1. What Is Foreign Investment Law?
Quick answer: foreign investment law is the set of rules governing when non-U.S. .nvestors can invest in American businesses and property and when those deals must be reviewed for national security. The central mechanism is CFIUS review under the Defense Production Act, as modernized by FIRRMA. Some filings are mandatory, others voluntary, and penalties for failing to file when required can be severe, so assessing whether a deal is covered should happen early.
Foreign investment law refers primarily to the legal regime governing national security review of foreign investment, alongside related rules on specific sectors and outbound capital. Its core is CFIUS, an interagency committee chaired by the Treasury Department that reviews certain transactions in which a foreign person could gain control of, or specified access to, a domestic business or sensitive real estate. CFIUS operates under Section 721 of the Defense Production Act of 1950, codified at 50 U.S.C. 4565, as substantially expanded by the Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act of 2018 (FIRRMA), with regulations at 31 C.F.R. Parts 800 and 802. The system reflects a deliberate balance: the country welcomes most foreign investment but reserves the right to scrutinize, condition, or block deals that raise national security concerns.
This area sits within the broader practice of foreign investment regulation and overlaps with export controls, sanctions, and sector-specific rules.
| Concept | What It Covers | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| CFIUS | Interagency national security review | Can condition, block, or unwind deals |
| FIRRMA (2018) | Expanded CFIUS jurisdiction | Reached minority deals and real estate |
| TID U.S. .usiness | Technology, infrastructure, sensitive data | A key trigger for review and filings |
| Mandatory filing | Certain higher-risk deals must be filed | Failure can bring large penalties |
| Voluntary filing | Optional notice for safe harbor | Often the only route to deal certainty |
What Does Cfius Review and Why?
CFIUS reviews transactions that could give a foreign person control of, or certain rights in, a domestic business or sensitive real estate, to assess national security risk. Its jurisdiction covers acquisitions that result in foreign control, and, since FIRRMA, certain non-controlling "covered investments" in what the rules call TID U.S. .usinesses, those involved in critical technologies, critical infrastructure, or sensitive personal data. It also reaches certain real estate transactions, particularly property near sensitive government or military sites.
What draws scrutiny is not the investment itself but the access or influence it confers, such as board seats, governance rights, or access to sensitive technology or data. A foreign investment in a company handling export-controlled technology or large volumes of personal data is far more likely to attract review than a passive stake in an ordinary business, which is why mapping the target's activities against the TID categories is an early step in any CFIUS compliance analysis.
How Did Firrma Change Foreign Investment Law?
FIRRMA, enacted in 2018, was the most significant modernization of CFIUS in decades. Before FIRRMA, CFIUS jurisdiction focused on transactions that could result in foreign control of a business, and all filings were voluntary. FIRRMA expanded that reach to certain non-controlling investments in TID businesses and to a defined set of real estate transactions, and, for the first time, created mandatory filing requirements for certain higher-risk deals. It also introduced a streamlined short-form "declaration" alongside the traditional long-form notice.
These changes substantially widened the range of deals that can fall within review, especially in technology, infrastructure, and data. Understanding the FIRRMA framework, including the TID concept and the mandatory-filing triggers, is now central to assessing any inbound investment, and is the focus of dedicated FIRRMA compliance work.
2. When Is a Filing Required?
A central question in any foreign investment is whether a CFIUS filing is mandatory, advisable, or unnecessary, and getting this wrong carries real consequences. Some transactions must be filed by law, while many others are technically voluntary but worth filing to obtain legal certainty.
The analysis turns on three things:
- What the U.S. .arget does, especially whether it touches critical technology, infrastructure, or sensitive data
- Who the foreign investor is, including any foreign-government ownership or links
- What rights the deal confers, such as control, board seats, or access to technology or data
Filing decisions should be made early, since they affect deal timing, structure, and risk. A misjudgment can mean either an unnecessary filing or, more seriously, a failure to file that exposes the parties to penalties and post-closing review.
What Triggers a Mandatory Filing?
Mandatory filings are generally required for certain higher-risk transactions, particularly where a foreign government holds a substantial interest in a deal involving a TID U.S. .usiness, or where the transaction involves critical technologies subject to U.S. .xport controls. In those situations, the parties must notify CFIUS, and failing to do so can carry steep civil penalties. Reporting indicates penalties were increased to more than $5 million per violation for failures to file, material misstatements, or breaches of mitigation, and can reach up to the full value of the transaction for a violation. The specific triggers are defined by regulation and turn on detailed thresholds.
Determining whether a deal falls into a mandatory category requires analyzing the target's technologies and data, the investor's identity and government links, and the rights being acquired. Treat the mandatory-filing analysis as a gating item before closing, since the penalties for missing a required filing are among the most serious in this area, a concern shared across foreign investment compliance generally.
Why File Voluntarily?
Many transactions are not subject to a mandatory filing, yet parties still choose to file voluntarily to obtain legal certainty. The reason is CFIUS's "evergreen" authority: if a covered transaction is not reviewed and cleared, CFIUS can review it even after closing and, in principle, require divestment or other remedies. A voluntary filing that results in clearance generally provides a safe harbor against later second-guessing of that transaction.
For that reason, voluntary filing is often the only route to true deal certainty for a covered transaction, even when no filing is strictly required. Weigh the cost and timing of a filing against the risk of an unreviewed deal being unwound later, a judgment that sits at the heart of foreign investment review.
What Happens during a Cfius Review?
A CFIUS review proceeds through defined stages:
- Filing: parties submit a short-form declaration or a long-form notice
- Review: CFIUS conducts an initial assessment of the national security risk
- Investigation: if needed, a deeper review follows
- Outcome: CFIUS clears the deal, clears it subject to mitigation conditions, or, in serious cases, recommends that the President suspend or prohibit it
Mitigation may involve measures that limit foreign access or influence to address identified risks. The process is fact-intensive and can affect deal timing significantly, so building CFIUS into the transaction calendar matters. Where risks are identified, negotiating workable mitigation rather than facing a block is often the goal, an exercise related to broader FOCI mitigation practice under national security rules.
3. The Current Foreign Investment Landscape
Foreign investment law has shifted notably in the last few years, with the government both tightening scrutiny of certain investors and moving to streamline review for trusted allies. A 2025 executive policy directive, the America First Investment Policy, set out an approach that directs agencies to facilitate investment from allies and partners while intensifying scrutiny of investors linked to identified adversaries, particularly in sensitive technology sectors. It was a statement of policy direction that agencies were tasked with implementing, so specific regulatory changes have continued to develop rather than taking effect all at once.
Alongside inbound review, the government now also regulates outbound investment. Rules implemented in 2025 restrict certain domestic capital from flowing into specified technologies, such as semiconductors, quantum, and artificial intelligence, in identified countries of concern. These programs remain in flux, so confirming the current state of any specific rule before relying on it is important.
How Are Allied and Adversary Investors Treated Differently?
Foreign investment policy increasingly distinguishes between investors from trusted allies and those linked to identified adversaries. Investors from certain partner countries, designated as "excepted" foreign states under the regulations, can benefit from reduced filing requirements and a more predictable process. Recent policy has emphasized facilitating and fast-tracking investment from allies and partners while directing heightened scrutiny, and potential new restrictions, toward investors connected to designated adversary states, especially in sensitive technologies.
This risk-tiered approach means an investor's nationality and ownership structure can significantly affect how a deal is treated. Identifying where an investor falls in this framework early helps predict the level of scrutiny and structure the transaction accordingly, a consideration that runs through foreign direct investment planning.
What Is Outbound Investment Screening?
Outbound investment screening is a newer dimension of foreign investment policy that regulates certain investments by U.S. .ersons into sensitive technologies abroad, rather than foreign money coming in. The rules now in force restrict or require notification of specified outbound investments in identified countries of concern in areas such as semiconductors and microelectronics, quantum information technologies, and artificial intelligence. This represents a significant expansion, since the government now scrutinizes capital flowing out as well as in.
For companies and investors with international portfolios, this means due diligence now extends to where their own capital goes, not just to inbound deals. Tracking these obligations is increasingly part of cross-border investment planning, and is the focus of dedicated outbound investment screening analysis.
4. When Foreign Investment Law Needs a Lawyer
Foreign investment law is technical, fact-specific, and consequential, so early legal analysis tends to save far more than it costs. Whether a deal triggers CFIUS jurisdiction, whether a filing is mandatory or advisable, and how to manage national security risk all depend on the specifics of the target, the investor, and the rights involved, and the rules continue to evolve.
Legal guidance is especially valuable when a foreign investor is acquiring or taking a stake in a U.S. .usiness, when the target involves technology, infrastructure, or sensitive data, when a foreign government or adversary-linked investor is involved, when real estate near sensitive sites is at issue, or when a domestic party is investing abroad in regulated sectors. A lawyer can assess whether a transaction is covered, determine filing obligations, prepare and manage a CFIUS filing, negotiate mitigation, and build the analysis into deal timing and structure. Since penalties for missing a required filing are severe and unreviewed deals can be unwound, getting advice before signing, rather than after, is the prudent course.
5. Frequently Asked Questions about Foreign Investment Law
These questions come from foreign investors, U.S. .usinesses, and advisers navigating national security review of foreign investment.
What Is Cfius?
CFIUS is the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, an interagency committee chaired by the Treasury Department that reviews certain foreign investments for national security risk. It operates under Section 721 of the Defense Production Act, as expanded by FIRRMA in 2018. CFIUS can clear a transaction, clear it with mitigation conditions, or recommend that the President block or unwind it. Its focus is the national security implications of a foreign person gaining control of, or certain access to, a business or sensitive real estate, not the commercial merits of the deal.
Does Every Foreign Investment Have to Be Reviewed?
No. Most foreign investment is welcome and never reviewed. Review applies to transactions within CFIUS jurisdiction, broadly, deals that could give a foreign person control of, or specified access to, a business involved in critical technology, infrastructure, or sensitive data, or that involve certain real estate. Some of these require a mandatory filing, while many others are voluntary. Passive, non-controlling investments with no governance rights or sensitive access generally fall outside the most scrutinized categories, though the specifics depend on the facts.
What Happens If You Fail to File When Required?
Failing to make a mandatory filing can carry serious consequences. Reporting indicates civil penalties were raised to more than $5 million per violation, and can reach up to the full value of the transaction, and the deal remains exposed to CFIUS's authority to review it even after closing, potentially leading to forced divestment or other remedies. There is no safe harbor for an unfiled covered transaction. This is why the mandatory-versus-voluntary analysis should be done before closing, and why parties often file voluntarily even when not strictly required, to secure certainty.
What Is a Tid U.S. Business?
A TID U.S. .usiness is one involved in Technology, Infrastructure, or Data in ways the CFIUS regulations define, and it is a central trigger for expanded review. The categories cover critical technologies, often those subject to U.S. .xport controls, such as advanced computing, microelectronics, or biotechnology; critical infrastructure like energy, communications, or financial systems; and businesses that maintain sensitive personal data of U.S. .ndividuals. If a target is a TID business, a foreign investment is much more likely to fall within CFIUS jurisdiction and, in some cases, to require a mandatory filing.
How Has Foreign Investment Policy Changed Recently?
Recent policy has moved in two directions at once: easing the path for investors from trusted allies while intensifying scrutiny of those linked to identified adversaries, especially in sensitive technologies. A 2025 executive policy directive set this approach and directed agencies to implement it, so specific rules have continued to develop since. The government has also begun screening certain outbound investments by U.S. .ersons into sensitive technologies abroad. Because these programs are still evolving, the current state of any particular rule should be confirmed rather than assumed.
Does Foreign Investment Law Cover Real Estate?
Yes, in defined circumstances. FIRRMA expanded CFIUS jurisdiction to reach certain real estate transactions by foreign persons, particularly the purchase or lease of property near sensitive government or military facilities, even where no operating business is involved. The concern is the access or proximity such property could provide. Not all real estate is covered, the rules turn on location and use, but foreign buyers of property near sensitive sites should assess whether their transaction falls within CFIUS's real estate jurisdiction before proceeding.
19 Dec, 2025

