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EB-5 visa denied? Will multiple petitions help your case? Experts explain
Written by
Varun Singh
Last updated
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5 min

EB-5 visa denied? Will multiple petitions help your case? Experts explain

Immigration lawyers warn that filing multiple I-290Bs after an EB-5 rejection may not improve your chances. Here's what investors should know

Publisher: Business Standard
EB-5 visa
Photo: Shutterstock

3 min read Last Updated : Feb 12 2026 | 6:50 PM IST


XIPHIAS Immigration perspective (quick context)

If your EB-5 petition is denied, the real question isn’t “How many filings can we submit?”—it’s whether your next step directly fixes the denial reasons (source of funds, job creation logic, documentation gaps, project structure, etc.).


If your EB-5 visa application has been rejected, should you file multiple petitions to get it approved? Immigration lawyers say that is not always the right move.

Recently, Brad Banias of Banias Law, a South Carolina-based immigration firm, wrote on X: “I see petition attorneys file multiple I290Bs when EB-5 visas get denied. If your project or attorney is urging you to do the same, get a second opinion.”

So what does this imply?

What is the EB-5 immigrant investor programme?

The EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program, formally known as the Employment-Based Fifth Preference, is a United States immigrant investor route. It allows foreign nationals to obtain a US Green Card by investing at least $800,000 in a new US commercial enterprise that creates at least 10 full-time jobs for US workers.

The programme provides a pathway to permanent residency for the investor, their spouse, and unmarried children under 21. It does not require employer sponsorship or specific educational qualifications.

Once approved, the family receives US green cards.

What happens after a denial?

When an EB-5 application is denied, the applicant, usually through their lawyer, has limited options to challenge that decision.

One such option is filing Form I-290B with the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS).

An I-290B can be used to:

Appeal the decision, or
Ask the same office to reopen or reconsider the case

It is a formal mechanism to challenge a denial. Filing multiple I-290Bs does not mean submitting the same form repeatedly without reason. Lawyers may try different legal arguments or procedural routes.

However, experts caution that more filings do not automatically translate into better chances.

“If the investors are told these I290Bs somehow keep them in lawful status, but here is the regulation on I290Bs: ‘Unless USCIS directs otherwise, the filing of a motion to reopen or reconsider or of a subsequent application or petition does not stay the execution of any decision in a case or extend a previously set departure date,’” said Banias.

In other words, submitting repeated motions does not, by itself, pause the effect of a denial.

When can a motion help?

Varun Singh (Managing Director, XIPHIAS Immigration) explained that outcomes depend on whether you’re directly addressing the denial grounds—with substance, not volume.

“The outcome depends on whether the motion directly addresses the specific grounds for denial — either by demonstrating a clear legal error or by presenting new, material evidence that was not previously available,” said Varun Singh, Managing Director at XIPHIAS Immigration, speaking to Business Standard.

He pointed out that many EB-5 refusals relate to documentation gaps.

“In most EB-5 cases, denials stem from documentation gaps, particularly around source of funds or job-creation requirements. If those issues are not substantively corrected, additional motions rarely make a meaningful difference and can simply add time and cost,” Singh said.

He added that where the weaknesses are more structural, a fresh strategy may be more practical.

“Where the underlying weaknesses are structural, a carefully reassessed re-filing strategy — with stronger documentation and legal positioning — may be more effective than pursuing multiple administrative challenges. The emphasis should be on the strength of the response, not the number of filings,” he said.


What to do next (investor checklist)

  • Start with the denial notice: map each refusal point to a concrete fix (evidence, legal argument, missing docs).
  • Don’t confuse motions with “status protection”: I-290B filings don’t automatically pause the denial effect.
  • Fix fundamentals first: source-of-funds trail, job creation methodology, project documentation, and consistency.
  • Choose the right path: motion vs appeal vs refile—based on whether you have new material evidence or clear legal error.

Related: American Green Card pathways


FAQs

Not automatically. What matters is whether your motion directly fixes the denial reasons—either by proving a legal error or adding new, material evidence.

Not by default. Repeated motions don’t automatically stay a decision unless USCIS directs otherwise.

Documentation gaps—especially around source of funds and job-creation requirements—are frequent triggers for denial in EB-5 cases.

If the weaknesses are structural (not just missing documents), a reassessed re-filing plan with stronger documentation and legal positioning can be more effective than multiple administrative challenges.

We review the denial grounds, assess whether a motion or refiling is more viable, and help rebuild documentation and legal positioning around source of funds and job creation. You can book a consult for a case-specific strategy.

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