Effective March 2, 2026
On February 25, 2026, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) released a critical update to its Immigrant Investor Program (EB-5) policy. This update introduces a new “Inventory Management” approach for processing Form I-526 and Form I-526E petitions, fundamentally shifting how cases are prioritized and sequenced.
1. The New Adjudication Hierarchy
Effective March 30, 2026, USCIS will transition to a balanced First-In, First-Out (FIFO) approach that prioritizes statutory requirements over simple filing dates. The new order of operations is as follows:
- Step 1: Project-First Adjudication: USCIS will not review an individual investor’s Form I-526E until it has made an official decision on the associated Form I-956F (the Regional Center’s project application). The project’s approval is now the “pacing item” for all associated investor petitions.
- Step 2: Rural Priority Queue: Rural petitions will be assigned for review first. USCIS will manage a dedicated FIFO queue for rural projects to ensure reserved visas for the fiscal year are fully utilized.
- Step 3: Other Reserved & Unreserved Categories: Once the rural queue is “empty” (or USCIS determines enough decisions have been made to fill the rural visa quota), the agency will assign other post-RIA I-526/E petitions in FIFO order.
2. Sub-Queues and Visa Availability
To further align with the Reform and Integrity Act (RIA), USCIS may now group non-rural petitions into sub-queues based on their visa category:
- High Unemployment Areas (10% set-aside)
- Infrastructure Projects (2% set-aside)
- Unreserved/Standard
This grouping allows USCIS to process cases in a way that facilitates the immediate usage of set-aside visas, potentially moving certain Targeted Employment Area (TEA) cases ahead of older, non-TEA filings.
3. Strategic Considerations for Investors
- Project Approval is Key: For those considering a Regional Center investment, the status of the project’s Form I-956F is more critical than ever. A project that already has I-956F approval may see associated investor petitions move much faster.
- Rural Advantage: The “Rural Priority” remains the fastest path to adjudication. Investors in rural projects can expect their cases to be pulled for review significantly earlier than those in urban or infrastructure projects. However, this will also likely cause the Rural category to backlog first. See WR Immigration’s Joey Barnett and Charlie Oppenheim’s insights for more information.
- September 30, 2026 Grandfathering: As a reminder, petitions filed on or before September 30, 2026, are legally “grandfathered.” This ensures that even if the Regional Center program faces future legislative lapses, your petition remains protected and must be adjudicated under current rules.
What This Means for You
If you have a pending petition or are planning to file, your “place in line” is no longer determined solely by your receipt date. It is now heavily influenced by your project type and the status of the project’s I-956F application.

