Citizenship‑by‑investment (CBI) programs let high‑net‑worth individuals obtain a second passport in exchange for a financial contribution, typically a donation or a real‑estate purchase. The main factors to weigh are the cost, the strength of the passport (visa‑free travel), tax obligations, processing time, and the likelihood that the program will remain available.
Caribbean programs – low cost, zero tax
| Country | Minimum investment | Type | Approx. processing time | Tax status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Saint Kitts & Nevis | US $130 k–$150 k (donation or real‑estate) | Donation or real‑estate | 12 months | No tax on worldwide income for new citizens |
| Antigua & Barbuda | US $130 k–$150 k | Donation or real‑estate | 12 months | Zero‑tax regime |
| Dominica | US $100 k (donation) | Donation | 12 months | Zero‑tax regime |
| Grenada | US $130 k–$150 k | Donation or real‑estate | 12 months | Zero‑tax regime |
These islands have very small populations and, once citizenship is granted, the holder is not required to file or pay taxes in the country. The investment amounts are modest compared with European options, making them attractive for entrepreneurs earning seven figures annually.
European and Mediterranean options – stronger passports, higher cost
| Country | Minimum investment | Type | Processing time | Notable features |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Malta | €750 k (real‑estate) or €1 M+ (donation) | Real‑estate or donation | ~12 months | Passport grants visa‑free access to the US, UK, Canada, Australia; requires “genuine link” to Malta; no refund of the contribution |
| Turkey | US $250 k (real‑estate) | Real‑estate | 3–6 months | Allows visa‑free travel to many countries, including Schengen states; property quality is generally good; passport strength is moderate |
| Montenegro | US $500 k (real‑estate) | Real‑estate | Unclear (program under pressure) | EU accession may force program cancellation; not reliable as a primary CBI |
| North Macedonia | Not specified (program launching) | Not specified | Unclear | Similar EU‑pressure risk; eligibility may require ancestral or other ties |
Malta offers the most powerful passport among the listed European programs but at a cost that can exceed a million dollars, with no possibility of recovering the investment. Turkey provides a cheaper real‑estate route but the passport does not rank as highly for global mobility.
Emerging or high‑risk programs
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Vanuatu (Pacific islands) – advertised as a two‑month process, but actual timelines are longer and costs are opaque. The program has been linked to fraud cases, and the lack of clear structure makes it unsuitable for most investors.
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Montenegro and North Macedonia – both face potential suspension due to EU concerns about selling passports. Their programs are still nascent and may be discontinued before they become fully operational.
Strategic combinations
Many investors use a tiered approach:
- Primary CBI – Choose a Caribbean passport (e.g., Saint Kitts & Nevis) for its low cost and zero‑tax status.
- Secondary European residency – Apply for a Portuguese Golden Visa (real‑estate investment, typically €280 k–€500 k). After five to six years the investment can be sold and the funds recovered, while the holder gains a residence permit and, under Portugal’s Non‑Habitual Resident (NHR) regime, enjoys tax exemptions on foreign income for the first ten years.
- Add‑on passports – Acquire additional citizenships (e.g., Turkey or Ukraine) to fill travel gaps not covered by the primary passport.
This layered strategy lets high‑net‑worth individuals preserve liquidity, minimize tax exposure, and maximize travel freedom.
Practical considerations
- Due diligence – All CBI programs require thorough background checks. Applicants with criminal records must disclose them fully; failure to do so can result in denial.
- Liquidity – Programs like Malta involve sunk costs with no refund, whereas the Portuguese Golden Visa allows capital recovery after several years.
- Visa‑free access – If the goal is unrestricted travel to the US, UK, Canada, and Australia, Malta is the only listed option that provides such breadth. For Schengen and broader European mobility, a Caribbean passport combined with a Portuguese residence permit is sufficient.
- Net‑worth threshold –
- 7‑figure entrepreneurs: Caribbean CBI (≈ $150 k) is generally optimal.
- 8‑figure and above: Malta becomes viable if the investor can allocate > $1 M without jeopardizing business cash flow.
- Ultra‑high‑net‑worth (≥ $100 M): Multiple passports, including Malta and possibly additional European citizenships, may be justified.
Bottom line
- Best value: Caribbean citizenship‑by‑investment programs (Saint Kitts & Nevis, Antigua & Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada) – low cost, zero tax, quick processing.
- Best passport strength: Malta – high cost, strong visa‑free travel, but no investment return.
- Supplementary options: Turkish real‑estate citizenship for regional diversification; Portuguese Golden Visa for EU residence with refundable investment.
- Avoid as primary choices: Vanuatu, Montenegro, North Macedonia – uncertain future, higher risk of program termination.





