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10 Cheapest Citizenship by Investment Programmes in 2026

Cheapest Citizenship by Investment

As of July 2026 the cheapest citizenship by investment programme is Nauru CBI program, with a minimum investment of USD 90,000 for a single applicant in the form of a Donation (ECRCP). However, the minimum investment is only part of the overall cost. Government processing fees, due diligence fees, and professional fees are payable in addition to the investment amount. In 2026, Ten lawful citizenship by investment programmes currently grant citizenship for a minimum investment below USD 500,000, spanning the Pacific, the Caribbean, the Middle East and Turkiye. This guide ranks all ten from the lowest entry point and explains where the real costs and trade-offs sit.


The 10 cheapest citizenship by investment programmes compared

Programme Minimum investment Route Processing time Standout benefit
Nauru USD 90,000 Donation 3 to 4 months Up to four generations in one application
Vanuatu DSP USD 130,000 Donation 2 to 3 months Speed and no personal income tax regime
Vanuatu CIIP USD 150,000 Capital investment 2 to 3 months No personal, corporate or capital gains tax
Dominica USD 200,000 Donation or real estate 6 to 8 months Lowest Caribbean entry point
Antigua and Barbuda USD 230,000 Donation (real estate from USD 300,000) 12 to 18 months Broadest family inclusion, including parents
Grenada USD 235,000 Donation (real estate from USD 350,000) 6 to 8 months E-2 Treaty with the USA
Saint Lucia USD 240,000 Donation (further routes available) 12 to 18 months Strong visa-free travel access
St Kitts and Nevis USD 250,000 Donation or real estate 6 to 10 months World's oldest CBI programme
Egypt USD 250,000 Donation (refundable deposit route available) 6 to 12 months E-2 Treaty with the USA
Turkiye USD 400,000 Real estate (further routes available) 3 to 6 months E-2 Treaty with the USA and a G20 economy

Minimum investments are programme minimums for a single applicant, not total costs. Each programme name below links to the full requirements.

Nauru: the lowest entry point at USD 90,000

Nauru's citizenship by investment programme holds the lowest minimum in the world, a USD 90,000 contribution processed in three to four months. Its defining strength is family scope: a single application can cover up to four generations, which makes it exceptional value for extended households.

The greatestt limitation is travel. Nauru's passport carries a narrower visa-free list than the Caribbean documents, so applicants should confirm that it serves their intended destinations before proceeding. It suits cost-led applicants, and large families, whose priorities are a lawful second citizenship and succession planning rather than maximum mobility.

Vanuatu DSP: the fastest affordable route

The Vanuatu Development Support Program grants citizenship from a USD 130,000 donation in around two to three months, the quickest realistic timeline at this price level. Vanuatu imposes no personal income tax, which attracts applicants restructuring their affairs. This is an important limitation and should be considered carefully.: visa-free access to the EU Schengen Area remains suspended, so the passport no longer serves applicants whose mobility needs centre on Europe. For applicants focused on Asia-Pacific travel, speed and tax neutrality, it remains a rational choice.

Vanuatu CIIP: investment-based rather than donation-based

The Vanuatu Capital Investment Immigration Plan starts at USD 150,000 and is structured as a capital investment rather than an outright donation, which some applicants prefer as a matter of principle. Vanuatu imposes no personal, corporate or capital gains tax, and processing is among the fastest of any programme in this guide. The same caveat applies as to the DSP: the suspension of Schengen visa-free access limits the passport's European affectiveness, and applicants should take advice on programme stability before committing.

Dominica: the cheapest Caribbean citizenship

Dominica's citizenship by investment programme is the lowest Caribbean entry point at USD 200,000, available as a donation or an approved real estate purchase, with processing of six to eight months. Operating since 1993, it is among the most established programmes in existence, and its family inclusion provisions are generous. The programme's main limitation is that Dominica has no E-2 treaty with the United States. If your long-term plans include establishing a business in the US, Grenada or Egypt may be a better fit.

Antigua and Barbuda: built for large families

Antigua and Barbuda's programme starts at USD 230,000 by donation, with approved real estate from USD 300,000 and the Nonsuch Bay Resort route from USD 200,000. The programme also offers some of the broadest family inclusion rules in the Caribbean, including parents and, in qualifying cases, siblings. For multi-generational families, this can improve the overall cost per person.However, applicants should factor in the longer timeline, with processing currently taking around twelve to eighteen months, as well as a short physical presence requirement after citizenship is granted.


Grenada: the affordable route to the US E-2 visa

Grenada's citizenship by investment programme requires a USD 235,000 donation or approved real estate from USD 350,000, processed in six to eight months. Its defining feature is the E-2 treaty with the United States: Grenadian citizens may apply for the US E-2 investor visa, a route unavailable to nationals of many countries. If access to the US E-2 visa is not part of your plans, Grenada's higher price may offer little additional value. Its real advantage lies in the E-2 treaty, making it the stronger choice for applicants with US business ambitions rather than those focused solely on cost.

Saint Lucia: breadth of routes and strong travel access

Saint Lucia's programme starts at USD 240,000 and is notable for the breadth of its qualifying routes and the strength of its visa-free travel access. It suits applicants who value mobility and optionality in how the investment is structured. Two limitations worth noting: processing currently runs twelve to eighteen months, and a residency requirement of thirty days is being introduced for new applications. Applicants considering Saint Lucia should confirm the status of that requirement with counsel before filing.

St Kitts and Nevis: the oldest programme, at a premium

St Kitts and Nevis created citizenship by investment in 1984 and operates the world's oldest programme, from USD 250,000 by donation or approved real estate, processed in six to ten months. Its passport carries the strongest travel access of any programme in this guide, and the programme's longevity gives it a stability few can match. Its main disadvantage is price. As the most expensive Caribbean option in this guide, it may be difficult to justify the additional cost for applicants who are primarily looking for the lowest investment threshold.

Egypt: strategic value beyond the passport

Egypt's citizenship by investment programme starts at USD 250,000 by donation, with alternative routes including a refundable bank deposit for applicants who prefer to preserve capital. Processing takes six to twelve months, and Egypt holds an E-2 treaty with the United States, giving its citizens access to the US investor visa route. The main limitation is visa-free travel. The Egyptian passport offers more limited travel access than the Caribbean programmes, so it is best suited to applicants whose priority is the US E-2 pathway or establishing a regional base, rather than maximising global mobility.

Turkiye: the most expensive entry in this guide, with reason

The Turkish citizenship by investment programme requires USD 400,000, typically through real estate, with processing of three to six months. Applicants receive citizenship of a G20 economy bridging Europe and Asia, together with access to the US E-2 investor visa under Turkiye's treaty. It is the highest minimum in this guide, and the honest limitation for European-minded applicants is that Turkish citizenship confers no EU rights: no free movement, no right of establishment in the Union. It is a strong passport, but it does not offer the same benefits as European citizenship.

Cheapest citizenship by investment in Europe

Direct citizenship by investment no longer exists inside the European Union. Malta operated the last such route, and its scheme ended after the EU Court of Justice ruling of 2025; Malta now offers permanent residency, not citizenship, to investors. Turkiye is therefore the most affordable European-adjacent citizenship by investment, though it carries no EU rights.

Investors whose objective is an EU passport now proceed in two stages: obtain residency through a residency by investment programme, then apply for citizenship through naturalisation after a qualifying period of residence. Portugal and Greece are the established routes. Naturalisation timelines and conditions are set by national law and are subject to legislative change, so they should be confirmed at the time of application. The two-stage route is slower than any programme in this guide, but it is the only lawful path to an EU passport by investment in 2026.

Why the sticker price is never the total price

Every figure in this guide is a programme minimum, and no applicant pays only the minimum. The full cost of an application includes several further categories, each set by the programme and each varying with family size:

  1. Due diligence fees, charged per adult applicant and in some programmes per dependant, covering the background verification every credible programme requires
  2. Government processing and application fees, payable regardless of the investment route chosen
  3. Per-dependant charges, which alter the economics considerably for families and multi-generational applications
  4. Passport issuance fees for each family member receiving a travel document
  5. Professional legal fees for the preparation, filing and management of the application

These amounts differ by programme and by the composition of the applying family, which is why no single total can honestly be quoted in an article. Harvey Law Group provides a complete, itemised quotation for each programme under consideration during the initial consultation, before any commitment is made.

Cheapest for whom? The ranking changes with your family

This ranking is based on the minimum investment for a single applicant. As family size increases, the order can change because each programme has different dependant fees and family inclusion rules.

A single applicant is served most cheaply by Nauru, followed by the two Vanuatu routes. A couple sees a similar order, though dependant charges begin to narrow the gaps.

For a family of four, Dominica's donation route becomes highly competitive against the Pacific options once all fees are totalled, and its established track record adds weight. For multi-generational families, the calculation changes altogether: Nauru's ability to cover up to four generations in one application, and Antigua and Barbuda's family inclusion extending to parents, can make either the least expensive lawful route per person, despite neither holding the lowest headline figure for that composition. The correct question is never which programme is cheapest, but which is cheapest for this family.

What cheap does not buy you

A lower investment does not necessarily mean the same outcome. Before choosing a programme based on price alone, there are four important differences to consider.

Travel access varies widely: the gap between Nauru's visa-free list and that of St Kitts and Nevis is substantial, and an applicant who saves USD 160,000 but cannot reach the destinations that matter has saved nothing.

Due diligence standards vary between programmes. While stricter checks may seem like a disadvantage, they help protect the long-term value and reputation of the passport with border authorities, banks, and other institutions.

Programme stability matters: Vanuatu's suspension from Schengen visa-free travel shows how quickly the value of a citizenship can change after the investment is made. And reputational considerations are real: financial institutions treat some citizenships more cautiously than others.

None of this is a reason for alarm; every programme in this guide is lawful and functioning. It is a reason for advice. Harvey Law Group has practised investment immigration since 1992, acts as an authorised agent for the programmes it recommends, and its lawyers are qualified in jurisdictions including Canada, England and Wales, France and Grenada. That perspective, legal rather than commercial, is what separates a cheap decision from an inexpensive one.

Frequently asked questions

What is the cheapest citizenship by investment programme in 2026?

Nauru offers the lowest minimum investment in 2026, with a contribution of USD 90,000 for a single applicant and processing of three to four months. Vanuatu follows at USD 130,000 under its Development Support Program. Both figures are programme minimums; government fees, due diligence fees and professional fees apply in addition.

What is the cheapest second passport in the world?

The cheapest second passport available through a lawful citizenship by investment programme is Nauru, from USD 90,000. It suits applicants who prioritise cost and family inclusion over travel coverage. Applicants who need broader visa-free access generally consider the Caribbean programmes, which start at USD 200,000 with Dominica.

Can you still buy EU citizenship?

No. Direct citizenship by investment no longer exists within the European Union following the closure of Malta's programme after the 2025 ruling of the EU Court of Justice. Investors seeking an EU passport now use residency by investment programmes, such as those of Portugal or Greece, and apply for citizenship through naturalisation after a qualifying period of residence.

How much does a Caribbean passport cost?

Caribbean citizenship by investment starts at USD 200,000 with Dominica. Antigua and Barbuda starts at USD 230,000, Grenada at USD 235,000, Saint Lucia at USD 240,000 and St Kitts and Nevis at USD 250,000. Total costs are higher once government fees, due diligence fees and dependant charges are included.

Are cheap citizenship by investment programmes legal?

Yes. Every programme in this guide is established under national legislation and administered by the relevant government. Applicants undergo mandatory due diligence before approval. Legality does not remove commercial risk, however, so applicants should assess programme stability and travel access with qualified legal counsel before committing funds.

Speak with a lawyer before you choose on price

The cheapest programme on paper is rarely the least expensive in practice, and it is never chosen well on price alone. Arrange a confidential consultation with Harvey Law Group's lawyers to receive a full quotation for your family composition and a recommendation matched to your objectives. The consultation is confidential and carries no obligation.

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