A growing number of citizens from the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and other “Tier‑A” countries are looking for ways to preserve travel freedom and protect assets in case their home‑country environment becomes less favorable. One practical approach is to build a portfolio of second passports and residency permits that together restore or even expand visa‑free access while keeping the option to return home.
1. Caribbean citizenship by investment – the first pillar
Why it matters
Caribbean citizenship‑by‑investment (CBI) programs are among the most affordable and quickest routes to a second passport. They provide solid visa‑free coverage across the Caribbean, South America, Central America and parts of Southeast Asia, while still allowing entry to the United Kingdom and Ireland.
Key programs and coverage
*Exact amounts vary by family size and whether the contribution is a donation or a real‑estate purchase.
Country (CBI)
Approx. investment*
Main travel benefits
Antigua & Barbuda
US $100 k (donation)
Full Schengen access, UK & Ireland visa‑free, good coverage in Caribbean & South America
Grenada
US $150 k (donation)
Adds visa‑free travel to China, Russia and many African states; strong for business travelers
St. Kitts & Nevis
US $150 k (donation)
Similar to Antigua; strong Caribbean network
Dominica
US $100 k (donation)
Cheapest option, decent EU coverage
St. Lucia
US $100 k (donation)
Comparable to Dominica, with a few extra visa‑free destinations
Typical gaps
- Limited visa‑free access to Japan, South Korea, and most of the EU (except for Schengen visa‑free travel).
- No direct entry to the United States, Canada, Australia or New Zealand.
2. Turkish citizenship by investment – filling the gaps
Why it matters
Turkey’s CBI program is relatively inexpensive compared with many European options and adds visa‑free or e‑visa access to several regions that Caribbean passports miss.
Cost and requirements
- Real‑estate purchase of US $250 k–$300 k (or a bank deposit of similar size).
- Processing fees and due‑diligence costs apply.
Travel advantages
Limitations
- No visa‑free travel to the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom or Ireland.
- Schengen visa still required (Turkey is not yet a full Schengen partner).
3. European residency → citizenship – the final layer
Goal
Obtain a European Union passport that restores full Schengen access and adds visa‑free entry to the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the UK (via the EU‑UK travel arrangements).
Main pathways
*Costs include investment, processing fees and any required donations. Real‑estate purchases can be rented out to offset expenses.
Program
Approx. cost*
Residency requirement
Typical timeline to citizenship
Portugal Golden Visa
€280 k–€500 k (real‑estate or capital transfer)
Minimum 7 days stay per year (or 14 days in a 2‑year period)
5 years residency, then 6 months language test → citizenship
Malta Individual Investor Programme (IIP)
€1 M+ (donation + property)
Immediate residency
12–36 months to citizenship (fastest EU route)
Bulgaria Investor Visa
€512 k (government bond)
5 years residency
5 years → permanent residency, then citizenship after additional 5 years
Other Golden Visa options (Greece, Spain, Cyprus)
€250 k–€500 k
Varying stay requirements
5–10 years to citizenship
Why Portugal is often recommended
Alternative: citizenship by descent
If you have ancestral ties to Italy, Poland, Hungary or other EU states, you may qualify for citizenship without investment. Timelines vary from a few months to several years, depending on documentation and bureaucracy.
Putting the three steps together
- Obtain a Caribbean passport (≈ US $100 k–$150 k).
- Add Turkish citizenship (≈ US $250 k–$300 k in real estate).
- Secure European residency (≈ €300 k–€500 k in Portugal) and work toward citizenship (5 + years).
Resulting coverage
Remaining gaps By layering these three passports—Caribbean, Turkish, and European—you can construct a robust “passport portfolio” that preserves travel freedom, offers residency options across multiple continents, and provides a safety net should you ever need to relocate permanently.
Only the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand remain unavailable visa‑free; however, the EU passport provides the strongest negotiating position for obtaining long‑term visas or residency in those countries if needed.
Practical considerations and risks
Decision checklist





