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citizenship by investment

Schengen’s EES Is Live: What Biometric Borders Mean for Your Passports

The Entry/Exit System replaced passport stamps with biometrics across Schengen — every visa-exempt entry now logs face, fingerprints and dat

The Entry/Exit System replaced passport stamps with biometrics across Schengen — every visa-exempt entry now logs face, fingerprints and dates centrally. The 90/180 calculation moved from ink and honor to database and automatic.

citizenship by investment

For second-passport holders the implications are specific: overstay tolerance is gone (the system flags day 91 itself); passport-switching between trips doesn’t reset counts (biometrics identify YOU, not your booklet); and clean travel history becomes a queryable asset.

The positive flip: legitimate travelers gain — e-gates speed repeat visitors, disputes about historical stays end (the record exists), and residence-permit holders are properly recognized as outside the 90/180 count for their issuing state.

Compliance posture for multi-passport families: track days with an app as the system does, enter consistently (same identity logic per country), and where Schengen life exceeds 90/180 realities, hold the residence permit that makes counting irrelevant. EES punishes improvisation and rewards structure — like everything else in this field.

Explore further: CBI guide · Golden visas · FAQ hub · Site directory.

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What Is Citizenship by Investment (CBI)?​

The reference section below extends this article with the market-wide data, costs, process and answers our readers ask for most — maintained by the Global Citizenship HQ research desk and updated as programmes change.

A planning principle that applies across every scenario above: sequence beats selection. The families with the best outcomes rarely found secret programmes — they executed ordinary ones in the right order: fast citizenship for immediate optionality, residence permits matched to actual living intentions, tax residency moved deliberately before liquidity events, and every dependent included at the cheapest possible moment.

Key Considerations Before You Commit

  • Programme stability: favour statutes with functioning units and clean treaty records — and remember every historical closure grandfathered existing holders.
  • Total cost honesty: model all-in figures (15–25% above headline), not brochure numbers.
  • Family completeness: file every eligible dependent now; later additions are limited and pricier.
  • Source-of-funds readiness: the documentation standard is bank-grade; build the narrative before applying.
  • Dual-citizenship legality: confirm your current nationality tolerates the acquisition — before, not after.
  • Passport utility for YOUR routes: check your ten key destinations against the actual treaty list, not aggregate counts.
  • Exit mechanics: know the holding period and the realistic buyer at the end of it before choosing property routes.
  • Tax layer separation: citizenship for mobility, residence for taxation — plan them as different decisions.
  • Advisor verification: government-authorised agents only, checked against the official CIU lists.
  • Timing: the market’s entire history rewards early applicants over waiting skeptics — prices ratchet one way.

Citizenship Program Landscape: The Reference Table

To place the topic above in market context, here is the current landscape at a glance — figures verified against official programme publications for 2026:

Program Minimum investment Timeline Visa-free access Residence req.
St Kitts & Nevis US$250,000 (SISC donation) or US$325,000+ real estate 4–6 months ≈150 destinations incl. Schengen & UK None
Dominica US$200,000 (EDF donation) or US$200,000+ real estate 4–6 months ≈143 destinations incl. Schengen & UK None
Grenada US$235,000 (NTF donation) or US$270,000+ real estate 4–6 months ≈146 incl. China; US E-2 treaty None
Antigua & Barbuda US$230,000 (NDF, family of 4) 4–6 months ≈147 destinations 5 days in 5 years
St Lucia US$240,000 donation or US$300,000 bond 4–8 months ≈145 destinations None
Türkiye US$400,000 real estate or US$500,000 deposit 4–8 months ≈110; US E-2 treaty None
Vanuatu US$130,000 (DSP) 2–3 months ≈95 (EU access suspended) None
Egypt US$250,000 donation 6–12 months ≈70 destinations None
Nauru US$105,000 contribution 3–4 months ≈89 destinations None
São Tomé & Príncipe ≈US$90,000 contribution 4–6 months ≈70 destinations None
Cambodia US$245,000 donation / US$305,000 investment 3–6 months ≈54 destinations None
Jordan US$750,000+ investment 6–9 months ≈55 destinations None

The independence note that shapes our coverage: Global Citizenship HQ maintains programme data from primary sources — statutes, government gazettes and official fee schedules — and updates after every legislative change. Rankings and comparisons follow published methodology; where commercial relationships exist with programmes or developers, they never alter an editorial conclusion.

The Real Cost Structure, Itemised

Whatever route this article points you toward, the cost anatomy is consistent across the industry — and the headline figure is never the whole story:

Cost component Typical range When paid Notes
Government contribution / investment US$90,000–US$800,000+ After approval-in-principle The headline figure; donation is consumed, property/bonds recoverable
Due diligence fees US$7,500–US$15,000 per adult At filing Non-refundable; funds international background checks
Government processing fees US$250–US$10,000 per person At filing / approval Varies sharply by programme and dependent count
Professional / legal fees US$15,000–US$50,000 per family Staged File preparation, compliance, submission, post-approval support
Document costs US$1,000–US$5,000 Preparation phase Apostilles, sworn translations, police certificates, courier
Passport & certificate fees US$350–US$1,500 per person After approval Biometrics, issuance, oath administration where applicable
Property transaction costs (if applicable) 4–10% of price At closing Transfer taxes, registration, agent commissions

Rule of thumb across the industry: budget 15–25% above the headline contribution for a realistic all-in figure, and require an itemised fee schedule in writing before engaging any advisor.

The Process Timeline, Step by Step

From first consultation to passport or permit in hand, well-run applications follow a predictable arc:

  1. Weeks 1–2: Strategy and eligibility. Confirm the right programme against your passport portfolio, family composition, budget and objectives; identify any restricted-nationality or profile complications before money moves.
  2. Weeks 2–8: Document assembly. Police certificates from every country of long residence (start the slowest jurisdictions first), civil documents, bank references and the source-of-funds evidence chain — apostilled and translated to programme standard.
  3. Weeks 6–10: Compliance review and filing. Internal pre-screening against known refusal grounds, final file assembly, and submission through the authorised channel with due-diligence fees.
  4. Months 2–5: Government due diligence. Multi-tier background verification, database checks and — in Caribbean programmes — the mandatory interview. Respond to any information requests within days, not weeks.
  5. Months 4–6: Approval in principle. The government confirms your file passed; the qualifying investment is now completed within the programme deadline (typically 30–90 days).
  6. Months 5–7: Naturalisation and passport. Certificate issuance, oath where required, biometrics, and passport delivery. Register any status with your banks proactively.
  7. Ongoing: Compliance calendar. Holding-period end dates, passport renewals, newborn registrations and — for residence permits — renewal windows and presence logs.

The regulatory backdrop matters to every decision on this page: since the 2024 Caribbean MOU established shared due-diligence standards and a US$200,000 price floor, and the European Court of Justice ended intra-EU citizenship sales in 2025, the market has consolidated around fewer, better-governed programmes. That consolidation is the buyer’s friend — surviving programmes defend their treaties vigorously because their entire value depends on them.

The Document Checklist

Every application in this field runs on the same documentary spine — assembled early, it is the single biggest determinant of your timeline:

  • Certified passport copies for every applicant (validity 6+ months beyond expected approval)
  • Birth certificates — apostilled, with certified translations where not in English
  • Marriage / divorce certificates documenting current family structure
  • Police clearance certificates from every country of residence over 6–12 months (age thresholds vary)
  • Source-of-funds evidence: bank statements, business accounts, sale contracts, inheritance or gift documentation
  • Bank reference letters from institutions holding your primary relationships
  • Professional reference and proof of occupation or business ownership
  • Medical certificates including specified test results where required
  • Passport-standard photographs to each programme’s specification
  • Military service records where applicable
  • Proof of residential address (utility bills, statements)
  • Programme-specific forms — completed identically to supporting documents, to the letter

The preparation standard that separates fast files from stalled ones: every name, date and address rendered identically across every document, validity windows mapped so nothing expires mid-process, and certified translations from recognised translators only.

Frequently Asked Questions: The Wider Picture

How much time in Europe do these statuses actually buy?

Visa-free passports get the Schengen 90/180-day allowance. A national residence permit (Greek or Portuguese golden visa) removes the limit for its issuing country entirely — unlimited presence there, plus the standard allowance across the rest of Schengen. Families wanting European lives buy the permit; travellers manage the count.

What travel access do these passports actually provide?

Caribbean CBI passports reach roughly 143–150 destinations visa-free or visa-on-arrival, including the Schengen area (90/180-day rule, ETIAS pre-authorisation) and the UK (up to six months per visit). Türkiye reaches ≈110 destinations plus US E-2 treaty eligibility. No CBI passport enters the USA visa-free — a B1/B2 visa or the E-2 route covers America.

Can I actually live in the Caribbean country?

Yes — citizenship includes the unrestricted right to reside. Most investors never move, but the option is real: St Kitts and Antigua offer the strongest infrastructure and connectivity, Grenada authentic island life with hurricane-belt advantages, Dominica unmatched nature. Programme economics are similar enough that lifestyle can be the tiebreaker.

Which programs help with living in the USA?

Grenada and Türkiye hold E-2 treaties with the United States: their citizens can obtain renewable US business-residence visas by making a substantial investment (typically US$150,000+) in an American enterprise. It is the practical alternative to EB-5’s US$800,000 — business residence in under a year for roughly half the total capital.

How do banks treat investment-migration citizenships?

As ordinary citizenships — with one extra KYC question about how the nationality was acquired. Answer plainly with the naturalisation certificate and programme documentation; statutory programmes are recognised globally. CRS reporting continues to follow your tax residence exactly as before.

How Global Citizenship HQ Can Help

Turning research into an outcome: Global Citizenship HQ manages the full journey — strategy, document architecture, source-of-funds preparation, authorised filing, interview readiness and post-approval compliance. Families we advise typically move from first call to submitted application inside eight weeks.

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The interaction between programmes deserves more attention than it gets: a Caribbean passport changes how a golden-visa application reads (stronger travel profile), an EU residence changes how banks treat your Caribbean citizenship (established footprint), and a deliberate tax residence makes every other document in your life easier to explain. Portfolios compound; single purchases just sit there.

How Fast This Market Moves: The Recent Change Log

The pace of change is itself a planning input. Recent seasons alone delivered:

  • 2024: the Caribbean Memorandum of Agreement — US$200,000 price floor, shared due-diligence standards, mandatory interviews across all five programmes.
  • April 2025: Spain terminated its golden visa; existing holders grandfathered — the pattern held again.
  • April 2025: the European Court of Justice ruling ended Malta’s investor citizenship — and with it, priced citizenship inside the EU.
  • 2025: Italy’s decree tightened citizenship by descent to two generations, reshaping the ancestry market overnight.
  • 2025–2026: Europe’s EES biometric borders went live and ETIAS rollout began — visa-free travel became pre-authorised travel.
  • Ongoing: Hungary’s guest investor programme matured, the UAE kept widening Golden Visa categories, and new entrants (São Tomé, Nauru, Vietnam) extended the market’s edges.

None of these changes stripped status from anyone who already held it. All of them repriced or restricted what later applicants could buy — the asymmetry that defines timing in this field.

Choosing Your Route: A Working Decision Framework

A decision framework that resolves most cases in one sitting: start from the outcome, not the programme. If you need a stronger passport within a year, direct citizenship by investment is the only product that delivers — shortlist by your actual destinations, then by family policy, then by route economics. If your goal is an eventual EU passport, buy the residence programme whose naturalisation clock you will genuinely satisfy — Portugal for minimal presence, Greece for property-led patience. If the objective is tax, choose the residence jurisdiction first (UAE, Italy’s flat tax, Greece’s non-dom, territorial systems) and let citizenship ride separately.

Then run the constraint check: dual-citizenship legality for your current nationality, military-service exposure for sons, source-of-funds documentability, and the honest presence question — how many days will your life actually allow where? Programmes fail families most often not on approval but on fit: the absentee who bought a residence-heavy route, the relocator who bought an absentee product. Match the instrument to the life, and the rest is paperwork.

Terms Worth Knowing

  • Approval in principle: the government’s confirmation that due diligence passed — the trigger for completing your investment, and the reason donation-route capital is never at risk early.
  • CIU: Citizenship by Investment Unit — the government agency that owns your file end to end.
  • Holding period: the statutory years a qualifying investment must be retained after approval (3–7 depending on programme).
  • Jus sanguinis: citizenship by bloodline — the legal basis of both descent claims and your children’s inheritance of a purchased citizenship.
  • PEP: politically exposed person — a screening category demanding deeper documentation, not a bar to approval.
  • Source of funds: the evidence chain proving your capital’s lawful origin — the single most consequential document set in any file.
  • Tie-breaker rules: treaty tests (home, vital interests, habitual abode, nationality) that assign tax residence when two countries claim you.
  • 90/180 rule: Schengen’s rolling short-stay allowance — the arithmetic that residence permits make irrelevant.

Where Every Passport Sits: The Mobility Tiers

Mobility tier Representative passports Approx. visa-free reach How investors access the tier
Tier 1 — Global elite Singapore, Japan, Germany, France, Italy, Spain 190–195 destinations Naturalisation after residence programmes (Portugal 5 yrs is the engineered path) or ancestry claims
Tier 2 — Strong Western UK, USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand 184–189 Skilled migration, EB-5 (US$800k), NZ Active Investor Plus, then naturalisation
Tier 3 — Premium CBI St Kitts & Nevis, Antigua, Grenada, St Lucia, Dominica 143–150 incl. Schengen & UK Direct purchase: US$200,000–250,000, 4–6 months
Tier 4 — Regional powers Türkiye, and rising climbers like the UAE 110–183 Türkiye US$400k CBI; UAE citizenship not sold — 10-yr Golden Visa instead
Tier 5 — Budget documents Vanuatu, Nauru, São Tomé, Cambodia, Egypt, Jordan 54–95 US$90,000–250,000; plan-B and regional value, not Europe access

The tier logic explains most pricing in this industry: you are buying treaty networks. Moving up one tier is what the investment actually purchases; comparing programmes within a tier is where family policy, speed and route options decide.

The Mistakes That Repeat (So Yours Don’t Have To)

  • Shopping on headline price alone — the all-in figure and the passport’s fit for your routes matter more than a US$10,000 difference in contributions.
  • Filing before documents are ready — deficiency letters cost months; six careful preparation weeks buy them back.
  • Leaving eligible family off the application — adding later is limited, slower and pricier in every programme.
  • Treating due diligence as an obstacle — it is the product; passports that survive scrutiny keep their treaties.
  • Confusing residence permits with tax plans — permits grant rights; day counts and ties decide taxation.
  • Buying programme real estate sight-unseen — the asset, not the route, determines your exit at year five.
  • Using unauthorised intermediaries — verify every agent against the official government lists before any payment.
  • Waiting for perfect certainty — every closure and price rise in this market’s history punished the undecided and grandfathered the committed.

Reading across the whole market rather than one programme at a time changes conclusions surprisingly often. Families who arrive certain they want a specific passport frequently leave with a two-instrument structure — a fast citizenship for permanence and a residence permit for lifestyle — because the combined cost of the right pair often undercuts forcing one product to do both jobs badly.