Namibia introduced a new residence‑by‑investment scheme in early March, positioning the country as one of the few African states offering a formal pathway for foreign investors to obtain residency and, eventually, citizenship.
Core requirements
- Investment vehicle – purchase a property in the President’s Link Estate, a coastal development in Walvis Bay.
- Minimum spend – US $316,000 for a 200 m² plot with a one‑story house. Larger plots with amenities (e.g., pools) typically exceed US $500,000.
- Developer restriction – the program is tied to a single developer; investors cannot spread the capital across multiple projects.
Residency and citizenship timeline
| Stage | Duration | Conditions |
|---|---|---|
| Initial residence permit | 5 years (renewable) | Property purchase as above |
| Permanent residence | After 7 years | Continuous residence |
| Citizenship | After 10 years | No dual citizenship except in limited cases (birth or descent) |
A work permit is granted, but it is limited to the investor’s own companies; employment with other Namibian firms is not permitted.
Tax environment
- Territorial tax system – only income generated within Namibia is subject to tax.
- No capital‑gains, inheritance, or wealth tax – simplifies the fiscal picture for high‑net‑worth individuals.
Passport strength
- Current visa‑free access – South Africa and Russia.
- Absent access – Schengen area, United States, Canada, Australia, and most other major economies.
Advantages
- Direct route to long‑term residency in a politically stable African nation.
- Attractive tax regime for investors who retain income streams outside Namibia.
- Modern, eco‑friendly residential development with high‑end amenities.
Drawbacks
- Overpriced, single‑property focus – investors cannot diversify across multiple developments; larger or more luxurious plots quickly surpass half‑a‑million dollars.
- Lengthy citizenship path – a decade before naturalisation, with strict limits on dual nationality.
- Limited passport utility – minimal visa‑free travel compared with many other citizenship‑by‑investment programs.
- Work restrictions – only self‑employment is allowed; no access to the broader Namibian labour market.
Who might benefit
The scheme appears tailored for affluent Africans, particularly South Africans, who:
- Seek a territorial tax environment to avoid South Africa’s citizenship‑based taxation.
- Desire a high‑quality coastal residence at a cost comparable to premium South African locales.
- Are comfortable maintaining business operations in South Africa while residing in Namibia.
Practical considerations
- Cost‑benefit analysis – compare the $316k‑plus outlay for a single property against jurisdictions that allow investment across multiple assets (e.g., real estate, government bonds, business ventures) for similar or lower total spend.
- Citizenship goals – if dual citizenship or rapid access to Schengen/US/Canada travel is a priority, Namibia’s program may fall short.
- Long‑term tax planning – ensure that the territorial tax advantage aligns with the investor’s overall income structure; income earned abroad will remain untaxed in Namibia but may still be liable in the home country.
- Diversification risk – concentrating the entire investment in one development exposes the investor to project‑specific risks (construction delays, market fluctuations).
In summary, Namibia’s residence‑by‑investment program offers a clear, tax‑friendly pathway to long‑term residency for high‑net‑worth individuals, but its high entry cost, limited property options, restrictive work permissions, and modest passport strength make it a niche solution rather than a broadly competitive alternative to other global investment migration schemes.





