TLDR: Purchasing an existing U.S. business can be one of the smartest paths to an E-2 Treaty Investor visa, but only if the deal is structured the right way. Officers want to see a real, active, and operating business; a substantial, at-risk investment that has been irrevocably committed; clear ownership and control by the treaty national; and proof the enterprise is more than marginal. The most common reasons E-2 applications get denied involve passive investments, sloppy escrow language, weak business plans, and businesses that can’t support more than the investor’s own family.
Why Buying a Business Often Beats Starting From Scratch
For many treaty investors, acquiring an established U.S. company is more attractive than launching a startup. Existing businesses come with revenue history, employees, customers, vendor relationships, and a track record that makes it much easier to prove the company is real, operating, and not “marginal” under E-2 rules.
That said, buying a business is not a shortcut. The U.S. government applies the same scrutiny (and in some ways, more) to acquisitions than it does to new ventures. The difference is that the evidence you’ll be asked to produce shifts. Instead of projections, officers want to see actual financials, payroll records, leases, and contracts.
The Core E-2 Requirements (Quick Refresher)
Before we get into the deal mechanics, every E-2 application, purchase or startup, must satisfy these foundational rules:
- Treaty country nationality. The investor must be a citizen of a country that has a qualifying treaty with the U.S.
- Substantial investment. There’s no fixed dollar minimum, but the amount must be proportionate to the cost of the business and large enough to ensure success.
- At-risk and irrevocably committed funds. Money sitting in a bank account doesn’t count.
- Real and operating enterprise. Passive investments like rental homes, stock portfolios, or businesses “on paper” are denied.
- Non-marginal business. The company must generate more than a minimal living for the investor’s family, or have a clear plan to do so within five years.
- Ownership and control. The investor must own at least 50% of the business and direct its operations.
What Works: Acquisitions That Tend to Get Approved
A Healthy, Operating Business With Employees
The strongest acquisition cases involve businesses that are already profitable, have W-2 employees on the books, and operate from a real physical location. Established franchises, restaurants, retail operations, service companies, manufacturing, and professional services all routinely succeed when the financials are clean and the business has real staff.
Officers love seeing existing employees because it instantly resolves the marginality question. A business that already supports a payroll beyond the owner’s family is, almost by definition, contributing to the U.S. economy.
A Properly Structured Escrow Agreement
Most buyers are understandably nervous about wiring six figures to a seller before knowing whether their visa will be approved. A well-drafted escrow agreement solves this. The full purchase price gets wired into a neutral escrow account, and the funds release to the seller automatically upon visa approval. If the visa is denied, the money returns to the buyer.
The catch: the escrow language has to be airtight. The only condition for the refund must be visa denial, nothing else. Broad “change of mind” clauses, discretionary withdrawal rights, or refunds tied to non-immigration contingencies will undermine the “at-risk” showing and can sink the application.
Clear, Traceable Source of Funds
Officers want to see exactly where the money came from and follow it from its origin to the escrow account. Personal savings, the lawful sale of property or another business, gifts from family with proper documentation, and unsecured loans all work, provided every step is documented with bank statements, tax returns, and supporting records.
A Realistic, Data-Backed Business Plan
Even when buying an existing business, a five-year business plan is essential. It should show how you intend to grow the operation, hire additional U.S. workers, and generate meaningful economic impact. Vague projections (“we will hire five employees by year five”) with no near-term hiring plan tend to draw skepticism.
What Gets Denied: Common Pitfalls in E-2 Acquisitions
Passive or “Paper” Businesses
Buying a single rental property, parking funds in a holding company, or acquiring a business with no real operations will lead to denial. The enterprise has to actively produce goods or services for profit.
Marginal Operations
A business that only supports the investor’s family (no employees, minimal revenue, no growth runway) will be deemed marginal. If the company you’re acquiring has just one or two employees and isn’t expected to grow, you’ll need a credible plan to scale, or you’ll face an uphill battle.
Weak or Mismatched Escrow Terms
Escrow language that allows the buyer to walk away for any reason, refunds tied to non-visa contingencies, or terms that don’t match the rest of the application file are a frequent denial trigger. The escrow agreement, purchase agreement, and business plan all need to tell the same story.
Ownership and Control Problems
If treaty-country ownership drops below 50%, even temporarily during a corporate restructuring, the business loses E-2 eligibility. Layered holding company structures must be documented all the way up the chain.
Inherited Compliance Problems
Buyers sometimes discover, too late, that the business they’re acquiring has tax issues, expired licenses, employment law problems, or other skeletons. Immigration officers may scrutinize these issues and use them to question the legitimacy of the enterprise. Pre-purchase due diligence is non-negotiable.
Setting Your Acquisition Up for Approval
The investors who succeed treat the E-2 process as a structured project, not a paperwork exercise. They line up immigration counsel before signing a purchase agreement, build the escrow language around E-2 requirements, document every dollar from origin to escrow, and prepare a business plan that addresses marginality head-on with a real hiring timeline.
Done right, buying a U.S. business can put you in a much stronger position than launching a startup from zero. Done wrong, it’s an expensive lesson. The difference almost always comes down to preparation and documentation.
Make a Plan Before Buying a U.S. Business for Your E-2 Visa
The E-2 visa rewards investors who arrive with a clear, well-supported plan and the right deal structure. If you’re considering acquiring a U.S. business and want to make sure your investment qualifies, the team at Berardi Immigration Law can guide you through every stage, from evaluating target businesses to drafting compliant escrow language and preparing a winning application.
Ready to take the next step? Schedule a consultation with our team today.
E-2 Visa FAQs
Q: Do I have to close on the business before applying for the E-2 visa?
Not necessarily. You can sign a purchase agreement that makes closing contingent on E-2 approval, with the purchase funds held in a properly structured escrow account. This shows the funds are committed and at risk while protecting your capital if the visa is denied.
Q: Is there a minimum dollar amount I need to invest?
No fixed minimum exists, but the investment must be “substantial” and proportionate to the cost of the business. Lower investments (generally under $100,000) face significantly more scrutiny on marginality, so the supporting evidence has to be that much stronger.
Q: What happens to the business if my E-2 visa is denied?
You’d still own the business, but you couldn’t actively manage or operate it from inside the United States without lawful status. That’s exactly why escrow agreements with a visa-denial refund clause are so commonly used in E-2 acquisitions.
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