You could get an E2 visa and be self employed. You need to have funds invested in the start-up usually more than $50,000.
However, with Walsh and Pollard, (20 I. & N. Dec. 60, 63 (BIA 1988)), the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) held that substantial investment of $15,000 was sufficient.
An E2 visa has no route to a green card and usually needs renewed every two years.
You best bet would be to find employment in the US and have them sponsor your visa/GC.
I believe, in those cases, you also need to have a business plan that says you are going to hire a lot of Americans relatively quickly.
You also need to look like a business in the eyes of the law -- this means getting real office space and whatnot. So you can't plan on a super-lean ramen-profitability period.
You could get an E2 visa and be self employed. You need to have funds invested in the start-up usually more than $50,000.
However, with Walsh and Pollard, (20 I. & N. Dec. 60, 63 (BIA 1988)), the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) held that substantial investment of $15,000 was sufficient.
An E2 visa has no route to a green card and usually needs renewed every two years.
You best bet would be to find employment in the US and have them sponsor your visa/GC.