U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) appears to be significantly increasing national security-related scrutiny of EB-5 immigrant investor petitions filed by individuals employed by, affiliated with, or previously connected to certain Chinese technology companies.
Recent cases suggest that USCIS is no longer limiting its review to traditional source-of-funds or immigration eligibility issues. Instead, adjudicators are increasingly examining whether an applicant’s employment history, corporate affiliations, or industry sector may raise broader national security or foreign influence concerns.
A Closer Look
In recent months, practitioners have seen increased scrutiny involving individuals connected to companies and universities such as:
- Huawei
- Tencent
- ByteDance (TikTok)
- ZTE
- Beihang University (formerly Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics)
- Beijing Institute of Technology
- Harbin Institute of Technology
- Harbin Engineering University
- Northwestern Polytechnical University
- Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics
- Nanjing University of Science and Technology
- Zhejiang University
Recent USCIS Notices of Intent to Deny (NOIDs) and denials have cited broader U.S. government concerns involving national security, cybersecurity, data privacy, surveillance capabilities, and perceived ties between certain technology companies and the Chinese government.
Importantly, many of these cases do not primarily involve concerns over lawful source of funds or traditional EB-5 eligibility requirements. Rather, the scrutiny appears tied to the applicant’s employment background, industry sector, or perceived geopolitical risk profile.
These developments reflect a broader trend toward heightened vetting of Chinese nationals in sensitive technology sectors, particularly in cases involving cybersecurity, telecommunications, artificial intelligence, data platforms, surveillance technology, semiconductors, and companies perceived to have ties to the Chinese government or military-industrial ecosystem.
Why This Matters for EB-5 Investors
EB-5 adjudications historically focused on:
- lawful source and path of funds;
- project eligibility;
- job creation requirements; and
- investor admissibility.
However, current adjudications increasingly involve extensive background screening and national security vetting. In some cases, adjudicators appear to be relying on broader policy considerations that may be difficult to rebut through conventional legal arguments alone.
This trend may affect:
- pending I-526E petitions;
- adjustment of status applications;
- immigrant visa processing abroad; and
- related family derivative applications.
Even applicants with no personal wrongdoing, no government employment, and fully documented lawful funds may still encounter enhanced scrutiny based solely on prior employment history or perceived industry affiliations.
Practical Guidance for Chinese EB-5 Investors
1. Conduct a Thorough Risk Review Before Filing
Investors who currently work for — or previously worked for — sensitive Chinese technology, telecommunications, AI, defense-adjacent, surveillance, cybersecurity, or data companies should undergo a detailed immigration risk assessment before filing.
This review should evaluate:
- employer background;
- ownership structure;
- government affiliations;
- sanctions exposure;
- military-civil fusion concerns;
- public reporting involving the company; and
- the investor’s specific role and level of involvement.
2. Carefully Evaluate Principal Applicant Strategy
Where appropriate, families may wish to consider whether another eligible family member should serve as the principal EB-5 applicant.
In some situations, changing the principal applicant to a spouse with a lower-risk professional profile may help reduce adjudication risk. However, this requires careful restructuring of documentation and should be analyzed on a case-by-case basis.
Potential revisions may include:
- subscription agreements;
- investment confirmation documents;
- loan agreements;
- gift documentation;
- source-of-funds tracing; and
- banking records.
3. Prepare for Enhanced Disclosure Requests
Applicants connected to sensitive industries should expect possible requests for:
- detailed employment histories;
- organizational charts;
- job duty explanations;
- ownership information;
- military affiliations;
- government relationships; and
- explanations regarding the nature of the employer’s business activities.
USCIS may also review publicly available media reports, sanctions lists, congressional reports, and U.S. government findings involving specific companies.
4. Avoid Inconsistent or Incomplete Disclosures
Given the current enforcement climate, consistency across all immigration filings, DS-260 applications, visa applications, resumes, LinkedIn profiles, and public-facing biographies is critical.
Even minor inconsistencies regarding employment history or job responsibilities may trigger additional scrutiny.
5. File Early Where Possible
The current environment remains fluid and could tighten further. Investors considering EB-5 should avoid unnecessary delay, particularly where visa availability and concurrent filing options remain favorable.
Final Thoughts
Chinese EB-5 investors connected to major technology companies are entering a period of substantially heightened immigration scrutiny. While many applicants from these sectors will still qualify for approval, adjudications may become significantly more complex, discretionary, and policy-driven.
Early strategic planning, careful principal applicant analysis, robust documentation, and proactive risk assessment are now more important than ever.

