Video Briefing

Nomad Capitalist: Should Non-US Citizens Get a Second Passport?

Mar 27, 2019Video Briefing8:14Watch on YouTube

A second passport can serve as “citizenship insurance,” giving high‑net‑worth individuals a fallback option if political, tax or travel restrictions change in their home country.

Who typically seeks a second passport?

  • U.S. citizens – Since the introduction of FATCA, many look for a quick route out of the extensive U.S. tax‑reporting obligations that apply even when they live abroad.
  • Entrepreneurs and investors from China, the Middle East, Russia and other nations with limited visa‑free travel – A second passport expands the list of countries they can enter for business or leisure without costly visas.
  • Western expatriates – Canadians, Britons, Australians, New Zealanders and others sometimes add a passport to protect against future policy shifts or to gain easier access to specific markets.

Why a second passport matters

  • Travel flexibility – An Australian passport, for example, cannot be used to enter Russia, China, Iran or several other states. A passport from a country like Armenia includes visa‑free access to Russia, opening business and personal travel opportunities.
  • Tax planning – Some jurisdictions may introduce minimum‑tax thresholds or “exit taxes” that could affect residents who try to avoid taxation by moving abroad. Holding a second citizenship provides an alternative legal residence if such rules tighten.
  • Residency rights – A second passport can guarantee the right to live, work, obtain health care, or enroll children in schools and universities in another country, often with more stable or favorable conditions than a temporary residence permit.
  • Business continuity – For entrepreneurs who need to move quickly between markets, a passport that allows direct entry can reduce the time and cost of obtaining visas repeatedly.

Paths to obtaining a second passport

  1. Ancestry‑based citizenship

    • Review your family tree for parents, grandparents or great‑grandparents from countries that allow citizenship by descent (e.g., Italy, Poland, Lithuania, Canada).
    • Ancestral claims are usually the least costly and fastest route when documentation is available.
  2. Residency‑to‑citizenship programs

    • Bank deposit – Some nations accept a minimum balance in a local bank as proof of financial stability.
    • Real‑estate investment – Purchasing property can satisfy residency requirements in many Caribbean, Central American and European states.
    • Business incorporation – Setting up a company, even if it remains dormant, may qualify you for residency.
    • Proof of income – Countries like Mexico accept applicants who can demonstrate a regular income stream.

    After meeting the residency period—typically 2 to 7 years, depending on the country—you may apply for citizenship. The required stay can be “call‑option” style: you fulfill the criteria once, then return later to claim the passport.

  3. Direct investment citizenship

    • Some programs grant citizenship in exchange for a lump‑sum contribution or investment (e.g., Vanuatu, St Kitts & Nevis).
    • Costs vary widely; a U.S. citizen might spend around $100 k for Dominican citizenship in five months, while other routes can be substantially cheaper.

Practical considerations and risks

  • Changing rules – Residency periods and investment thresholds can be altered. Belgium, for instance, moved from a three‑year to a five‑year, then to a seven‑year residency requirement.
  • Cost vs. benefit – Evaluate the total outlay (fees, taxes, travel, legal assistance) against the tangible advantages of the target passport.
  • Political stability – While a second passport offers a safety net, it does not guarantee immunity from global events; it merely expands your options.
  • Dual‑taxation agreements – Ensure the new citizenship does not create unexpected tax liabilities in either the original or the new country.
  • Documentation – Ancestry claims require thorough proof (birth, marriage, death certificates) and may involve translation and legalization.

Decision criteria

Factor What to assess
Travel needs Which countries must you enter regularly?
Tax exposure Are you vulnerable to future exit taxes or minimum‑tax regimes?
Financial capacity Can you meet investment or residency costs comfortably?
Family considerations Do you need education, health care, or retirement options for dependents?
Time horizon How quickly do you need the passport—immediate (investment) vs. long‑term (residency)?

A well‑planned second passport strategy can act as an insurance policy, providing mobility, tax flexibility, and a reliable place to call home should circumstances change in your primary country of citizenship.