Key Takeaways
- Business funding from $25K to $1M for T visa holders in Virginia
- Virginia businesses qualify based on revenue, not immigration status
- All industries — cleaning, food service, childcare, trucking, retail — qualify
- No green card required — Bankable evaluates business revenue only
- SBA 2026 citizen rule does not apply to Bankable's private lending in Virginia
T visa holders in Virginia have built businesses across every sector of the state economy — cleaning companies, restaurants, childcare centers, trucking operations, beauty salons, and professional service firms. These businesses generate real, documented revenue that qualifies for Bankable capital. We evaluate your business — not your immigration status.
The Business Opportunity
Virginia has a growing T visa holder population in Northern Virginia, Richmond, and the Hampton Roads area. Northern Virginia's proximity to Washington, D.C. creates strong federal contractor and professional services markets that T visa business owners actively serve. T visa holders who own businesses here have access to one of the most dynamic business environments in the United States.
The SBA's March 2026 rule requiring 100% U.S. citizen ownership for all SBA loan programs eliminates T visa holders from federal small business lending. Bankable operates as a private lender with no citizenship requirements — Virginia T visa business owners qualify on the same terms as any other business owner: based on revenue.
What Funding Covers
- Cleaning & Home Services: Residential and commercial cleaning companies in Virginia's growing service economy
- Food Service: Restaurants, food trucks, and catering businesses serving Virginia's diverse communities
- Childcare: Licensed daycare and childcare centers serving immigrant and mixed-status families
- Trucking & Transportation: Owner-operators and small fleets serving Virginia's logistics needs
- Professional Services: Consulting, accounting, IT, and healthcare businesses owned by T visa professionals
How Bankable Qualifies Applications
To qualify for Bankable funding in Virginia, you need an active business entity registered in the state, a business bank account, and at least 3 months of operating history with $15,000+ in monthly revenue for most working capital products.
T visa business owners in Virginia can check their Bankability Score in 5 minutes to see personalized funding options. There is no immigration status check — your business revenue is your qualification. Learn about SBA alternatives for businesses without SBA eligibility.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Bankable provides business funding to T visa holders in Virginia based on business revenue. No green card, SBA eligibility, or citizenship is required.
Any business type with documented revenue qualifies: cleaning companies, restaurants, trucking, childcare, retail, construction, professional services, and more. The qualifying factor is your business revenue — not your industry or immigration status.
Yes. The March 2026 SBA rule requires 100% U.S. citizen ownership for all SBA programs. T visa holders in all 50 states must use private lenders like Bankable, which carry no such restriction.
Bankable funds T visa businesses from $25,000 to $1,000,000 depending on monthly revenue. Most working capital products require $15,000+ in monthly gross revenue as a minimum.
The fastest path is a revenue-based working capital advance: 5-minute application, 24-72 hour decision, 3-5 business days to funding. You need 3-6 months of business bank statements and basic business information.
Yes. You need an active business entity registered in your state with a business bank account. A home-based business with proper registration qualifies.
Yes. Payroll for newly hired employees is one of the most common uses of Bankable working capital. Expanding your team to service more clients or take on larger contracts is exactly the kind of growth Bankable funds.
Banks typically decline T visa holders immediately upon learning their visa status. Bankable is a private lender — we review business bank statements, revenue trends, and business performance. Immigration status is not an underwriting factor.