Key Takeaways
- E-1 holders in Georgia access up to $5M in business capital based on US revenue — no green card required
- SBA loans closed to all E-1 holders in Georgia as of March 2026 — Bankable is the direct alternative
- 48-hour decisions, funds in 3–5 business days after approval
- Georgia's E-1 community spans Gwinnett County Korean business corridor, Hartsfie... and surrounding areas
- Revenue-based repayment flexes with your monthly business performance
E-1 Treaty Trader visa holders in Georgia operate some of the most economically significant businesses in the state's international trade ecosystem. Atlanta has emerged as a major E-1 hub for Latin American trade operations and Korean business activity. Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport is the busiest airport in the world by passenger count and a major air freight hub connecting US goods to Latin America. The Korean community in Gwinnett County and the broader Atlanta metro area represents one of the largest Korean E-1 business concentrations in the Southeast. Colombian and Brazilian E-1 trade companies use Atlanta as their Southeast US distribution base.
The March 2026 SBA rule change — requiring US citizenship for all SBA borrowers — hit the E-1 community in Georgia particularly hard. Many E-1 holders had built their business financing strategy around eventual SBA access, using short-term capital during early growth and planning to refinance into SBA 7(a) or 504 loans once the business matured. That pathway is now entirely closed. Bankable fills this gap with revenue-based capital up to $5M — evaluated entirely on your US business performance, not your visa category or immigration timeline.
E-1 Business Concentrations in Georgia
Key E-1 business types in Georgia include: Korean wholesale distributors (Gwinnett County), Colombian logistics operators, Brazilian consumer goods importers, Israeli tech firms, Mexican manufacturing representatives. These businesses reflect the treaty trade relationships that the E-1 visa facilitates — matching the geographic and economic position of Georgia within the US international trade system.
Major E-1 business areas and corridors in Georgia: Gwinnett County Korean business corridor, Hartsfield-Jackson Airport freight zone, Atlanta Merchandise Mart, Savannah port (state's largest port). Bankable funds E-1 businesses throughout Georgia — rural and urban, established and growth-stage, single-location and multi-unit operations.
How E-1 Holders in Georgia Access Bankable Capital
The process begins with a Bankability Score assessment — a 5-minute evaluation of your business financial profile that produces a preliminary funding range before any document submission. For E-1 holders in Georgia with clean US bank statements showing consistent monthly revenue, the preliminary range is often accurate within 10% of final approval.
After the score assessment, you submit 6 months of US business bank statements, basic E-1 visa documentation, and business registration information. Our underwriting team — which includes professionals familiar with Georgia's specific E-1 business community and industry mix — reviews and issues a decision within 48 hours. For businesses in major Georgia cities with high volumes of established E-1 operations, processing often moves faster due to pattern recognition in underwriting.
SBA Alternative for Georgia E-1 Holders in 2026
The SBA's March 2026 exclusion affects every E-1 holder in Georgia equally. Whether you're a Korean wholesale importer in a major metro area or a Japanese food producer in a rural area, SBA 7(a) and 504 are no longer available. Bankable's SBA alternative program provides comparable capital at terms designed for businesses that would have qualified for SBA financing on all metrics except citizenship.
Key Capital Products for Georgia E-1 Businesses
- Working Capital Lines ($25K–$2M): Revolving credit for operational needs — inventory, payroll, operating costs. Repay as revenue arrives, draw again as needed.
- Equipment Financing ($10K–$5M): Asset-backed financing for machinery, vehicles, technology, and specialized equipment. The asset serves as collateral for lower rates.
- Expansion Capital ($100K–$5M): For opening second locations, acquiring competitors, or making significant capital investments in your existing operation.
- Revenue-Based Advances ($25K–$2M): Immediate capital repaid as a fixed percentage of monthly revenue. No fixed payment schedule — payments flex with your business cycle.
Related E-1 Funding Resources
SBA Alternative 2026
Why SBA is closed to E-1 holders and what Bankable offers instead — comparable terms, no citizenship requirement.
Explore →Check Bankability Score
5-minute assessment of your E-1 business funding eligibility before submitting any documents.
Check Score →E-1 Funding Requirements 2026
What documents and revenue minimums E-1 holders need to qualify for Bankable capital.
Explore →Frequently Asked Questions
Georgia has a significant E-1 Treaty Trader business community. Key concentrations include: Gwinnett County Korean business corridor, Hartsfield-Jackson Airport freight zone, Atlanta Merchandise Mart, Savannah port (state's largest port). Exact counts are not published by USCIS, but Georgia's trade profile and treaty-country business communities make it one of the notable E-1 states.
The most common E-1 businesses in Georgia include: Korean wholesale distributors (Gwinnett County), Colombian logistics operators, Brazilian consumer goods importers, Israeli tech firms, Mexican manufacturing representatives. These reflect Georgia's trade relationships, port infrastructure, and geographic position relative to key treaty nations.
Yes. Bankable funds E-1 businesses throughout Georgia — not just in major cities. Rural Georgia E-1 operators in agriculture, logistics, and specialty trade qualify the same as urban businesses, provided US revenue meets the $20K monthly threshold.
SBA loans now require US citizenship for all borrowers. Every E-1 holder in Georgia — regardless of how long they've been in business, their credit score, or their revenue — is excluded from SBA 7(a), SBA 504, and SBA microloans as of March 2026. Bankable provides direct capital without citizenship requirements.
Most E-1 businesses in Georgia with 6 months of US bank statements receive a funding decision within 48 hours regardless of their location in the state. Funds arrive 3–5 business days after approval.
$20,000 per month in US business revenue deposited in a US business bank account. This threshold applies nationwide — there is no state-specific minimum.
Bankable provides operating business capital — working capital, equipment financing, expansion capital, and revenue-based lines of credit. For commercial real estate financing specifically, commercial mortgage lenders are the appropriate channel. Bankable can fund the operating business that uses the real estate.
Bankable's funding criteria are consistent nationwide. However, our underwriters have experience with the specific trade industries and E-1 community profiles in each major state, which allows for more informed evaluation of industry-specific revenue patterns.