayment obligations.
Neither date is a reason to rush into a weak project. Both are reasons to start your source of funds work early. Between the six weeks of legal preparation and the lead time on a HELOC or brokerage transfer, the calendar fills up faster than people expect.
Yes. The EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act of 2022 explicitly recognizes loans as a valid source of funds, provided the loan is made in good faith and the proceeds come from a lawful source.
There's no fixed statutory cap, and some investors have financed large portions through secured lending. As a practical matter, attorneys recommend limiting unsecured borrowing to around $150,000 to $200,000 so your repayment ability holds up under review.
Your home, investment properties, stock portfolios, and even property or gold held abroad. The one asset you can never pledge is the EB-5 project itself.
No. Your green card depends on the investment staying at risk and the jobs being created, not on the loan's payoff date. You do need to keep making payments on schedule, since a default could raise questions about the arrangement's legitimacy.
Yes. One qualifying investment covers the investor, spouse, and unmarried children under 21, regardless of how the funds were sourced.
The executed loan agreement, proof of any collateral and how you acquired it, evidence of the lender's lawful funds, bank records tracing the money into your account, and the wire trail into the project's escrow.
The immigration requirements are identical. The difference lies in documentation depth and carrying costs. Cash from salary is simpler to trace. A loan adds an agreement and lender paperwork but lets you keep your other assets exactly where they are.
Expect prime plus 1 to 3 percent for most third-party loans, and lower for well-secured facilities like HELOCs and securities-backed lines. Interest-only structures are common, with principal typically due within two to five years.
The minimums adjust for inflation on January 1, 2027, and projections point meaningfully above $800,000 for TEA projects. Filing by September 30, 2026 locks your case into the current rules.
Vicky Katsarova is an internationally recognized advisor in residency and citizenship by investment, with more than 15 years of experience helping investors, entrepreneurs, and families secure strategic residency and citizenship solutions.
Since founding High Net Worth Immigration in 2010, she has advised clients across more than 20 jurisdictions, helping them enhance global mobility, protect family wealth, diversify geopolitical risk, and unlock international opportunities through carefully selected investment migration programs.
Having lived in Bulgaria, the UAE, and Canada, Vicky combines professional expertise with personal international experience. Her boutique advisory is built on discretion, integrity, and long-term client relationships, delivering tailored solutions aligned with each client’s unique objectives.
Member of the Uglobal Writers Council | Contributor to UNIQUE Private Jet Magazine | Featured in CIVITAS POST's “Leading Women” & Women's Journal