If you've been hunting for a second passport that pairs Caribbean lifestyle with a tangible, income-producing asset, Antigua and Barbuda keeps coming up for one good reason. Buying property here doesn't just hand you a key to a beachfront villa, it also opens the door to citizenship in a country whose passport gets you into more than 150 destinations visa-free, including the entire Schengen Area, the United Kingdom, Singapore, and Hong Kong.
But the program has shifted in the last two years. Fees went up, due diligence got tighter, and a regional reset across the Eastern Caribbean changed the floor pricing for every CBI applicant. So if you're sitting with information from 2022 or 2023, throw most of it out. Below is the updated 2026 picture, written for serious investors who want the requirements, the real costs, the realistic return, and the step-by-step path from "interested" to "passport in hand."
The Antigua and Barbuda Citizenship by Investment Program launched in 2013, and the real estate option is one of four ways to qualify. Instead of writing a non-refundable check to the National Development Fund, you buy property in a government-approved project. After five years, you can sell the asset and recover most or all of your capital, which is why so many high-net-worth investors prefer this route over a straight donation.
The mechanics are simple. The Citizenship by Investment Unit (CIU) keeps a vetted list of approved real estate projects, and you must purchase from that list. Anything off-list, however beautiful, won't count. Once you sign a binding purchase and sale agreement, your file gets submitted to the CIU, you pass due diligence, you complete the funding, and your family receives Antigua and Barbuda passports.
Antigua and Barbuda is currently the only Caribbean CBI jurisdiction openly positioned as crypto-friendly, with the government supporting blockchain-related licensing.
For investors holding a meaningful chunk of their wealth in digital assets, that matters. It's also one of the most generous programs for large families, parents, grandparents over 55, unmarried siblings of any age, and dependent children up to age 30 can all be included on a single application.
The minimum real estate investment for Antigua citizenship is USD 300,000 in a government-approved project, and you must hold that property for at least five years before selling. This figure was revised upward under the Citizenship by Investment (Amendment) Regulations 2024, which lifted the threshold from $200,000 to $300,000 across the Caribbean as part of an OECS-wide regional reset.
Two important nuances most articles gloss over.
First, there's a joint investment option. Two unrelated applicants can co-purchase a single approved property, with each contributing at least $300,000. So if a property is listed at $600,000, two qualifying investors can split it and each gets independent citizenship rights, which is useful for business partners or extended family arrangements.
Second, the $300,000 is just the asset. It does not include government processing fees, due diligence fees, professional service fees, taxes, or transaction costs. We'll break those down in a minute.
To qualify under the real estate route, the main applicant must:
That five-day stay is the only physical presence requirement, and it can be spread across multiple short visits or knocked out in one trip. There's no language test, no history exam, and no requirement to relocate.
You also cannot apply on your own. Antiguan law requires every CBI application to be submitted through a licensed local agent or an authorized international representative working with one. This is a feature, not a bug, the agent absorbs your initial due diligence load and acts as your interface with the CIU.
This is where most guides get vague. Here's the actual sequence, in the order it happens.
Before you even look at properties, you sit with a licensed agent for a confidential pre-assessment. They'll do a Know Your Client (KYC) review, check your background, examine source-of-funds documentation, and confirm everyone you want to include qualifies. A good agent will tell you up front if anything in your file is going to trip the CIU's enhanced due diligence so you can fix it or pick a different program. Expect this stage to take one to two weeks if your documents are clean.
Now you select from the list of approved real estate projects in Antigua. Top areas where most CBI-qualifying inventory sits include Jolly Harbour on the west coast, Nonsuch Bay on the east coast, Verandah Estates on Long Bay Beach, Hodges Bay, and Tamarind Hills. The choices generally fall into two buckets: branded resort residences, which are fully managed and hands-off, and standalone luxury villas, which offer more upside on appreciation but more management responsibility.
You execute a binding purchase and sale agreement with the developer, contingent on your citizenship being granted. At this point you're not transferring the full purchase price, only a refundable deposit, typically 10 percent, goes into escrow. If your application is denied, the deposit comes back to you.
Your agent assembles the full file: notarized passports, police clearance certificates from every country you've lived in for six months or more since age 18, marriage and birth certificates, financial statements, source of funds documentation, medical exams, and the signed purchase agreement. Every document must carry an apostille seal. At submission, you pay the due diligence fees and 10 percent of the government processing fee.
The CIU runs a multi-tier due diligence check, including international database screening, in-country investigation, and the now-mandatory virtual interview. The interview is conducted in English, or your native language with a translator, and covers your background, source of wealth, and intent. The Antigua and Barbuda CBI program maintains a rejection rate of around 2 to 3 percent, low enough to indicate the program is well-regulated, high enough to confirm the screening is real.
Once the CIU issues your approval letter, you have 30 days to fund the rest of the investment, the balance to the developer, the remaining 90 percent of the government processing fee, and any outstanding professional fees. Title is registered in your name, or in a holding company you set up, which is permitted.
You can take the oath of allegiance either in Antigua or at any Antiguan consulate or high commission worldwide. Once that's done, your passports are issued, typically within a few weeks. From start to finish, the process now runs three to six months in normal conditions, though processing has been backed up at times in 2025, so build in a buffer.
The headline number is $300,000, but the all-in cost is meaningfully higher. Here's a realistic 2026 cost table for a family of four taking the real estate route.
| Cost Component | Amount (USD) |
|---|---|
| Approved real estate purchase (minimum) | $300,000 |
| Government processing fee (family of 4 or fewer) | $20,000 |
| Each additional dependent (processing fee) | $10,000 |
| Due diligence — main applicant | $8,500 |
| Due diligence — spouse | $5,000 |
| Due diligence — dependents 12 to 17 | $2,000 each |
| Due diligence — dependents 18 and over | $4,000 each |
| Passport issuance fee | ~$300 / person |
| Property transfer tax (negotiable on some projects) | 2.5–7.5% |
| Legal and agent professional fees | $15,000 – $30,000 |
| Apostille, translations, courier, medicals | $1,500 – $3,000 |
| Total estimated all-in cost (family of four) | $355K – $385K |
For a family of four, expect total costs in the range of $355,000 to $385,000 before you account for any furniture or property upgrades. For a single applicant, you're closer to $335,000 to $345,000 all-in.
The professional fees vary widely between agents, so get two or three quotes. The transfer tax is sometimes negotiated down by approved developers as part of the package, ask about this before signing.
This is where investors pay attention. Antigua and Barbuda real estate isn't a get-rich-quick play, but it's also not a cost. Here's the honest ROI picture.
Rental yield. If you place your villa in a managed rental pool, expect annual yields in the range of 3.5 to 5 percent depending on the project and management quality. Verandah Estates, for example, targets approximately 3.5 percent annually with their managed program. Beachfront luxury rentals in peak season can pull premium rates, but vacancy in low season pulls the average down.
Capital appreciation. Antiguan property values have generally appreciated 3 to 5 percent annually over the last decade, with select areas like Long Bay and Jolly Harbour outperforming. The five-year hold gives appreciation time to compound.
Exit. After year five, you can sell the property to another CBI applicant or on the open market. Some developers, including Elite Island Resorts at Verandah Estates, build in target resale prices and waive resale commissions if the target isn't met, which provides a useful floor.
Tax efficiency. Antigua and Barbuda imposes no personal income tax, no capital gains tax, no inheritance tax, and no wealth tax on individuals. Real estate tax is just 0.1 to 0.5 percent of property value annually. If you eventually become a tax resident under the 183-day rule, the tax shelter widens further to dividends, interest, and royalties.
Add it up: a citizenship that grants visa-free access to 150-plus countries, a tangible asset producing 4-ish percent annually, modest but reliable appreciation, and a tax-friendly base. For HNWIs treating this as portfolio diversification rather than a primary residence play, the math holds together.
The National Development Fund donation route starts at $230,000 and is genuinely simpler. There's no property selection, no rental pool, no five-year holding period, and no eventual sale. You write the check, you get the citizenship. But you also never see that money again.
Tangible asset. Five-year hold. Resaleable to next CBI applicant. Generates rental income (3.5–5% annually). Net cost over five years can be near-zero or positive after appreciation and yield.
BEST FOR: HNWIs with a 5+ year horizon who want capital recovery and lifestyle utility.
Direct contribution to the National Development Fund. Faster (3–4 months). Zero ongoing involvement. No property to manage, no resale risk. But the capital is gone the moment it clears.
BEST FOR: Investors prioritizing speed and simplicity over capital recovery.
The real estate route costs you about $70,000 more upfront in the qualifying investment, plus modestly higher legal and transaction fees. In return, you get an asset that should be worth roughly the same or more at year five, plus rental income along the way. If the property appreciates even 3 percent a year and you collect 4 percent in rents, your effective net cost over five years is dramatically lower than a donation, and could even be net positive.
Rule of thumb: if you have the capital and don't mind a five-year horizon, real estate wins on economics. If you want speed and zero ongoing involvement, the NDF donation is cleaner.
The approved project list shifts periodically as new developments come online, but the established areas remain the most reliable.
West coast. Largest planned community on the island. Marina, golf course, restaurants, supermarket. Strong rental demand from expats and corporate executives year-round.
East coast. Caters to luxury buyers with sailing and a quieter, more secluded feel. Higher entry prices, premium clientele.
25-acre gated community next to Verandah Resort & Spa. Freehold villas, optional rental program, professional management by Elite Island Resorts. Long Bay regularly ranks among Antigua's finest beaches.
Cliffside properties with dual-bay views. More boutique, more design-forward. Architecturally distinct and visually striking.
North of the island near the airport. Convenient for short visits, mature community, private island club. Strong infrastructure for short-term stays.
Several CIU-approved resort residences offer share-based participation from around $300K. Hands-off, predictable, lower hassle than standalone villas.
When evaluating any of these, ask three questions: Is the project on the current CIU-approved list, not a list from 2022? Is there a working rental program with a track record? And what's the realistic exit strategy after year five?
This is one of the strongest features of the Antiguan program. A single application can include:
You can also add new dependents, a future spouse or future children, after citizenship is granted, which is unusual among CBI programs and a meaningful long-term planning advantage.
Holding an Antigua and Barbuda passport gives you visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to over 150 destinations. The headline ones for most investors:
You don't get visa-free entry to the United States, but Antigua passport holders can apply for a 10-year B-1/B-2 visitor visa, which most successful CBI applicants secure within a year of receiving citizenship. Antigua is also a Commonwealth member, which carries certain reciprocal privileges in the UK and other Commonwealth countries.
Before you commit, run this checklist:
The single biggest risk in this program isn't the program itself, it's choosing a weaker developer or a project without genuine demand. A villa you can't rent and can't sell at year five turns a citizenship win into an asset problem.
Standard processing is three to six months from submission to approval, plus 30 days to complete the funding after approval. Allow another two to four weeks for passport issuance and oath. Realistically, plan for five to seven months end to end.
Yes. Most approved projects offer optional managed rental pools, and you can also rent independently. Rental income is yours to keep, and there's no personal income tax on it.
No. Only properties from the official CIU-approved list qualify. Buying a private home on the open market does not count, no matter how much you spend.
For HNWIs who want global mobility, tax efficiency, asset diversification, and a Caribbean lifestyle option, yes, the program is one of the best-value Caribbean CBI options in 2026. For investors purely chasing yield with no interest in citizenship, traditional real estate markets will likely outperform on cash returns alone.
Your citizenship can be revoked. The five-day visit requirement is firm, but easy to meet. Most investors combine it with a vacation.
Yes. Parents and grandparents 55 and older qualify, and unmarried siblings of any age can be added. This is one of the most generous family-inclusion policies in the Caribbean.
Antigua and Barbuda's real estate route to citizenship in 2026 is a more serious, more regulated program than it was three years ago, and that's a feature for HNWIs who want a defensible second passport rather than a marketing brochure. Higher minimums, mandatory interviews, tighter due diligence, and a regional pricing floor have pushed out the bargain hunters and left a cleaner, more credible program for genuine investors.
If your capital, family situation, and long-term mobility goals fit the profile, this is one of the few Caribbean programs that gives you a real asset, real income potential, and real optionality at the end of five years. Start with a licensed agent, get a full written cost breakdown, vet the developer, and treat the whole thing like the regulated financial transaction it is.
Treat the process like a regulated financial transaction, not a real estate purchase. The CBI program rewards investors who prioritize compliance, program fit, and total family pricing over headline minimums.