[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 8, Volume 1]
[Revised as of January 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 8CFR204.6]

[Page 165-171]
 
                     TITLE 8--ALIENS AND NATIONALITY
 
CHAPTER I--IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
 
PART 204--IMMIGRANT PETITIONS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 204.6  Petitions for employment creation aliens.

    (a) General. A petition to classify an alien under section 203(b)(5) 
of the Act must be filed on Form I-526, Immigrant Petition by Alien 
Entrepreneur. The petition must be accompanied by the appropriate fee. 
Before a petition is considered properly filed, the petition must be 
signed by the petitioner, and the initial supporting documentation 
required by this section must be attached. Legible photocopies of 
supporting documents will ordinarily be acceptable for initial filing 
and approval. However, at the discretion of the director, original 
documents may be required.
    (b) Jurisdiction. The petition must be filed with the Service Center 
having jurisdiction over the area in which the new commercial enterprise 
is or will be principally doing business.
    (c) Eligibility to file. A petition for classification as an alien 
entrepreneur may only be filed by any alien on his or her own behalf.
    (d) Priority date. The priority date of a petition for 
classification as an alien entrepreneur is the date the petition is 
properly filed with the Service or, if filed prior to the effective date 
of these regulations, the date the Form I-526 was received at the 
appropriate Service Center.
    (e) Definitions. As used in this section:
    Capital means cash, equipment, inventory, other tangible property, 
cash equivalents, and indebtedness secured by assets owned by the alien 
entrepreneur, provided that the alien entrepreneur is personally and 
primarily liable and that the assets of the new commercial enterprise 
upon which the petition is based are not used to secure any of the 
indebtedness. All capital shall be valued at fair market value in United 
States dollars. Assets acquired, directly or indirectly, by unlawful 
means (such as criminal activities) shall not be considered capital for 
the purposes of section 203(b)(5) of the Act.
    Commercial enterprise means any for-profit activity formed for the 
ongoing conduct of lawful business including, but not limited to, a sole 
proprietorship, partnership (whether limited or general), holding 
company, joint venture, corporation, business trust, or other entity 
which may be publicly or privately owned. This definition includes a 
commercial enterprise consisting of a holding company and its wholly-
owned subsidiaries, provided that each such subsidiary is engaged in a 
for-profit activity formed for the ongoing conduct of a lawful business. 
This definition shall not include a noncommercial activity such as 
owning and operating a personal residence.
    Employee means an individual who provides services or labor for the 
new commercial enterprise and who receives wages or other remuneration 
directly from the new commercial enterprise. In the case of the 
Immigrant Investor Pilot Program, ``employee'' also means an individual 
who provides services or labor in a job which has been created 
indirectly through investment in the new commercial enterprise. This 
definition shall not include independent contractors.
    Full-time employment means employment of a qualifying employee by 
the new commercial enterprise in a position that requires a minimum of 
35 working hours per week. In the case of the Immigrant Investor Pilot 
Program, ``full-time employment'' also means employment of a qualifying 
employee in a position that has been created indirectly through revenues 
generated from increased exports resulting from the Pilot Program that 
requires a minimum of 35 working hours per week. A job-sharing 
arrangement whereby two or more qualifying employees share a full-time 
position shall count as full-time employment provided the hourly 
requirement per week is met. This definition shall not include 
combinations of part-time positions even if, when combined, such 
positions meet the hourly requirement per week.
    High employment area means a part of a metropolitan statistical area 
that at the time of investment:

[[Page 166]]

    (i) Is not a targeted employment area; and
    (ii) Is an area with an unemployment rate significantly below the 
national average unemployment rates.
    Invest means to contribute capital. A contribution of capital in 
exchange for a note, bond, convertible debt, obligation, or any other 
debt arrangement between the alien entrepreneur and the new commercial 
enterprise does not constitute a contribution of capital for the 
purposes of this part.
    New means established after November 29, 1990.
    Qualifying employee means a United States citizen, a lawfully 
admitted permanent resident, or other immigrant lawfully authorized to 
be employed in the United States including, but not limited to, a 
conditional resident, a temporary resident, an asylee, a refugee, or an 
alien remaining in the United States under suspension of deportation. 
This definition does not include the alien entrepreneur, the alien 
entrepreneur's spouse, sons, or daughters, or any nonimmigrant alien.
    Regional center means any economic unit, public or private, which is 
involved with the promotion of economic growth, including increased 
export sales, improved regional productivity, job creation, and 
increased domestic capital investment.
    Rural area means any area not within either a metropolitan 
statistical area (as designated by the Office of Management and Budget) 
or the outer boundary of any city or town having a population of 20,000 
or more.
    Targeted employment area means an area which, at the time of 
investment, is a rural area or an area which has experienced 
unemployment of at least 150 percent of the national average rate.
    Troubled business means a business that has been in existence for at 
least two years, has incurred a net loss for accounting purposes 
(determined on the basis of generally accepted accounting principles) 
during the twelve- or twenty-four month period prior to the priority 
date on the alien entrepreneur's Form I-526, and the loss for such 
period is at least equal to twenty percent of the troubled business's 
net worth prior to such loss. For purposes of determining whether or not 
the troubled business has been in existence for two years, successors in 
interest to the troubled business will be deemed to have been in 
existence for the same period of time as the business they succeeded.
    (f) Required amounts of capital. (1) General. Unless otherwise 
specified, the amount of capital necessary to make a qualifying 
investment in the United States is one million United States dollars 
($1,000,000).
    (2) Targeted employment area. The amount of capital necessary to 
make a qualifying investment in a targeted employment area within the 
United States is five hundred thousand United States dollars ($500,000).
    (3) High employment area. The amount of capital necessary to make a 
qualifying investment in a high employment area within the United 
States, as defined in section 203(b)(5)(C)(iii) of the Act, is one 
million United States dollars ($1,000,000).
    (g) Multiple investors--(1) General. The establishment of a new 
commercial enterprise may be used as the basis of a petition for 
classification as an alien entrepreneur by more than one investor, 
provided each petitioning investor has invested or is actively in the 
process of investing the required amount for the area in which the new 
commercial enterprise is principally doing business, and provided each 
individual investment results in the creation of at least ten full-time 
positions for qualifying employees. The establishment of a new 
commercial enterprise may be used as the basis of a petition for 
classification as an alien entrepreneur even though there are several 
owners of the enterprise, including persons who are not seeking 
classification under section 203(b)(5) of the Act and non-natural 
persons, both foreign and domestic, provided that the source(s) of all 
capital invested is identified and all invested capital has been derived 
by lawful means.
    (2) Employment creation allocation. The total number of full-time 
positions created for qualifying employees shall be allocated solely to 
those alien entrepreneurs who have used the establishment of the new 
commercial enterprise as the basis of a petition on Form I-526.

[[Page 167]]

No allocation need be made among persons not seeking classification 
under section 203(b)(5) of the Act or among non-natural persons, either 
foreign or domestic. The Service shall recognize any reasonable 
agreement made among the alien entrepreneurs in regard to the 
identification and allocation of such qualifying positions.
    (h) Establishment of a new commercial enterprise. The establishment 
of a new commercial enterprise may consist of:
    (1) The creation of an original business;
    (2) The purchase of an existing business and simultaneous or 
subsequent restructuring or reorganization such that a new commercial 
enterprise results; or
    (3) The expansion of an existing business through the investment of 
the required amount, so that a substantial change in the net worth or 
number of employees results from the investment of capital. Substantial 
change means a 40 percent increase either in the net worth, or in the 
number of employees, so that the new net worth, or number of employees 
amounts to at least 140 percent of the pre-expansion net worth or number 
of employees. Establishment of a new commercial enterprise in this 
manner does not exempt the petitioner from the requirements of 8 CFR 
204.6(j) (2) and (3) relating to the required amount of capital 
investment and the creation of full-time employment for ten qualifying 
employees. In the case of a capital investment in a troubled business, 
employment creation may meet the criteria set forth in 8 CFR 
204.6(j)(4)(ii).
    (i) State designation of a high unemployment area. The state 
government of any state of the United States may designate a particular 
geographic or political subdivision located within a metropolitan 
statistical area or within a city or town having a population of 20,000 
or more within such state as an area of high unemployment (at least 150 
percent of the national average rate). Evidence of such designation, 
including a description of the boundaries of the geographic or political 
subdivision and the method or methods by which the unemployment 
statistics were obtained, may be provided to a prospective alien 
entrepreneur for submission with Form I-526. Before any such designation 
is made, an official of the state must notify the Associate Commissioner 
for Examinations of the agency, board, or other appropriate governmental 
body of the state which shall be delegated the authority to certify that 
the geographic or political subdivision is a high unemployment area.
    (j) Initial evidence to accompany petition. A petition submitted for 
classification as an alien entrepreneur must be accompanied by evidence 
that the alien has invested or is actively in the process of investing 
lawfully obtained capital in a new commercial enterprise in the United 
States which will create full-time positions for not fewer than 10 
qualifying employees. In the case of petitions submitted under the 
Immigrant Investor Pilot Program, a petition must be accompanied by 
evidence that the alien has invested, or is actively in the process of 
investing, capital obtained through lawful means within a regional 
center designated by the Service in accordance with paragraph (m)(4) of 
this section. The petitioner may be required to submit information or 
documentation that the Service deems appropriate in addition to that 
listed below.
    (1) To show that a new commercial enterprise has been established by 
the petitioner in the United States, the petition must be accompanied 
by:
    (i) As applicable, articles of incorporation, certificate of merger 
or consolidation, partnership agreement, certificate of limited 
partnership, joint venture agreement, business trust agreement, or other 
similar organizational document for the new commercial enterprise;
    (ii) A certificate evidencing authority to do business in a state or 
municipality or, if the form of the business does not require any such 
certificate or the State or municipality does not issue such a 
certificate, a statement to that effect; or
    (iii) Evidence that, as of a date certain after November 29, 1990, 
the required amount of capital for the area in which an enterprise is 
located has been transferred to an existing business, and that the 
investment has resulted in a substantial increase in the

[[Page 168]]

net worth or number of employees of the business to which the capital 
was transferred. This evidence must be in the form of stock purchase 
agreements, investment agreements, certified financial reports, payroll 
records, or any similar instruments, agreements, or documents evidencing 
the investment in the commercial enterprise and the resulting 
substantial change in the net worth, number of employees.
    (2) To show that the petitioner has invested or is actively in the 
process of investing the required amount of capital, the petition must 
be accompanied by evidence that the petitioner has placed the required 
amount of capital at risk for the purpose of generating a return on the 
capital placed at risk. Evidence of mere intent to invest, or of 
prospective investment arrangements entailing no present commitment, 
will not suffice to show that the petitioner is actively in the process 
of investing. The alien must show actual commitment of the required 
amount of capital. Such evidence may include, but need not be limited 
to:
    (i) Bank statement(s) showing amount(s) deposited in United States 
business account(s) for the enterprise;
    (ii) Evidence of assets which have been purchased for use in the 
United States enterprise, including invoices, sales receipts, and 
purchase contracts containing sufficient information to identify such 
assets, their purchase costs, date of purchase, and purchasing entity;
    (iii) Evidence of property transferred from abroad for use in the 
United States enterprise, including United States Customs Service 
commercial entry documents, bills of lading, and transit insurance 
policies containing ownership information and sufficient information to 
identify the property and to indicate the fair market value of such 
property;
    (iv) Evidence of monies transferred or committed to be transferred 
to the new commercial enterprise in exchange for shares of stock (voting 
or nonvoting, common or preferred). Such stock may not include terms 
requiring the new commercial enterprise to redeem it at the holder's 
request; or
    (v) Evidence of any loan or mortgage agreement, promissory note, 
security agreement, or other evidence of borrowing which is secured by 
assets of the petitioner, other than those of the new commercial 
enterprise, and for which the petitioner is personally and primarily 
liable.
    (3) To show that the petitioner has invested, or is actively in the 
process of investing, capital obtained through lawful means, the 
petition must be accompanied, as applicable, by:
    (i) Foreign business registration records;
    (ii) Corporate, partnership (or any other entity in any form which 
has filed in any country or subdivision thereof any return described in 
this subpart), and personal tax returns including income, franchise, 
property (whether real, personal, or intangible), or any other tax 
returns of any kind filed within five years, with any taxing 
jurisdiction in or outside the United States by or on behalf of the 
petitioner;
    (iii) Evidence identifying any other source(s) of capital; or
    (iv) Certified copies of any judgments or evidence of all pending 
governmental civil or criminal actions, governmental administrative 
proceedings, and any private civil actions (pending or otherwise) 
involving monetary judgments against the petitioner from any court in or 
outside the United States within the past fifteen years.
    (4) Job creation--(i) General. To show that a new commercial 
enterprise will create not fewer than ten (10) full-time positions for 
qualifying employees, the petition must be accompanied by:
    (A) Documentation consisting of photocopies of relevant tax records, 
Form I-9, or other similar documents for ten (10) qualifying employees, 
if such employees have already been hired following the establishment of 
the new commercial enterprise; or
    (B) A copy of a comprehensive business plan showing that, due to the 
nature and projected size of the new commercial enterprise, the need for 
not fewer than ten (10) qualifying employees will result, including 
approximate dates, within the next two years, and when such employees 
will be hired.
    (ii) Troubled business. To show that a new commercial enterprise 
which has

[[Page 169]]

been established through a capital investment in a troubled business 
meets the statutory employment creation requirement, the petition must 
be accompanied by evidence that the number of existing employees is 
being or will be maintained at no less than the pre-investment level for 
a period of at least two years. Photocopies of tax records, Forms I-9, 
or other relevant documents for the qualifying employees and a 
comprehensive business plan shall be submitted in support of the 
petition.
    (iii) Immigrant Investor Pilot Program. To show that the new 
commercial enterprise located within a regional center approved for 
participation in the Immigrant Investor Pilot Program meets the 
statutory employment creation requirement, the petition must be 
accompanied by evidence that the investment will create full-time 
positions for not fewer than 10 persons either directly or indirectly 
through revenues generated from increased exports resulting from the 
Pilot Program. Such evidence may be demonstrated by reasonable 
methodologies including those set forth in paragraph (m)(3) of this 
section.
    (5) To show that the petitioner is or will be engaged in the 
management of the new commercial enterprise, either through the exercise 
of day-to-day managerial control or through policy formulation, as 
opposed to maintaining a purely passive role in regard to the 
investment, the petition must be accompanied by:
    (i) A statement of the position title that the petitioner has or 
will have in the new enterprise and a complete description of the 
position's duties;
    (ii) Evidence that the petitioner is a corporate officer or a member 
of the corporate board of directors; or
    (iii) If the new enterprise is a partnership, either limited or 
general, evidence that the petitioner is engaged in either direct 
management or policy making activities. For purposes of this section, if 
the petitioner is a limited partner and the limited partnership 
agreement provides the petitioner with certain rights, powers, and 
duties normally granted to limited partners under the Uniform Limited 
Partnership Act, the petitioner will be considered sufficiently engaged 
in the management of the new commercial enterprise.
    (6) If applicable, to show that the new commercial enterprise has 
created or will create employment in a targeted employment area, the 
petition must be accompanied by:
    (i) In the case of a rural area, evidence that the new commercial 
enterprise is principally doing business within a civil jurisdiction not 
located within any standard metropolitan statistical area as designated 
by the Office of Management and Budget, or within any city or town 
having a population of 20,000 or more as based on the most recent 
decennial census of the United States; or
    (ii) In the case of a high unemployment area:
    (A) Evidence that the metropolitan statistical area, the specific 
county within a metropolitan statistical area, or the county in which a 
city or town with a population of 20,000 or more is located, in which 
the new commercial enterprise is principally doing business has 
experienced an average unemployment rate of 150 percent of the national 
average rate; or
    (B) A letter from an authorized body of the government of the state 
in which the new commercial enterprise is located which certifies that 
the geographic or political subdivision of the metropolitan statistical 
area or of the city or town with a population of 20,000 or more in which 
the enterprise is principally doing business has been designated a high 
unemployment area. The letter must meet the requirements of 8 CFR 
204.6(i).
    (k) Decision. The petitioner will be notified of the decision, and, 
if the petition is denied, of the reasons for the denial and of the 
petitioner's right of appeal to the Associate Commissioner for 
Examinations in accordance with the provisions of part 103 of this 
chapter. The decision must specify whether or not the new commercial 
enterprise is principally doing business within a targeted employment 
area.
    (l) Disposition of approved petition. The approved petition will be 
forwarded to the United States consulate selected by the petitioner and 
indicated on the petition. If a consulate

[[Page 170]]

has not been designated, the petition will be forwarded to the consulate 
having jurisdiction over the place of the petitioner's last residence 
abroad. If the petitioner is eligible for adjustment of status to 
conditional permanent residence, and if the petition indicates that the 
petitioner intends to apply for such adjustment, the approved petition 
will be retained by the Service for consideration in conjunction with 
the application for adjustment of status.
    (m) Immigrant Investor Pilot Program--(1) Scope. The Immigrant 
Investor Pilot Program is established solely pursuant to the provisions 
of section 610 of the Departments of Commerce, Justice, and State, the 
Judiciary, and Related Agencies Appropriation Act, and subject to all 
conditions and restrictions stipulated in that section. Except as 
provided herein, aliens seeking to obtain immigration benefits under 
this paragraph continue to be subject to all conditions and restrictions 
set forth in section 203(b)(5) of the Act and this section.
    (2) Number of immigrant visas allocated. The annual allocation of 
the visas available under the Immigrant Investor Pilot Program is set at 
300 for each of the five fiscal years commencing on October 1, 1993.
    (3) Requirements for regional centers. Each regional center wishing 
to participate in the Immigrant Investor Pilot Program shall submit a 
proposal to the Assistant Commissioner for Adjudications, which:
    (i) Clearly describes how the regional center focuses on a 
geographical region of the United States, and how it will promote 
economic growth through increased export sales, improved regional 
productivity, job creation, and increased domestic capital investment;
    (ii) Provides in verifiable detail how jobs will be created 
indirectly through increased exports;
    (iii) Provides a detailed statement regarding the amount and source 
of capital which has been committed to the regional center, as well as a 
description of the promotional efforts taken and planned by the sponsors 
of the regional center;
    (iv) Contains a detailed prediction regarding the manner in which 
the regional center will have a positive impact on the regional or 
national economy in general as reflected by such factors as increased 
household earnings, greater demand for business services, utilities, 
maintenance and repair, and construction both within and without the 
regional center; and
    (v) Is supported by economically or statistically valid forecasting 
tools, including, but not limited to, feasibility studies, analyses of 
foreign and domestic markets for the goods or services to be exported, 
and/or multiplier tables.
    (4) Submission of proposals to participate in the Immigrant Investor 
Pilot Program. On August 24, 1993, the Service will accept proposals 
from regional centers seeking approval to participate in the Immigrant 
Investor Pilot Program. Regional centers that have been approved by the 
Assistant Commissioner for Adjudications will be eligible to participate 
in the Immigrant Investor Pilot Program.
    (5) Decision to participate in the Immigrant Investor Pilot Program. 
The Assistant Commissioner for Adjudications shall notify the regional 
center of his or her decision on the request for approval to participate 
in the Immigrant Investor Pilot Program, and, if the petition is denied, 
of the reasons for the denial and of the regional center's right of 
appeal to the Associate Commissioner for Examinations. Notification of 
denial and appeal rights, and the procedure for appeal shall be the same 
as those contained in 8 CFR 103.3.
    (6) Termination of participation of regional centers. To ensure that 
regional centers continue to meet the requirements of section 610(a) of 
the Appropriations Act, the Assistant Commissioner for Adjudications 
shall issue a notice of intent to terminate the participation of a 
regional center in the pilot program upon a determination that the 
regional center no longer serves the purpose of promoting economic 
growth, including increased export sales, improved regional 
productivity, job creation, and increased domestic capital investment. 
The notice of intent to terminate shall be made upon notice to the 
regional center and shall set forth the reasons for termination. The 
regional center must be provided thirty days from receipt of

[[Page 171]]

the notice of intent to terminate to offer evidence in opposition to the 
ground or grounds alleged in the notice of intent to terminate. If the 
Assistant Commissioner for Adjudications determines that the regional 
center's participation in the Pilot Program should be terminated, the 
Assistant Commissioner for Adjudications shall notify the regional 
center of the decision and of the reasons for termination. The regional 
center may appeal the decision within thirty days after the service of 
notice to the Associate Commissioner for Examinations as provided in 8 
CFR 103.3.
    (7) Requirements for alien entrepreneurs. An alien seeking an 
immigrant visa as an alien entrepreneur under the Immigrant Investor 
Pilot Program must demonstrate that his or her qualifying investment is 
within a regional center approved pursuant to paragraph (m)(4) of this 
section and that such investment will create jobs indirectly through 
revenues generated from increased exports resulting from the new 
commercial enterprise.
    (i) Exports. For purposes of paragraph (m) of this section, the term 
``exports'' means services or goods which are produced directly or 
indirectly through revenues generated from a new commercial enterprise 
and which are transported out of the United States;
    (ii) Indirect job creation. To show that 10 or more jobs are 
actually created indirectly by the business, reasonable methodologies 
may be used. Such methodologies may include multiplier tables, 
feasibility studies, analyses of foreign and domestic markets for the 
goods or services to be exported, and other economically or 
statistically valid forecasting devices which indicate the likelihood 
that the business will result in increased employment.
    (8) Time for submission of petitions for classification as an alien 
entrepreneur under the Immigrant Investor Pilot Program. Commencing on 
October 1, 1993, petitions will be accepted for filing and adjudicated 
in accordance with the provisions of this section if the alien 
entrepreneur has invested or is actively in the process of investing 
within a regional center which has been approved by the Service for 
participation in the Pilot Program.
    (9) Effect of termination of approval of regional center to 
participate in the Immigrant Investor Pilot Program. Upon termination of 
approval of a regional center to participate in the Immigrant Investor 
Pilot Program, the director shall send a formal written notice to any 
alien within the regional center who has been granted lawful permanent 
residence on a conditional basis under the Pilot Program, and who has 
not yet removed the conditional basis of such lawful permanent 
residence, of the termination of the alien's permanent resident status, 
unless the alien can establish continued eligibility for alien 
entrepreneur classification under section 203(b)(5) of the Act.

[56 FR 60910, Nov. 29, 1991, as amended at 57 FR 1860, Jan. 16, 1992; 58 
FR 44608, 44609, Aug. 24, 1993]