For entrepreneurs and investors who do business across borders, few things slow you down more than a passport that forces you into consulate queues before every European trip.
⚠ Disclaimer
Immigration laws and financial requirements change frequently. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Before making any decisions, please consult a qualified professional or reach out to the High Net Worth Immigration team for a free, up-to-date consultation.
For internationally minded entrepreneurs and investors, time is a strategic asset. That's why many High Net Worth Individuals (HNWIs) are turning to Citizenship by Investment (CBI) programs. The right second passport can eliminate many travel barriers, giving you visa-free access to most of Europe and the flexibility to travel whenever business demands it.
The reason so many investors pursue CBI programs for European access is simple. European Union is one of the largest single markets on earth, with some of the world's most important financial, manufacturing, and trade hubs.
For any entrepreneur building an export business, courting European clients, or expanding into EU supply chains, easy access to the continent is a genuine competitive advantage.
A right CBI passport can be the bridge to that market. It will not make you an EU citizen, and it is important to be precise about what it does and does not do. But if anyone use it correctly, it can remove one of the biggest friction points in international business: getting into Europe quickly, repeatedly, and without red tape.
Whatever your situation, book a free and confidential meeting today. High Net Worth Immigration brings 15+ years of experience helping clients secure second passports, residency, and cross-border asset protection.
The core benefit connecting citizenship by investment to European business is visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to the Schengen Area. As of mid-2026, citizens of the five main Caribbean CBI nations, Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, St Kitts and Nevis, and St Lucia, can enter the Schengen Area visa-free for short stays. You can fly into any Schengen country and move between them without a visa arranged in advance.
For a business owner, that unlocks a lot:
The longest you may stay in the Schengen Area within any rolling 180-day period.
Designed for business trips, conferences, and meetings, not for living in Europe permanently.
If your business genuinely requires you on the ground longer, or you want to relocate, a CBI passport alone is not the solution. You would need separate residence or work authorization, exactly as any other non-EU national would.
From late 2026, the EU is rolling out ETIAS, the European Travel Information and Authorisation System. It is not a visa and it does not remove your visa-free access. It is a quick online pre-authorization that visa-exempt travelers, including Caribbean CBI passport holders, complete before flying: a short form, a small fee, approval usually within minutes. You can think of it the way US-bound travelers handle ESTA, one extra box to tick during trip planning, not an obstacle to reaching the European market.
This is the most important distinction in the entire subject. A Caribbean CBI passport gives you travel freedom and business access to Europe. It does not give you EU citizenship, and it does not automatically grant the right to live, work, or establish permanent operations inside the European Union.
All five active Caribbean programs currently offer visa-free Schengen access, but they differ in cost, processing time, family rules, and added benefits. Here is how they compare for a business-focused investor.
Launched in 1984, St Kitts and Nevis runs the oldest and arguably most prestigious CBI program in the world. It is known for rigorous due diligence, which is part of why its passport enjoys such a strong reputation and broad visa-free access, including the Schengen Area and the UK.
Grenada is unique among Caribbean nations because it holds a bilateralE-2 Investor Treaty with the United States. That means Grenadian citizens, including those who naturalized through CBI, can apply for a US E-2 visa to run a business in America. For an entrepreneur who wants both European business travel and a pathway into the US market, Grenada is in a class of its own. Note that US authorities now expect E-2 applicants to show genuine ties to Grenada, so this route works best as part of a real long-term plan.
Antigua and Barbuda offers one of the most cost-effective routes for larger families. Its University of the West Indies (UWI) Fund option is designed for families of six or more and even includes a period of tuition-free education for one family member.
Dominica consistently offers one of the lowest entry costs in the Caribbean, making it a popular starting point for single applicants and budget-conscious investors who still want Schengen business access.
St Lucia is known for competitive pricing and a range of investment routes, including a government bond option, giving investors more ways to structure their contribution.
Turkey is often mentioned in the same breath as European business access, and it deserves an honest caveat. Turkey's CBI program grants a passport that sits at the crossroads of Europe and Asia and benefits from Turkey's Customs Union relationship with the EU. However, a Turkish passport does not provide visa-free Schengen access. Turkish nationals still need a Schengen visa to enter the EU. Turkey can be an excellent base for trade and manufacturing that feeds European supply chains, but if your priority is visa-free travel into Europe, the Caribbean programs are the more direct answer.
| Program | Min. Investment | Processing | Schengen | UK Visa-Free | Family Inclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| St Kitts and Nevis | From USD 250,000 | ~4 to 6 months | ✓ | ✓ | Spouse, children, parents, more |
| Grenada | From USD 235,000 | ~8 to 10 months | ✓ | ✓ | Spouse, children, parents, siblings |
| Antigua and Barbuda | From USD 230,000 | ~8 to 10 months | ✓ | ✓ | Very broad, cost-efficient for large families |
| Dominica | From USD 200,000 | ~8 to 10 months | ✓ | ✕ | Spouse, children, parents, grandparents |
| St Lucia | From USD 240,000 | ~8 to 10 months | ✓ | ✕ | Spouse, children, parents, siblings |
All figures in US dollars and reflect published minimums as of mid-2026. Program terms change, so confirm current requirements with a licensed advisor before applying.
Beyond the ability to fly in without a visa, a second citizenship delivers practical commercial value.
Attend meetings, expos, and negotiations across Europe on short notice, without the delay and unpredictability of consular visa applications. For a founder chasing deals, that speed is a real edge.
A reputable second passport can make it easier to open international and, in many cases, European bank accounts and to move funds across borders, subject to each bank's compliance checks. This supports smoother currency payments and cleaner corporate structures.
None of the five Caribbean CBI nations taxes non-resident citizens on worldwide income, and most levy no wealth, inheritance, or capital gains tax. Be clear on one point, though: holding a Caribbean passport does not by itself change your tax residency. You remain taxable where you are actually resident, so any tax planning should be done with a qualified professional.
A recognized passport and a genuine second nationality can strengthen how international partners perceive you, and it gives you a legitimate Plan B for your family and your business in an uncertain world.
Every Caribbean program allows you to include your spouse and dependent children, and most extend to parents and other dependents. Your citizenship, and the mobility that comes with it, can be passed to future generations.
Being fully informed means understanding the risks, not just the benefits.
The EU has increased scrutiny of investor citizenship programs. Vanuatu lost its EU visa-free access entirely, a clear reminder that visa-free travel is a policy privilege, not a permanent entitlement. The Caribbean programs currently retain Schengen access, but the landscape is under active review.
Government fees, due diligence fees, and professional and legal costs sit on top of the minimum investment. Budget for the full picture, not just the entry number.
A new citizenship can interact with your home country's tax rules in ways that need careful planning. Get professional advice before you apply.
All Caribbean programs require you to apply through an authorized agent. Working with a reputable, licensed firm protects you from fraud and costly mistakes.
The five active Caribbean CBI programs, Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, St Kitts and Nevis, and St Lucia, all currently provide visa-free short-stay access to Europe's Schengen Area for business travel. This lets holders attend meetings, conferences, and trade events across the EU without applying for a Schengen visa in advance.
Yes, for travel and dealmaking. A Caribbean CBI passport lets you enter Europe visa-free for short business trips, meet clients and partners, attend expos, and pursue opportunities without consular delays. It does not, however, grant the right to reside or work in the EU long term, which requires separate authorization.
It can make company formation and banking easier in practice, and in many jurisdictions non-residents can register or own companies. But a CBI passport does not grant the automatic right of establishment that EU citizens have. Actively running an on-the-ground operation with staff usually requires a business or residence permit, just as it would for any non-EU national.
As of mid-2026, all five Caribbean programs offer visa-free Schengen access: Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, St Kitts and Nevis, and St Lucia. St Kitts and Nevis is often favored for its strong passport reputation, while Grenada adds a US E-2 visa pathway.
Yes. Attending meetings, negotiations, conferences, and trade fairs is exactly the kind of short-stay business activity that visa-free Schengen access is designed for, within the 90-day limit per 180-day period.
There is no universal best. But St Kitts and Nevis stands out for its prestige and speed, while Grenada is the strongest all-rounder for entrepreneurs who also want US market access through the E-2 treaty. The right choice depends on your budget, family size, and whether the UK and US are also priorities.
Dominica currently offers the lowest entry point for a single applicant, with a minimum contribution starting at USD 200,000, while still providing visa-free Schengen access. For larger families, Antigua and Barbuda's UWI Fund often works out most cost-efficient per person.
Visa-free access is limited to 90 days within any rolling 180-day period across the Schengen Area. This suits business trips and events but not full-time residence. Staying longer requires a national visa or residence permit.
It can help. A reputable second passport often makes international and European banking more accessible, but every bank runs its own compliance and source-of-funds checks. Approval depends on your overall profile, not on the passport alone.
No. Caribbean CBI programs grant Caribbean citizenship, not EU citizenship, and there is no automatic upgrade path. Following a 2025 European Court of Justice ruling, direct citizenship by investment inside the EU (previously offered by Malta) is no longer available. EU citizenship today generally requires long-term legal residence and naturalization in an EU country.
Visa-free business travel lets you enter and move around the Schengen Area for short stays to conduct business, subject to the 90/180 limit. The right to work and reside is a separate legal status that lets you live in an EU country and take employment there. A CBI passport gives you the first, not the second.
St Kitts and Nevis is generally the fastest, with approvals often completed in around four to six months and accelerated processing available. Once your passport is issued, visa-free Schengen access applies immediately.
Yes. All Caribbean programs let you include your spouse and dependent children, and most also allow parents and other dependents. Each qualifying family member receives their own citizenship and passport, and therefore the same visa-free travel benefits.
Not anymore in the direct sense. Malta previously offered a route to citizenship through investment, but a 2025 European Court of Justice ruling ended that direct model. European countries still offer residency-by-investment (golden visa) programs, but those grant residence rights rather than an immediate passport, and they are a different product from Caribbean CBI.
Every Caribbean program conducts strict, internationally aligned due diligence, including identity verification, criminal background checks, and detailed source-of-funds review. Some now include mandatory interviews and biometric enrollment. A clean, well-documented file processed through a licensed agent is the key to a smooth approval.
Vicky Katsarova is an internationally recognized advisor in residency and citizenship by investment, with more than 15 years of experience helping investors, entrepreneurs, and families secure strategic residency and citizenship solutions.
Since founding High Net Worth Immigration in 2010, she has advised clients across more than 20 jurisdictions, helping them enhance global mobility, protect family wealth, diversify geopolitical risk, and unlock international opportunities through carefully selected investment migration programs.
Having lived in Bulgaria, the UAE, and Canada, Vicky combines professional expertise with personal international experience. Her boutique advisory is built on discretion, integrity, and long-term client relationships, delivering tailored solutions aligned with each client’s unique objectives.
Member of the Uglobal Writers Council | Contributor to UNIQUE Private Jet Magazine | Featured in CIVITAS POST's “Leading Women” & Women's Journal