DEPARTMENT OF STATE
TIPS FOR U.S. VISAS:
Treaty Traders and Treaty Investors
The Immigration and Nationality Act provides nonimmigrant
visa status for a national of a country with which the United States
maintains a treaty of commerce and navigation who is coming to the United
States to carry on substantial trade, including trade in services or
technology, principally between the United States and the treaty country,
or to develop and direct the operations of an enterprise in which the
national has invested, or is in the process of investing a substantial
amount of capital.
REQUIREMENTS: TREATY TRADER
The applicant must be a national of a treaty country;
The trading firm for which the applicant is coming
to the U. S. must have the nationality of the treaty country;
The international trade must be "substantial"
in the sense that there is a sizable and continuing volume of trade;
The trade must be principally between the U.S. and
the treaty country, which is defined to mean that more than 50 percent
of the international trade involved must be between the U.S. and the
country of the applicant's nationality;
Trade means the international exchange of goods,
services, and technology. Title of the trade items must pass from one
party to the other; and
The applicant must be employed in a supervisory
or executive capacity, or possess highly specialized skills essential
to the efficient operation of the firm. Ordinary skilled or unskilled
workers do not qualify.
REQUIREMENTS: TREATY INVESTOR
The investor, either a real or corporate person,
must be a national of a treaty country;
The investment must be substantial. It must be sufficient
to ensure the successful operation of the enterprise. The percentage
of investment for a low-cost business enterprise must be higher than
the percentage of investment in a high-cost enterprise;
The investment must be a real operating enterprise.
Speculative or idle investment does not qualify. Uncommitted funds in
a bank account or similar security are not considered an investment;
The investment may not be marginal. It must generate
significantly more income than just to provide a living to the investor
and family, or it must have a significant economic impact in the United
States;
The investor must have control of the funds, and
the investment must be at risk in the commercial sense. Loans secured
with the assets of the investment enterprise are not allowed; and
The investor must be coming to the U.S. to develop
and direct the enterprise. If the applicant is not the principal investor,
he or she must be employed in a supervisory, executive, or highly specialized
skill capacity. Ordinary skilled and unskilled workers do not qualify.
VISA INELIGIBILITY / WAIVER
The nonimmigrant visa application Form OF-156 lists
classes of persons who are ineligible under U.S. law to receive visas.
In some instances an applicant who is ineligible, but who is otherwise
properly classifiable as a treaty trader or treaty investor, may apply
for a waiver of ineligibility and be issued a visa if the waiver request
is approved.
HOW TO APPLY FOR THE VISA
Applicants for visas should generally apply at the
U.S. Embassy or Consulate with jurisdiction over their place of permanent
residence. Although visa applicants may apply at any U.S. consular office
abroad, it may be more difficult to qualify for the visa outside the
country of permanent residence.
Required Documentation
Each applicant for the visa must pay a nonrefundable
US$45 application fee and submit:
1) An application Form OF-156, completed and signed.
Blank forms are available without charge at all U.S. consular offices;
2) A passport valid for travel to the United States
and with a validity date at least six months beyond the applicant's
intended period of stay in the United States. If more than one person
is included in the passport, each person desiring a visa must make an
application;
3) One photograph 1 and 1/2 inches square (37x37
mm) for each applicant, showing full face, without head covering, against
a light background.
Optional Documentation
An applicant for a Treaty Trader (E-1) or Treaty
Investor (E-2) visa must first establish that the trading enterprise
or investment enterprise meets the requirements of the law. The consular
officer will provide the applicant with special forms for this purpose.
An applicant may also be asked to provide evidence which illustrates
that the stay in the U.S. will be temporary. It is impossible to specify
the exact form the evidence should take since applicants' circumstances
vary greatly.
U.S. PORT OF ENTRY
Applicants should be aware that a visa does not
guarantee entry into the United States. The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization
Service (INS) has authority to deny admission. Also, the period for
which the bearer of a treaty trader or investor visa is authorized to
remain in the United States is determined by the INS, not the consular
officer. At the port of entry, an INS official validates Form I-94,
Record of Arrival-Departure, which notes the length of stay permitted.
Those persons who wish to stay beyond the time indicated on their Form
I-94 must contact the INS to request Form I-539, Application to Extend
Status. The decision to grant or deny a request for extension of stay
is made solely by the INS.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Family Members
Spouses and unmarried children under 21 years of
age, regardless of nationality, may receive derivative E visas in order
to accompany the principal alien. Dependents are not authorized to work
in the United States.
Time Limits
Holders of E visas may reside in the United States
as long as they continue to maintain their status with the enterprise.
FURTHER INQUIRIES
Questions on qualifications for various classifications
and visa application procedures should be made to the American consular
office abroad where the applicant intends to apply. Questions on conditions
and limitations on employment should be made to the local INS office.
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Bureau of Consular Affairs
February 1998
Visa
Services
THE TEXT ABOVE IS PUBLIC DOMAIN MATERIAL AUTHORED BY AN AGENCY
OF THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT AND NOT COPYRIGHTED BY THIS
WEBSITE. To locate the original material (which may have been updated)
click here.
|