
Key takeaways for Canadians
- Canadian citizens qualify for the E-2 treaty investor visa — one of the most flexible US immigration pathways available
- There is no fixed minimum investment — the amount must be “substantial” relative to the business cost
- The E-2 visa is renewable indefinitely — many Canadians hold it for 20+ years
- Your spouse can work for any US employer on an E-2 dependent visa
- Buying a US franchise is one of the most popular and successful E-2 strategies for Canadians
- The E-2 does not directly lead to a green card — but parallel pathways exist
What is the E-2 Visa and Why Are Canadians Uniquely Positioned for It?
The E-2 treaty investor visa allows citizens of countries with a qualifying Treaty of Commerce and Navigation with the United States to invest in and operate a US business — and live in the United States legally while doing so.
Canada has had a treaty with the United States since 1815 — one of the oldest and most comprehensive trade relationships in the world. This means Canadian citizens are among the most advantaged nationalities for E-2 applications.
Unlike the H-1B which requires an employer sponsor and a lottery, the E-2 is entirely within your control. You decide what to invest in, when to apply, and how to structure the business. There is no cap, no lottery, and no employer dependency. For entrepreneurial Canadians who want to live and work in the United States, the E-2 is often the most direct path available.
Indian and Chinese nationals — two of the largest groups seeking US immigration — are NOT eligible for the E-2 visa because their countries do not have a qualifying treaty with the US. As a Canadian citizen, you have access to a pathway that is simply unavailable to most of the world.
E-2 Visa — The Basics
The E-2 visa is a nonimmigrant visa — it does not by itself lead to a green card. However, it allows you to live and work in the United States legally for as long as your qualifying investment continues to operate.
| E-2 Visa Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Who qualifies | Canadian citizens with a qualifying investment in a US business |
| Minimum investment | No fixed minimum — must be “substantial” relative to business cost |
| Typical investment range | $100,000 – $500,000+ (varies by business type) |
| Visa duration | Up to 5 years per entry for Canadians |
| Renewable? | Yes — indefinitely while investment continues |
| Work authorization | Only in your own E-2 business |
| Spouse work auth? | ✅ Yes — spouse can work for any US employer |
| Children | Can study in the US — cannot work |
| Green card path? | Not directly — parallel pathways available |
| Annual cap? | No cap — no lottery |
How Much Do You Need to Invest?
This is the most common question Canadians ask about the E-2 visa — and the answer is more nuanced than a simple dollar amount.
The regulations require the investment to be “substantial” — defined as substantial in relationship to the total cost of purchasing or establishing the enterprise. This means a $50,000 investment in a $55,000 business may qualify, while a $500,000 investment in a $5,000,000 hotel may not.
The proportionality test
USCIS uses a sliding scale to evaluate substantiality:
| Total business cost | Typical investment needed | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Under $100,000 | 75%+ of total cost | Very high proportion required |
| $100,000 – $500,000 | $100,000 – $200,000+ | High proportion required |
| $500,000 – $1,000,000 | $200,000 – $400,000 | Moderate proportion |
| Over $1,000,000 | $400,000+ | Lower percentage acceptable |
In VisaPlace’s 30 years of E-2 experience, most successful Canadian E-2 applications involve investments between $100,000 and $300,000. The investment must be actively deployed — not sitting in a bank account — and genuinely at risk of loss if the business fails. A VisaPlace lawyer can advise on the right investment structure for your specific situation.
What counts as the investment?
- Purchase price of an existing business
- Franchise fees and build-out costs
- Equipment, inventory, and supplies
- Leasehold improvements and renovation costs
- Working capital actively committed to the business
- Funds escrowed pending visa approval (with conditions)
Funds sitting in a personal bank account, loans secured by the investment itself (the money must be “at risk”), or passive investments in real estate where you are not actively managing the enterprise do not satisfy the E-2 investment requirement.
Thinking about investing in the US?
VisaPlace has helped Canadian investors obtain E-2 visas for over 30 years. Get a free assessment to find out if your investment qualifies.
✏ Get Free E-2 AssessmentWhat Can You Invest In? Popular E-2 Business Types for Canadians
The E-2 visa covers a wide range of business types. The business must be a real, active commercial enterprise — not a passive investment or a shell company. Here are the most popular investment categories for Canadian E-2 applicants:
🍕 Franchises
Proven business model, brand recognition, training support, and clear financial projections. Makes E-2 approval straightforward. Popular categories: food service, fitness, childcare, cleaning, professional services.
🏪 Existing businesses
Purchasing an established US business with a track record of revenue. Easier to demonstrate non-marginality. Seller financing can sometimes be structured to meet at-risk requirements.
💻 Technology startups
Tech and software businesses are increasingly viable for E-2. Must show a clear path to revenue and job creation beyond the investor. Strong for Canadian tech entrepreneurs.
🏥 Professional services
Consulting, healthcare, legal support, accounting services. Often lower capital requirements but must demonstrate ability to generate revenue beyond marginal income.
🏗 Construction & trades
Skilled trades businesses — electrical, plumbing, HVAC, general contracting. High demand in US markets, strong revenue potential, clear job creation pathway.
🏠 Real estate
Passive real estate investment does NOT qualify. However, an active property management company, real estate brokerage, or development business can qualify with the right structure.
Franchises are the most popular E-2 investment vehicle for Canadian applicants because they solve the biggest E-2 challenge — proving the business will succeed. A franchise with an established brand, training system, and proven revenue model makes it straightforward to demonstrate to USCIS that the investment is not marginal. VisaPlace works with several franchise consultants who specialize in E-2 compatible businesses for Canadian investors.
The Four Key E-2 Requirements Every Canadian Investor Must Meet
Requirement 1 — Treaty nationality
You must be a Canadian citizen. Canadian permanent residents who are not citizens do not qualify for the E-2. If you have dual citizenship — Canadian and another treaty country nationality — you can choose which nationality to use for the E-2 application.
Requirement 2 — Substantial investment at risk
The investment must be substantial relative to the total cost of the enterprise and must be irrevocably committed — genuinely at risk of loss if the business fails. The capital cannot be a loan secured by the investment itself.
Requirement 3 — Active enterprise — not marginal
The business must generate — or have the realistic capacity to generate — income beyond what is merely sufficient to support the investor and their family. USCIS looks for evidence that the business will create jobs for US workers or otherwise contribute economically beyond the investor’s own livelihood.
Requirement 4 — Investor directs and develops the enterprise
You must be coming to the US to develop and direct the investment enterprise. You must own at least 50% of the business, or otherwise have operational control through a managerial position or other corporate device.
How to Apply for an E-2 Visa as a Canadian — Step by Step
Identify the business you will invest in — whether a new startup, franchise purchase, or existing business acquisition. Structure the investment correctly from the start to meet E-2 requirements. This step is where a VisaPlace lawyer adds the most value — getting the structure right before you commit capital.
The investment must be irrevocably committed and at risk. This typically means executing purchase agreements, signing commercial leases, purchasing equipment, or otherwise actively deploying capital. Funds can be held in escrow pending visa approval if structured correctly.
A detailed, professionally prepared business plan is required. It must show that the business will generate more than marginal income and demonstrate a clear plan for job creation. VisaPlace works with business plan specialists experienced in preparing E-2 compliant plans for USCIS and consular review.
Canadian citizens typically apply at a US consulate in Canada — most commonly the US Consulate General in Toronto or Calgary. You will need Form DS-160, your business plan, source of funds documentation, investment evidence, and supporting financial documents. If you are already in the US on another valid status, you may be able to change status to E-2 without leaving.
The consular officer will review your application and ask about your business plan, investment, and qualifications. VisaPlace prepares clients thoroughly for the interview — including mock interview sessions covering the most common consular questions for E-2 applicants.
Once approved, enter the United States and begin actively managing your business. Your E-2 status depends on your continued active involvement in directing and developing the enterprise. You cannot become a passive investor after approval.
The E-2 Spouse Benefit — One of the Best in US Immigration
One of the most compelling features of the E-2 visa for Canadian families is the spouse work authorization benefit.
Your spouse comes to the US as an E-2 dependent. Unlike most dependent visa categories where the spouse cannot work, the E-2 spouse can apply for an Employment Authorization Document (EAD) and work for any US employer — not just your business. Your children under 21 can attend US schools and universities.
Compare this to the TN visa where the TD spouse cannot work at all, or the H-1B where the H-4 spouse can only work if the H-1B holder has an approved I-140. The E-2 spouse EAD is one of the most flexible dependent work authorizations in US immigration — and it is available to all E-2 dependents regardless of the H-1B I-140 situation.
E-2 vs Other US Visa Options for Canadians
| Visa | Who controls it? | Investment needed? | Spouse work auth? | Renewable? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| E-2 Investor | You — no employer needed | Yes — substantial | ✅ Yes — any employer | ✅ Indefinitely |
| TN Visa | Employer — needs job offer | No | ❌ No | ✅ Indefinitely |
| H-1B | Employer — lottery required | No | Conditional | 6yr max |
| L-1 | Employer — same company | No | ✅ Yes | Yes |
| EB-5 Green Card | You — no employer needed | $800,000+ required | ✅ Yes — full GC | Permanent |
The E-2 sits in a unique position — it gives you independence from an employer and control over your own destiny, without the $800,000 minimum investment required for the EB-5 green card. For entrepreneurial Canadians with $100,000–$500,000 to invest, it is frequently the most practical pathway to long-term US residence.
E-2 Visa to Green Card — Your Options
The E-2 visa itself does not lead to a green card — it is a nonimmigrant visa. However, many Canadians use the E-2 as a foundation while pursuing a green card through parallel pathways:
- EB-5 investor green card — If your E-2 business grows to the point where a $800,000 investment and 10 US jobs can be documented, you can self-petition for an EB-5 green card
- EB-1C multinational manager — If you establish a US business and also have a Canadian entity, after one year you may qualify for an L-1A and subsequently an EB-1C green card
- EB-2 National Interest Waiver — If your business serves the national interest of the United States, you may be able to self-petition for an EB-2 NIW green card
- Marriage to a US citizen — The most direct family-based pathway if applicable
The best time to plan your green card pathway is before you file your E-2 application — not years later. VisaPlace can structure your E-2 investment and business plan with a parallel green card strategy built in from the start.
Frequently Asked Questions About the E-2 Visa for Canadians
Why Canadian Investors Choose VisaPlace for Their E-2 Visa
VisaPlace has been helping Canadian investors obtain E-2 visas for over 30 years. We understand both the US immigration requirements and the unique perspective of Canadian investors — many of whom are making their first significant cross-border investment.
- End-to-end E-2 service — from investment structuring through visa approval
- Business plan specialists — we work with E-2 experienced business plan writers
- Franchise connections — access to E-2 compatible franchise opportunities for Canadian investors
- Green card strategy — we build your long-term green card plan into the E-2 from day one
- Both US and Canadian immigration — we handle your entire cross-border immigration picture in one firm
- 24-hour response — submit your assessment and receive a response within 24 hours
Ready to invest in the US and live the American dream?
Talk to a VisaPlace immigration lawyer today. Free assessment, response within 24 hours. Call 866.934.7447.
✏ Get Free E-2 AssessmentLegal disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Immigration law is complex and fact-specific. Individual circumstances vary significantly. Consult a qualified US immigration lawyer regarding your specific situation before making any investment or immigration decisions.