E-1 Visa: the visa for
entrepreneurs with active trade
between their country and the U.S.
If your company already exports, imports, or provides services between Mexico, Canada, Colombia, Argentina, and the United States, there is a visa designed exactly for you — and most Latin American entrepreneurs don't even know it exists.
"The E-1 Visa is the best-kept secret in the immigration world. If you're already trading with the U.S., you probably already meet half the requirements without knowing it."
The immigration visa designed for trading entrepreneurs
The E-1 Treaty Trader Visa is a non-immigrant migratory category created under bilateral trade treaties between the U.S. and dozens of countries. It allows citizens of those countries to enter the United States to develop and direct substantial international trade operations between their home country and the U.S.
Unlike the E-2 Visa (which requires a substantial investment in a U.S. business), the E-1 does not require a minimum investment. What it does require is active, continuous, and substantial trade between both countries. That's why it's ideal for Mexican, Colombian, Argentine, or Canadian entrepreneurs who already have established commercial relationships with U.S. clients or suppliers.
"For many Latin American entrepreneurs who already export or provide services to the U.S., the E-1 is the most natural and economical route to the American market — without needing to invest hundreds of thousands of dollars in a new business."
Mexico, Canada, Colombia, and Argentina: all have an active E-1 treaty
Not all Latin American countries have an E-1 treaty with the U.S. — but the four most important markets for trading entrepreneurs in the region do. If you are a citizen of any of these countries and your company trades with the U.S., you potentially qualify for the E-1:
Mexico
Active E-1 treaty. Mexican entrepreneurs can apply at 10 U.S. consulates in Mexico. Benefited by the USMCA.
Canada
Active E-1 treaty. Canadian entrepreneurs have one of the strongest commercial relationships with the U.S. under the USMCA.
Colombia
Active E-1 treaty since the Colombia–U.S. FTA. Colombian entrepreneurs can apply at the U.S. Consulate in Bogotá.
Argentina
Active E-1 treaty. Argentine entrepreneurs can apply at the U.S. Consulate in Buenos Aires with relatively quick availability.
⚠️ Important: Some Latin American countries such as Brazil, Venezuela, Peru, Chile, Uruguay, and most of Central America do not have an active E-1 treaty with the U.S. If you have dual nationality with an eligible country, you can apply under that nationality. Consult your case before applying.
What you must meet as a trading entrepreneur
The E-1 has specific criteria that differentiate it from other business visas. These are the five pillars USCIS or the consulate evaluates when reviewing your case:
✅ Good news: If your company already has 2+ years exporting to the U.S., with recurring clients and significant revenue, it's very likely you already meet the essential requirements. You just need to properly structure the case presentation.
Key differences between the E-1 Visa and the E-2 Visa
Both are treaty visas, but they respond to very different business profiles. If you're unsure which one suits you, this quick comparison will help you identify the correct category:
"The E-1 is for those who already do business with the U.S. The E-2 is for those who want to start a business in the U.S. For many Latin American entrepreneurs, the E-1 is more accessible — but they underestimate it because they don't know it."
What types of international trade are eligible for the E-1
The E-1 is not limited to the sale of physical products. The definition of "trade" for immigration purposes is broad and covers both goods and services. These are the types of trade most used by Latin American entrepreneurs:
Export of physical goods
Manufacturing, agricultural products, textiles, crafts, processed foods, auto parts. Traditional product trade is the most common in E-1.
Professional services and technology
Software development, consulting, IT services, design, digital marketing provided to U.S. clients. "Service trade" does qualify for E-1.
Technology and information trade
Software licensing, know-how transfer, data services, telecommunications, digital platforms with U.S. clients.
International transportation and logistics
Freight transportation services, cross-border logistics, customs brokerage between your country and the U.S. Especially relevant at the northern border for Mexicans.
Financial services and insurance
International banking, cross-border financial advisory, insurance, international investments with active flow between your country and the U.S.
Specialized professional services
Journalism, audiovisual production, tourism, engineering, architecture — as long as there is documented and continuous commercial flow with the U.S.
How to apply for the E-1 Visa from your country
The E-1 process is typically handled through the consular route, at the U.S. consulate in your home country. If you are already in the United States with a valid visa, you can also do a change of status with USCIS. This is the standard path:
✅ Realistic total time: Between 4 and 8 months from the beginning of structuring to the consular interview. Faster than E-2 in many cases because it does not require setting up a company in the U.S.
What documents prove substantial trade with the U.S.
The E-1 is a visa intensive in commercial documentation. These are the critical documents the consulate will expect to see perfectly organized:
- 1Commercial operations records (last 24 months) Invoices issued to U.S. clients, commercial contracts, recurring purchase orders, export/import customs declarations, Bills of Lading, air waybills. The more historical documentation, the stronger the case.
- 2Analysis of total international trade Document that mathematically demonstrates that +50% of your company's international trade is with the U.S. Comparative table by country, year, volume, and percentages — prepared by a certified accountant.
- 3Corporate documents of your company Articles of incorporation, certificate of existence and legal representation, RFC/NIT/CUIT according to country, shareholder books (proving 50%+ ownership by treaty country citizens), audited financial statements, recent tax returns.
- 4Financial trade support Business bank statements showing income from U.S. clients, international transfers (SWIFT), payments received in USD, bank reconciliations. The traceability of commercial money is critical.
- 5Business plan and future projections Professional document that demonstrates trade continuity over 5 years, expansion plans, new prospective U.S. clients, growth strategy, and bilateral economic impact.
- 6Personal documents of the applicant Valid passport, national identity document, resume demonstrating your executive/managerial role, evidence of your share ownership or position in the company, apostilled criminal background check.
⚠️ Attention to the apostille: All documents to be presented in the U.S. must be apostilled by the competent authority of your country (Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Secretariat of Government). Without apostille, the documents are not valid.
The 5 most common mistakes when applying for the E-1 Visa
Knowing the mistakes is as important as knowing the requirements. These are the most frequent pitfalls we see in Latin American entrepreneurs when applying for the E-1:
- !Applying before having sufficient trade history The E-1 is not for "starting to trade" with the U.S. — it's for those who already do. Applying with 6 months of operation or isolated transactions almost guarantees denial. Ideally, you should have 24+ months of recurring documented trade.
- !Failing to mathematically demonstrate the +50% trade with the U.S. The officer will check whether the majority of your international trade goes to the U.S. If you export to 5 countries and only 30% goes to the United States, you don't qualify — no matter how large the absolute amount in USD.
- !Underestimating the importance of customs documentation Customs declarations, BLs, air waybills, and customs records are the "factual" proof of international trade. Without these physical documents, invoices and contracts lose much evidential weight before the officer.
- !Applying as an employee without a documented essential role The E-1 also applies to key employees, but they must demonstrate indispensable and strategic skills. A common administrative manager probably doesn't qualify — a commercial director with unique market knowledge does.
- !Confusing E-1 and E-2 when filling out forms The DS-156E is the same form for both categories, but the questions and supporting documentation vary radically. Checking the wrong box or presenting mixed evidence from both categories confuses the officer and generates denials.
"The E-1 rewards entrepreneurs who are already doing things right. It doesn't reward good ideas — it rewards real, documented, and substantial trade."
What every Latin American entrepreneur asks about the E-1
The E-1 may be your visa — if you're already trading with the U.S.
If you are a Mexican, Canadian, Colombian, or Argentine entrepreneur and your company already has clients, suppliers, or business partners in the United States, you probably already have half the road traveled without knowing it. The E-1 Visa is one of the most underused immigration tools by Latin American entrepreneurs — not for lack of eligibility, but for lack of awareness.
But like any treaty visa, its approval depends less on the volume of your business and more on how you structure, document, and present it before the consular officer.
"If you're already trading with the United States, you don't need to invent a new immigration project. You just need the visa that recognizes what you're already doing right."
Does your company already trade
with the U.S.? Let's evaluate your E-1
Schedule a strategic consultation. We evaluate your company's trade volume, your executive role, and the percentage of operations with the U.S. — and we tell you clearly whether the E-1 Visa is your best immigration route.
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