Video Briefing

Wealthy Expat: Best Alternatives to Caribbean Citizenship by Investment

Apr 9, 2026Video Briefing10:56Watch on YouTube

The landscape of second‑residency and citizenship‑by‑investment programs is expanding, but each option carries distinct costs, timelines, and risks. Below is a concise overview of the most frequently discussed schemes, highlighting the key requirements, processing periods, and practical considerations for investors.

Caribbean citizenship – Saint Kitts & Nevis

  • Program type: Citizenship by investment (CBI) – either a non‑refundable donation to the Sustainable Growth Fund or a qualifying real‑estate purchase.
  • Typical costs:
    • Donation – US $150 000 for a single applicant (plus fees).
    • Real‑estate – minimum US $200 000 purchase; additional due‑diligence and legal fees apply.
  • Processing time: Historically 3–4 months, but recent trends show longer queues and extended due‑diligence checks.
  • Key points:
    • The program remains the most reputable Caribbean CBI, while Saint Lucia and Dominica have higher due‑diligence burdens and slower processing.
    • Real‑estate investments must be carefully vetted; not all projects qualify, and resale restrictions may apply.
    • Ongoing renewal of the passport requires renewed due‑diligence, adding recurring costs and administrative effort.

European “golden visa” routes

Country Main pathway Minimum investment Residency → citizenship timeline Notable features
Greece Property‑based residence permit €250 000 (property purchase) ~12 months for residence; citizenship after 7 years of continuous residence One of the shortest residence‑by‑investment timelines in the EU.
Spain Digital Nomad Visa (functionally a golden visa) Proof of income ≥ €3 000/month Residence granted within a month; citizenship after 10 years of residence (standard EU rule) Fast processing; suitable for remote‑work professionals.
Italy Investor visa €250 000 in an innovative startup or €2 m in government bonds Residence within 6 months; citizenship after 10 years Allows long‑term stay for investors and entrepreneurs.
Portugal Golden Visa €280 k in qualifying real estate (low‑density areas) or €350 k in other real estate Residency in ~3 years; citizenship after 5 years of residence Popular for its Schengen access and pathway to EU citizenship.

All EU programs are subject to the upcoming ETIAS system, which may impose additional entry checks for non‑EU passport holders.

Pacific alternatives

  • Vanuatu – Citizenship by investment for US $130 000–$140 000 (including fees). The passport offers limited visa‑free travel but can be paired with a European golden visa (e.g., Spain) to secure Schengen access.
  • Other Pacific nations – Some offer residency or investment schemes, but political stability and reputation vary; investors should assess long‑term viability.

South American options

  • Argentina – Not an investment‑based program, but residency can be obtained by demonstrating a monthly income of US $2 000–$3 000.
    • Timeline: 1‑year residency permit, renewable after 6 months of physical presence per year; citizenship possible after 2 years of residence, with a total of roughly 4 years from start to passport.
    • Advantages: No large upfront investment; relatively quick naturalisation compared with many CBI schemes.
  • Panama – “Friendly Nations” visa grants permanent residency with a modest economic tie (e.g., a US $5 000 deposit). After 5 years of residence, citizenship may be applied for, but approval depends on political discretion, creating uncertainty.

Middle Eastern and North African routes

  • Turkey – Citizenship by investment requires a US $400 000 real‑estate purchase. Processing exceeds 12 months, and geopolitical risk (regional conflicts) should be factored into any decision.
  • Albania, Serbia, Montenegro – Offer relatively straightforward residency permits; some provide “citizenship by merit” pathways, though these are less predictable than standard investment routes.

African programs (status as of 2024)

  • São Tomé & Príncipe, Sierra Leone, Botswana – Emerging CBI schemes with high entry costs and limited global mobility. Botswana’s program is delayed due to domestic industry issues.
  • El Salvador – Requires a cryptocurrency investment of US $1 million for citizenship; suitable only for high‑net‑worth crypto holders.

Leveraging ancestry and birthright

  • Ancestral citizenship – Many countries (e.g., Ireland, Italy, the Philippines, Argentina) grant citizenship automatically to descendants of nationals. Costs are typically low (often under US $200 for documentation) and processing can range from a few weeks to several months.
  • Birthright strategy – Having a child born in a country that offers citizenship by birth (e.g., Brazil) can provide the child with a passport and grant the parents permanent residency, with a pathway to citizenship after a year of residence. The total cost for the birth and legal process can be around US $15 000, often cheaper than a direct CBI purchase.

Practical considerations for investors

  1. Due‑diligence burden – Programs with higher scrutiny (most Caribbean CBI, some EU visas) entail recurring compliance costs and longer processing.
  2. Geopolitical risk – Nations in conflict zones (e.g., Turkey) or with unstable policy environments (Panama’s discretionary citizenship) may delay or jeopardize outcomes.
  3. Visa‑free travel vs. residency – A passport with broad visa‑free access (e.g., Saint Kitts & Nevis) may still face entry restrictions under ETIAS; a residency permit in the Schengen area can provide more reliable access for long‑term stays.
  4. Cost vs. benefit – Direct investment amounts range from US $130 000 (Vanuatu) to over US $400 000 (Turkey) plus real‑estate purchases in Europe that can exceed €500 000. Weigh the financial outlay against the mobility, tax, and lifestyle advantages.
  5. Timeline pressure – Programs advertised as “3‑month” processes often extend to 12–30 months as demand rises; act promptly if a short window is critical.

Investors should align their choice of program with personal risk tolerance, desired travel freedom, and long‑term residency goals, while maintaining rigorous due‑diligence throughout the application process.