Video Briefing

IMI Daily: Why Some Citizenships Cost 10X More Than Others

Jan 27, 2026Video Briefing8:54Watch on YouTube

Passport value depends on the level of rights and access it grants, structured in a four-layer government pyramid: temporary residency, permanent residency, citizenship, and supernational citizenship.

Layer 1 – Temporary residency: work visas, student visas, digital nomad visas, and golden visas; grants limited rights like banking, healthcare, education, and local employment; often probationary with no guarantee of settlement.

Layer 2 – Permanent residency: indefinite residence with strong deportation protections, public service access, and family reunification rights; cannot vote or run for office; examples include Greece, Panama, Qatar, Cyprus, Singapore.

Layer 3 – Citizenship: full political rights, unconditional residence, diplomatic protection, and generational inheritance; programs include Dominica, St. Kitts & Nevis, St. Lucia, Grenada, Vanuatu, Turkey, and El Salvador; direct acquisition usually via investment or donation.

Layer 4 – Supernational citizenship: extends rights across multiple countries via regional blocs; examples: EU (27 member states), Organization of Eastern Caribbean States, Mercosur, Gulf Cooperation Council; acquiring citizenship in one country can grant access to multiple jurisdictions.

• Investment migration programs either insert applicants at lower layers to climb over time (e.g., Portugal Golden Visa, Italy Investor Visa) or place them directly at Layer 3 (Caribbean citizenship, Vanuatu, Turkey, El Salvador) for immediate mobility.

• Traditional immigration requires long-term presence, language, cultural integration; investment programs substitute capital for time, sometimes requiring minimal or no physical presence.

Takeaway: When investing in residency or citizenship programs, you are buying a position on the four-layer settlement pyramid—your rights, security, and access scale with the layer, not merely the document itself.