Key Takeaways
- H-1B holders represent 3% of the US H-1B workforce in Georgia — one of the largest immigrant entrepreneur concentrations in America
- Bankable funds H-1B businesses in Georgia up to $5M based on revenue — no green card, no state residency requirement beyond what federal law requires
- The March 2026 SBA rule eliminated H-1B Georgia business owners from all SBA 7(a) and 504 loans
- 48-hour funding decisions — faster than any bank, SBA lender, or CDFI in Georgia
- Check your Bankability Score in 30 seconds — no SSN upload, available in all 50 states
Georgia's H-1B workforce is concentrated in Atlanta's technology sector (NCR, Global Payments, Equifax, Cox Communications), Alpharetta's fintech corridor (called 'Transaction Alley' for its concentration of payment processing companies), and the Gwinnett County suburban corridor with one of the largest Southeast Asian communities in the Southeast US.
Gwinnett County — particularly the Duluth and Norcross corridors along Buford Highway — hosts extraordinary concentrations of Korean, Vietnamese, Chinese, and Indian businesses. Buford Highway's restaurant and retail strip is one of the most culturally diverse commercial corridors in America. H-1B-linked business ownership is extremely high in this corridor.
Georgia's state income tax (5.75% top rate) and relatively lower cost of living compared to coastal metros make Atlanta an increasingly attractive destination for H-1B workers seeking to build businesses. Atlanta's airport connectivity and logistics infrastructure also support H-1B entrepreneurs in import/export, logistics, and food distribution businesses.
The SBA Rule Change and Georgia H-1B Business Owners
Effective March 1, 2026, the SBA requires 100% US citizen or national ownership for all 7(a) and 504 loan programs. H-1B business owners in Georgia — regardless of how long they've operated, how much revenue they generate, or how strong their credit history — are now fully excluded from the SBA program that offered rates as low as prime plus 2.75% and terms as long as 25 years. Bankable's revenue-based tranche funding provides comparable access to capital without any citizenship requirement.
What H-1B Business Owners in Georgia Use Bankable For
- Technology and IT Services: H-1B engineers in Georgia's tech sector building consulting, staffing, and software businesses alongside sponsored employment.
- Restaurant and Food Service: Diaspora community restaurants serving the H-1B professional community and broader public.
- Professional Services: Medical practices, dental offices, accounting firms, and legal practices owned by H-1B professionals.
- Real Estate and Construction: Property management companies, residential and commercial construction firms.
- Retail and Ecommerce: Specialty retail serving diaspora communities and online businesses with national or global reach.
| Funding Source | H-1B Eligible? | Max Amount | Speed |
|---|---|---|---|
| SBA 7(a) — March 2026+ | No — US citizens only | $5M | 30–90 days |
| Traditional Banks | Rarely | Varies | 3–6 weeks |
| Bankable | Always yes | $5M | 48 hours |
For H-1B business owners in Georgia across all industries, Bankable's funding process is identical: complete the 30-second Bankability Assessment, receive a preliminary range, and get a final decision within 48 hours. State of operation does not affect eligibility. For industry-specific funding guidance, visit our H-1B funding hub. For the full SBA alternative analysis, see our SBA alternative guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Bankable funds H-1B businesses in all 50 states including Georgia based on revenue alone. No state or federal residency requirement applies to Bankable's funding.
The most common H-1B business categories in Georgia include technology consulting, IT staffing, restaurant and food service, medical and dental practices, real estate, and specialty retail serving diaspora communities.
Yes. H-1B business owners in Georgia are now fully excluded from SBA 7(a) and 504 loans under the March 1, 2026 citizenship ownership rule. Bankable has no such restriction.
48 hours from completed application. Bankable's funding process does not vary by state. The Bankability Assessment at /bankability-score/ gives a preliminary range in 30 seconds.
Bankable requires an active EIN and business bank account. State of registration (whether Delaware, {h1_state}, or other) does not affect eligibility. Most H-1B businesses are registered in the state where they operate.
Minimum $15,000 to $25,000/month in documented business revenue for initial consideration, depending on industry. The Bankability Assessment at /bankability-score/ gives a precise preliminary range.
No. Bankable has zero residency requirements. H-1B, L-1, O-1, and other work visa holders all qualify for funding assessment based on business revenue alone.
Effective March 1, 2026, the SBA requires 100% US citizen or national ownership for all 7(a) and 504 programs. H-1B holders are completely excluded regardless of revenue or credit history.