citizenship by investment countries

Citizenship by investment countries

The best citizenship by investment country depends on budget, family size, source-of-funds complexity, travel goals, program risk, and current official rules.

Group countries by decision type

Cost-first applicants usually compare Vanuatu and Caribbean programs. Family applicants often compare Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, St Lucia, Grenada, and St. Kitts and Nevis. EU-focused applicants may research Malta, but it is a more complex exceptional-services naturalisation framework.

A useful shortlist should include total cost, family fit, due diligence, travel needs, timeline assumptions, residence or visit requirements, advisor quality, and program reputation.

Use official sources before relying on sales pages

Every country page should point to the official unit or government source first, then explain where advisor quotes, passport indexes, and marketing pages can differ.

Applicants should avoid providers that guarantee approval, hide referral compensation, or quote only a headline contribution without due diligence, processing, document, bank, and professional fees.

Common questions

How many citizenship by investment countries should I compare?

Most applicants should compare two or three realistic options after filtering by budget, family size, nationality, travel goals, and source-of-funds complexity.

Are all citizenship by investment countries equal?

No. Programs differ by cost, due diligence, international perception, passport utility, family pricing, timelines, and rule-change risk.

Official sources to verify

Compare citizenship by investment advisors

Ask for a line-item quote that separates contribution, due diligence, processing, document, and professional fees.

We may earn a referral fee if you choose an advisor through this site. We still aim to show cost ranges, caveats, and official source links plainly.

Compare advisors