Residency by investment grants a residence status, usually with renewal and investment-maintenance conditions. Citizenship by investment grants nationality after approval and completion of a qualifyin
Residency by investment grants a residence status, usually with renewal and investment-maintenance conditions. Citizenship by investment grants nationality after approval and completion of a qualifying contribution or investment. Residence does not automatically become citizenship, and a “Golden Visa” is not a passport. Compare legal rights, physical-presence rules, family eligibility, tax exposure, due diligence and exit conditions before comparing headline investment amounts.
Important: Programme rules, mobility rights and naturalisation laws change. Obtain regulated immigration, legal and tax advice for the selected country.
A residence permit allows a person to live in the issuing country under stated conditions. Citizenship creates a nationality relationship and can support a passport application, political or consular rights and transmission to future generations, subject to national law.
| Attribute | Residency by investment | Citizenship by investment |
|---|---|---|
| Status granted | Temporary, renewable or permanent residence | Citizenship/nationality |
| Passport | Not granted by residence itself | May be applied for after citizenship approval |
| Investment | Usually maintained for a defined period | Contribution or investment under programme rules |
| Renewal | Commonly required | Citizenship is generally not periodically renewed, but passports are |
| Physical stay | Programme-specific | Often limited, but country-specific |
| Naturalisation | Separate future process | Direct citizenship route |
| Due diligence | Applicant and funding checks | Usually enhanced because nationality is granted |
Residence can provide the right to live, study or work, but the exact rights depend on the permit. Some permits restrict employment or require separate work authorisation.
Citizenship generally provides broader rights under national law. It does not guarantee visa-free entry to every country, tax exemption, banking access or permanent mobility rights in other states.
The UAE Golden Visa is long-term residence, not citizenship. Review the Golden Visa versus investor visa guide for the UAE distinction.
Residence programmes may require an applicant to:
Citizenship programmes may use non-refundable contributions, approved real estate, bonds, enterprise investment or public-benefit routes. Real-estate and business options can have mandatory holding periods and resale restrictions.
The minimum investment is not the total cost. Add government, due-diligence, interview, legal, translation, property, tax and dependant fees.
Physical-presence rules vary widely. A residence programme designed for optionality may require only limited visits, while a path intended for relocation or naturalisation can require substantial residence.
Ask four separate questions:
Do not infer tax residence from immigration status alone.
Programmes define eligible spouses, children, parents and other dependants differently. Age, dependency, education, custody, marital status and financial support can matter.
Mobility claims should be checked against current border rules immediately before travel. A residence card may support Schengen travel but does not make the holder an EU citizen. A passport's visa-free list can also change.
No. Naturalisation is a separate legal process. It can require lawful residence, physical presence, language, integration, clean records and other conditions.
Citizenship by investment is different because the programme directly considers nationality after investment and due diligence. Even then, investment does not guarantee approval.
Use the European residence comparison and Caribbean citizenship comparison to compare like with like.
| Goal | Pathway to assess first | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Relocate and live in one country | Residence route | Focus on work, school, healthcare and long-term status |
| Preserve optional future relocation | Low-stay residence route | Maintain residence without immediate full relocation |
| Obtain a second nationality | Citizenship route | Residence alone does not grant a passport |
| Build a naturalisation path | Residence route with realistic stay | Physical presence and integration usually matter |
| Include a complex family | Compare both | Dependant rules can outweigh headline investment |
| Use business-sale proceeds | Either, after evidence review | Source-of-funds readiness is central |
Before selecting either route, complete a source-of-funds and due-diligence review.
No. “Golden Visa” normally describes residence, not nationality.
No. Applicants must pass due diligence and receive government approval before completing the programme process.
No. Tax treatment depends on residence, domicile, income, assets and local law.
Capitals28 can compare programme status, family fit, investment structure and evidence readiness within its stated investment-migration scope. Regulated country advice and government approval remain separate.