Video Briefing

Offshore Citizen: Citizenship by Investment Program Review: Saint Kitts and Nevis

Feb 6, 2021Video Briefing16:01Watch on YouTube

Saint Kitts and Nevis offers one of the longest‑running citizenship‑by‑investment (CBI) schemes in the Caribbean. The program provides a passport that grants visa‑free or visa‑on‑arrival access to 156 countries, including the United Kingdom, Ireland, and the Schengen Area, but excludes the United States, Canada, Mexico, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, China, South Africa, and most of Latin America. Notably, it does include Russia and the entire “Shengen” zone.

Visa‑free travel

Region Access
Europe (EU, UK, Ireland) Visa‑free
Schengen Area Visa‑free
Russia Visa‑free
Remaining 156 destinations Visa‑on‑arrival or visa‑free

The passport’s travel reach is comparable to other Caribbean CBI programs, with the only notable omission being the United States and Canada.

Investment routes

1. Donation (Economic‑Fund contribution)

Applicant type Donation Due‑diligence Government fee Passport fee Courier Local lawyer Bank due‑diligence Total (USD)
Single $150,000 $7,500 $250 $365 $200 $5,000 $200 $163,515
Couple $175,000 $11,500 $250 (per person) $365 (per person) $200 (per person) $200 (per person) $193,230
Two dependents < 16 $195,000 $11,500 $250 (per person) $365 (per person) $200 (per person) $200 (per person) $214,560
Two dependents > 16 $195,000 $19,500 $250 (per person) $365 (per person) $200 (per person) $200 (per person) $226,000

The donation is a one‑time, non‑refundable contribution that secures citizenship for life.

2. Real‑estate investment

  • Minimum property purchase: $200,000 (must be an approved development).
  • Additional government real‑estate fees: $35,000 for a single applicant, $55,000 for a couple, $75,000 for a family of four.

Total out‑of‑pocket cost (including due‑diligence, legal, and processing fees):

Applicant type Total cost (USD)
Single $248,565
Couple $273,330
Family of four $294,760
Family with dependents > 16 (higher due‑diligence) $286,000

The real‑estate route ties up capital for at least seven years, after which the property can be sold. Potential recoupment depends on market conditions; the opportunity cost of the locked‑in capital should be considered.

3. Financing option (partial‑payment real‑estate)

Instead of paying the full $200,000 property price, applicants can make a down‑payment (typically $50,000) while the remainder is financed. The applicant does not retain ownership of the property at the end of the term.

Applicant type Out‑of‑pocket cost (USD)
Single $98,565
Couple $123,330
Two dependents < 16 $144,760
Two dependents > 16 $152,860

This option reduces the immediate cash outlay dramatically, making it the cheapest pathway among the three.

Timeline and due‑diligence

  • Standard processing: 4–6 months from application to citizenship issuance.
  • Accelerated processing (additional fee of $25,000 for the main applicant and $20,000 per dependent) can shorten the timeline to 2–3 months. The due‑diligence fee (e.g., $7,500) is non‑refundable, but the donation or real‑estate payment is only made after approval.

The due‑diligence review is more rigorous than programs such as Turkey or Vanuatu, though less intensive than Malta’s EU scheme. Source‑of‑funds verification is a key component.

Payment methods

  • Cryptocurrency is accepted via a broker for the donation route (e.g., Bitcoin).
  • Direct crypto payments to the government are not permitted, but the broker can convert and forward the funds, which may be attractive to applicants seeking to use digital assets.

Comparison with other Caribbean CBI programs

Program Visa‑free count Base cost (single applicant) Notable advantage
Saint Kitts & Nevis (donation) 156 $163,515 Strong travel list, includes Russia
Grenada 144 $150,000 (donation) Access to U.S. E‑2 visa
Antigua & Barbuda ~150 $100,000–$150,000 (donation) Lower cost, similar travel
Dominica ~140 $100,000 (donation) Cheapest Caribbean option
Saint Lucia ~146 $100,000 (donation) Comparable travel, lower cost

When cost is the primary factor, the financing option for Saint Kitts & Nevis is cheaper than the donation routes of most other Caribbean nations, while still delivering a passport with a broad travel network.

Practical considerations

  • Capital tie‑up – Real‑estate investments lock funds for several years; the financing option avoids this but yields no asset.
  • Due‑diligence scrutiny – Applicants must provide thorough documentation of wealth origin; failure to satisfy this can result in loss of the non‑refundable due‑diligence fee.
  • Future resale value – Real‑estate projects may appreciate, but market risk remains.
  • Accelerated processing – Worth considering if the applicant needs citizenship quickly and can absorb the extra fee.
  • Crypto acceptance – Useful for applicants with liquid digital assets, but requires a broker to handle conversion and compliance.

Overall, the financing route for Saint Kitts & Nevis offers the lowest immediate cash requirement among Caribbean CBI programs, while still providing a passport with extensive visa‑free access. Prospective applicants should weigh the trade‑offs between cost, asset acquisition, processing speed, and personal travel needs before deciding.