The figures below are EB.Academy's market estimates, drawn from working inside the corridor — directional, not official statistics. But the shape they describe is consistent year to year.
- On our estimate, roughly 250–400 real EB-5 investors per year — actual, closable capital for new or mid-tier projects.
- Around 20 active Regional Centers; perhaps half are consistently winning meaningful deals.
- On the distribution side, about 20 agencies drive consistent volume; another 50–80 are sporadic at best.
Education agencies.
Most Regional Centers dismiss them — “they're just referrals,” “EB-5 isn't their core.” That's the mistake. In reality they are the first trusted relationship a family builds, they work with families for years, and they shape what families believe is possible long before EB-5 ever comes up. Ignore them and you compete at the bottom; work with them properly and you influence from the top.
“Properly” means teaching how EB-5 fits into the education journey, focusing on “what happens after graduation?” rather than ROI, no hard selling or commission pressure, and accepting that year one may produce zero deals. Most Regional Centers won't do this because it doesn't convert fast — which is exactly why it works.
Four paths, honestly described.
Throw money at it. Sponsor events, pay for access. You'll get some traction — but you're fighting the top players for a limited pie, renting attention rather than building position.
Go direct. No agents, no commissions — build brand, trust, and presence from zero. A multi-year grind. Are you actually staying that long?
Build where others aren't — the education channel. Slower, harder, no quick wins. But it sits upstream of every major family decision, and in a culture where education is central, that becomes a real moat.
Bet on sporadic agencies — carefully. They'll promise volume; most won't last. EB-5 is a 5–8+ year product, and many of their business models can't survive that timeline.
New Regional Centers don't fail because of bad projects.
They fail because they misread the game — chasing the same 20 agencies everyone else chases, ignoring upstream influence, and treating every partner as equal. In a long-cycle product, survivorship is the entire bet.
What it actually takes
- Year 1: build relationships with three to five education agencies. Expect nothing. Filter sporadic agencies hard.
- Year 2: double down on the durable ones. First real referrals start appearing naturally.
- Year 3+: the education channel compounds. Durable partners become loyal.
This is a 36-month minimum commitment. Most new Regional Centers won't last that long — which is precisely your edge if you do.
There is no empty space here — only existing relationships, trust, and flow. You're not choosing a strategy so much as choosing how much you'll spend, how long you'll stay, and whether you understand the market.
