Release Date
Today, the Department of Homeland Security posted a Federal Register notice providing information related to the EB-5 Integrity Fund. USCIS will use the EB-5 Integrity Fund primarily to administer the EB-5 Regional Center Program, as required by the EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act of 2022. Starting March 2, USCIS will collect an annual fee from each designated regional center to finance the EB-5 Integrity Fund.
As required under the new EB-5 law, the fee is $20,000 for regional centers with more than 20 investors and $10,000 for those with 20 or fewer investors. The fee payment for fiscal year (FY) 2023 is due by Apr. 1, 2023, and regional centers must pay the fee online directly at Pay.gov, a system managed by the U.S. Department of the Treasury. Starting in FY 2024 (October 2023), the fee will be due at the start of each fiscal year between Oct. 1 and Oct. 31.
In addition, the filing fee for Form I-526E, Immigrant Petition by Regional Center Investor, increased by $1,000 on Oct. 1, 2022, to incorporate the Integrity Fund fees.
The center may use fees collected for the EB-5 Integrity Fund to detect and investigate fraud and other immigration crimes.
The center will not impose late fees for payments that were due in FY 2023. USCIS will start imposing a late fee, beginning October 2023, for any payments made more than 30 days later than the due date. USCIS will announce the amount of the late penalty and the process for collecting in a future publication before USCIS collects it or it is due.
Per the new EB-5 law, the center must terminate the designation of any regional center that does not pay the fee within 90 days of the due date. Termination will not be automatic, and the center will provide a notice of intent to terminate and the opportunity to prove that the fee was paid in the proper amount within 90 days of the due date before sending a notice of termination.
The EB-5 Regional Center Program makes visas available to qualified immigrants (and the eligible spouses and children of such immigrants) who pool their investments with other qualified immigrants in a “regional center” in the United States. USCIS designates regional centers based on a proposal for the promotion of economic growth, including prospective job creation and increased domestic capital investment in their requested geographic region.
The Federal Register notice and the EB-5 Integrity Fund page explain the requirement for the fee and provide the process for how it is to be paid.
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