The E-2 Treaty Investor visa allows eligible nationals of treaty countries to invest in, develop, and direct a business in the United States. It is one of the most flexible business visa options because it can be renewed indefinitely, includes dependent benefits, and supports entrepreneurs who want to actively operate a U.S. enterprise.
E-2 Visa Core Requirements
1. Treaty Country Nationality
The investor must be a citizen of an E-2 treaty country. If not a citizen of a treaty country, you generally cannot qualify unless you hold dual citizenship and apply under your treaty nationality.
2. Substantial Investment
There is no fixed statutory minimum investment amount. "Substantial" is judged by the total cost of the business, whether the investment is sufficient to ensure successful operations, and whether it demonstrates meaningful financial commitment. Very small investments may face increased scrutiny.
3. Investment Must Be "At Risk" and Irrevocably Committed
Funds must be committed to the enterprise and subject to potential loss. Money must already be spent or contractually committed β funds sitting in a bank account generally do not qualify.
4. Real, Active, Operating Business
The enterprise must be a bona fide business producing goods or services β not a speculative or idle venture.
5. Develop and Direct
The E-2 investor must own at least 50% or otherwise have operational control, and actively manage the business.
E-2 Application Process
Most applicants apply at a U.S. embassy/consulate using Form DS-160 with supporting documents. The consular E visa application processing fee is $315. Some applicants already in the U.S. can request E-2 classification through USCIS.
E-2 Renewals
E-2 can be renewed indefinitely as long as the business is active and operating, the investor continues to develop and direct, the business is not marginal, and the E-2 structure remains compliant.
E-2 Employees: Who Can Qualify?
Certain employees can qualify when they share the same nationality as the principal E-2 enterprise and will serve in an executive/managerial role or have specialized skills essential to the business.
E-2 Dependents
Spouses and unmarried children under 21 qualify for dependent status. E-2 spouses are generally eligible for work authorization under current policy frameworks. Children generally may study but are not authorized to work.
E-2 vs E-1
- E-1: Based on substantial trade between the treaty country and the U.S.
- E-2: Based on substantial investment in a U.S. enterprise and operating a business
Common Reasons E-2 Cases Get Denied
- Investment not sufficiently committed ("funds parked")
- Business not operational or lacking credible activity
- Marginal enterprise concerns (insufficient economic impact)
- Weak documentation trail for lawful source of funds
- Generic business plan that doesn't match evidence
Key Takeaway
E-2 is a treaty-based investor visa for operating a U.S. business. There is no fixed minimum investment, but it must be substantial and at risk. Renewals can continue indefinitely with ongoing eligibility. E-2 does not directly lead to a green card, but other immigrant pathways may later apply.
FAQs
What is the E-2 visa application fee in 2026?
The State Department lists the E (treaty trader/investor) visa application processing fee as $315.
Can I buy an existing business for E-2?
Yes. Purchasing an operating business can qualify if the structure, investment, and role meet E-2 standards.
Does E-2 lead to a green card?
Not directly. Some E-2 holders later pursue employment-based or family-based immigrant pathways depending on eligibility.