Citizenship by investment, not a golden visa
As of 2026, Turkey runs one of the fastest and most generous citizenship-by-investment (CBI) programs in the world. The single most important thing to understand before you read another word: this is CBI, not a golden visa. A golden visa - such as the UAE golden visa or the residency programs catalogued in our golden visa hub - gives you a residence permit. You become a legal resident, you may renew the permit periodically, and only after several years of residency (and usually a language test and physical-presence requirements) might you eventually qualify to apply for citizenship. Turkey skips all of that.
Under the Turkish program you receive citizenship directly. There is no residency clock to run down, no minimum number of days you must spend in Turkey, and no naturalization interview at the end of a five-year wait. You make the qualifying investment, your file is approved, and you are issued a Turkish passport - a real travel document of the Republic of Turkey, with all the rights of any Turkish citizen. The whole point of CBI is that the investment IS the path to the passport, compressing a process that takes a decade elsewhere into roughly three to four months.
This distinction matters enormously for how you should evaluate Turkey against alternatives. If you want the right to live in a specific country and you do not need a second passport, a golden visa may be cheaper and simpler. If what you actually want is a second nationality - a travel document, a fallback, a treaty benefit, an asset you can pass to your children - then a CBI program is the relevant category, and Turkey competes directly with Caribbean citizenship by investment programs rather than with European residency schemes.
Investment options and exact thresholds
As of 2026 there are several qualifying routes to Turkish citizenship by investment. The headline and by far the most popular is the real-estate route at USD 400,000. The other routes all sit at USD 500,000 (or involve job creation). Every figure below is denominated in US dollars by regulation - the investment must be made and documented in USD via official bank transfer, regardless of the lira exchange rate on any given day.
| Route | Threshold | Minimum hold | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Real estate | $400K | 3 years | Most popular; appraisal in USD; resaleable after hold |
| Fixed capital investment | $500K | 3 years | Confirmed by Ministry of Industry & Technology |
| Bank deposit | $500K | 3 years | Deposited in a Turkish bank, locked for 3 years |
| Government bonds | $500K | 3 years | Held for the required period |
| Investment / VC fund shares | $500K | 3 years | Real-estate or venture capital fund participation |
| Job creation | 50 jobs | n/a | Employ 50 Turkish citizens (Ministry of Labour confirms) |
The real-estate threshold has changed twice. The program launched in 2018 at USD 250,000, which made Turkey the cheapest CBI program in the world at the time and drove a wave of foreign buying. In June 2022 the government raised the real-estate minimum to USD 400,000 to cool that demand and capture more value, and that USD 400,000 figure remains the rule as of 2026. If you read older articles quoting USD 250,000, they are out of date - the current minimum is USD 400,000 for the property route.
The property valuation must be carried out by a government-authorized appraiser, and the appraised value (not merely the contract price) must meet or exceed USD 400,000. Payment must move through the official banking system in US dollars so that the Central Bank can certify the transfer. You may buy one property or combine several to reach the threshold, and the real estate can be residential, commercial, or land. A formal annotation is placed on the title deed (tapu) committing you not to sell for three years.
Eligibility and who is included
Eligibility for Turkish CBI is broad. There is no age limit, no education requirement, no language test, and no interview. The core requirements are that you make and maintain a qualifying investment from the list above, that the funds are clean and lawfully sourced, and that you and your included family members pass background and security checks. Applicants from a small number of sanctioned or restricted nationalities face additional scrutiny or exclusion, so confirm your nationality is eligible before you start.
The application is a family application. The main investor, their spouse, and their children under 18 are all included under the single qualifying investment - they do not each need a separate USD 400,000 stake. This makes Turkey strong value for families compared with programs that price per person. Children over 18 generally cannot be added as dependants on the main file and would need their own qualifying route.
- Main applicant - makes the qualifying investment (e.g. USD 400,000 real estate)
- Spouse - included in the same application at no additional investment
- Children under 18 - included as dependants in the same application
- Clean lawful source of funds - documented bank transfers in USD
- No physical residency, no minimum stay, no language test, no interview
Crucially, Turkey allows dual citizenship. You are not required to renounce your existing nationality to become Turkish. That said, your home country may impose its own restrictions - some nations do not permit dual nationality, and a few require you to notify them. Always check your home country's rules before acquiring a second passport. For most US, UK, Canadian, Australian, and EU citizens, holding a Turkish passport alongside their original one is fully legal.
How to apply - step by step
The process is fast by CBI standards, but it is paperwork-intensive and almost always handled through a licensed Turkish law firm holding power of attorney on your behalf. You do not need to be physically present in Turkey for most of it. From signed power of attorney to passport in hand, well-prepared files typically complete in three to four months.
- Engage a licensed Turkish immigration lawyer and sign a power of attorney (POA). The POA lets the lawyer open accounts, register property, and file on your behalf so you do not need to live in or repeatedly fly to Turkey.
- Obtain a Turkish tax number and open a Turkish bank account. These are required to receive and document the qualifying transfer through the official banking system in US dollars.
- Select your qualifying investment. For the real-estate route, choose property whose government-authorized appraisal meets or exceeds USD 400,000. Commission the official valuation report before purchase.
- Transfer the funds in USD through the banking system and complete the investment. For real estate, the title deed (tapu) is registered in your name with a three-year no-sale annotation; for deposits, bonds, or funds, the holding is locked for three years.
- Apply for a Certificate of Conformity from the relevant ministry, confirming your investment meets the program rules. This certificate is the key document that unlocks the citizenship application.
- File for a short-term residence permit tied to the investment, then submit the citizenship application to the Directorate of Population and Citizenship Affairs along with the conformity certificate and family documents.
- Undergo background and security checks. Provided your file is clean, approval is issued and the application is finalised by Presidential decree.
- Collect your Turkish ID and apply for Turkish passports for yourself, your spouse, and your children under 18. At this point you are a Turkish citizen.
Because much of the work is documentary, the main causes of delay are appraisal disputes (the valuation coming in below USD 400,000), incomplete source-of-funds evidence, and background-check holds. A reputable firm front-loads these issues, which is why choosing the lawyer carefully matters more than shaving a few thousand dollars off fees. Picking a weak adviser is one of the most common visa rejection reasons across all investment-migration programs.
Costs and fees beyond the investment
The headline USD 400,000 is the investment, not the total cost. Several taxes and fees sit on top, and on the real-estate route some of these are recoverable in value (the property itself) while others are pure transaction costs. Budget realistically for the extras below as of 2026.
| Item | Typical amount | Recoverable? |
|---|---|---|
| Qualifying real estate | $400K | Yes - resaleable after 3 years |
| Title deed (tapu) transfer fee | ~4% of value | No |
| Property appraisal report | $300 to $600 | No |
| Legal / processing fees | $8K to $20K | No |
| Government application fees | Varies per family | No |
| Passport & ID issuance | Modest per person | No |
| VAT (may be exempt for some foreign buyers) | Varies | Depends on exemption |
The single largest add-on is usually the title-deed transfer fee, charged as a percentage of the declared property value. Legal and processing fees vary widely between firms and with family size. Some foreign buyers qualify for a VAT exemption on a first property purchase in Turkey if they bring the funds from abroad and hold the property for the required period - this can be a meaningful saving, so ask your lawyer whether your purchase qualifies. The net economic cost of Turkey CBI is therefore the non-recoverable fees plus whatever value you lose (or gain) when you resell the property after three years, which is structurally cheaper than a donation-only program where the entire contribution is gone for good.
This recoverable-asset feature is the central financial argument for Turkey over a pure donation route. In a donation-based Caribbean program the money is spent. In Turkey, the bulk of your outlay is parked in an asset you can in principle sell after the hold. The trade-off is real-estate and currency risk: Turkish property prices and the lira can move sharply, so the asset is not a guaranteed store of value.
Turkish passport benefits and the US E-2 route
A Turkish passport gives visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to roughly 110-plus countries as of 2026. That is a solid but not elite passport - it is weaker than an EU passport on visa-free travel, and notably it does NOT include visa-free entry to the Schengen Area. The strongest strategic reason wealthy investors choose Turkey is not the visa-free list at all. It is the E-2 treaty.
Turkey holds an E-2 Treaty Investor agreement with the United States. That means Turkish citizens are eligible to apply for the US E-2 visa, which lets a treaty-national invest a substantial amount in a US business and live in the United States to run it, with renewable status and the ability to bring a spouse and children. For an investor from a country that does NOT have an E-2 treaty with the US (China and India, for example, do not), acquiring Turkish citizenship is a well-known back door: become Turkish, then qualify for the E-2 as a Turkish national. This is the main reason many Chinese and Indian families pursue Turkey specifically.
If a direct US immigration route is your real goal, weigh the Turkey-then-E-2 path against the proposed Trump gold card visa. The gold card is a far more expensive direct US route, whereas Turkey-plus-E-2 is a two-step strategy that costs less but gives you renewable non-immigrant status rather than a green card. Many advisers present Turkey CBI plus a US E-2 as the pragmatic middle path for investors who are priced out of direct US programs.
Not the EU, not Schengen - clearing the confusion
A frequent and costly misunderstanding: Turkey is NOT a member of the European Union, and a Turkish passport is NOT a Schengen passport. Becoming a Turkish citizen does not give you the right to live, work, or settle anywhere in the EU, and it does not grant visa-free travel into the Schengen Area. If your objective is European residence or an EU passport, Turkey is the wrong program and you should be looking at European golden visas in our golden visa hub instead.
This is exactly where the golden-visa-vs-CBI distinction bites again. European golden visas (Portugal, Greece, and others) give you EU residency and a long, slow path toward an EU passport that does carry Schengen and free-movement rights. Turkey gives you a passport quickly but it is a Turkish passport with Turkish rights, not European ones. Neither is better in the abstract - they serve different goals. Marketing material that blurs this line, implying a Turkish passport gets you into Europe, is misleading.
| Feature | Turkey CBI | EU golden visa | UAE golden visa |
|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Passport (citizenship) | Residency (then maybe EU passport) | Residency only |
| Speed to status | 3-4 months | Months to years | Weeks to months |
| EU / Schengen rights | No | Yes (eventually via passport) | No |
| US E-2 eligibility | Yes | Country-dependent | No (UAE no E-2 treaty) |
| Min cost | $400K (recoverable) | Often EUR 250K-500K+ | Property / talent based |
For a direct comparison with a residency-only program that explicitly does NOT lead to citizenship, see the UAE golden visa. The UAE gives long-term residency, zero personal income tax, and a base in the Gulf, but it does not offer a passport and there is no E-2 treaty. Turkey gives the passport and the E-2 angle but does not offer the UAE's tax profile. Investors often shortlist both and choose based on whether a second nationality or a tax residence is the priority.
Tax treatment and the US-person warning
Acquiring Turkish citizenship does not, on its own, make you a Turkish tax resident. Turkey generally taxes individuals based on residence (broadly, where you actually live and spend your time), not on citizenship. So simply holding a Turkish passport while continuing to live elsewhere typically does not pull your worldwide income into the Turkish tax net. If you do relocate to Turkey and become tax resident, you would then be taxed under Turkish rules, and you should get local advice on rates, the tax year, and any treaty relief with your home country.
For non-US investors the picture is usually simpler: a Turkish passport is a travel and optionality asset, not a tax event, as long as you do not become resident in Turkey. Property held in Turkey will attract Turkish property-related taxes (the transfer fee at purchase and recurring local charges), and any rental income or capital gain on resale is taxable in Turkey under domestic rules. Model the after-tax resale outcome, not just the headline USD 400,000, when you compare Turkey with a donation program.
Pros and cons
Turkey CBI is one of the most popular programs in the world precisely because of its speed and its recoverable-asset structure, but it is not the right fit for every goal. The summary below weighs the program against EU residency routes and against pure donation-based Caribbean citizenship.
- [+] Real citizenship and a passport, not just a residence permit - the investment is the direct path
- [+] Fast: roughly 3-4 months from start to passport, among the quickest CBI programs anywhere
- [+] No residency wait, no minimum stay, no language test, no interview
- [+] No donation required - the USD 400,000 real estate is an asset, resaleable after 3 years
- [+] Whole family included (spouse + children under 18) under one qualifying investment
- [+] Dual citizenship allowed by Turkey - no need to renounce your original nationality
- [+] Eligible to apply for the US E-2 treaty investor visa - a back door to living in the US
- [+] Lower net cost than a pure donation program because the property can be sold after the hold
- [-] NOT the EU and NOT Schengen - the passport does not grant European residence or visa-free Schengen entry
- [-] Passport strength is moderate (~110+ destinations), well below an EU passport
- [-] Currency and property risk: lira depreciation and price swings can cut your dollar resale value
- [-] Threshold has risen before (USD 250K to USD 400K in 2022) and could change again
- [-] US persons keep full US worldwide tax and reporting obligations regardless
- [-] Three-year lock on the asset - your capital is committed and the title carries a no-sale annotation
What changed - 2022 to 2026
The defining recent change is the June 2022 increase of the real-estate threshold from USD 250,000 to USD 400,000. That single revision reshaped the program's positioning: Turkey went from being the world's cheapest passport-by-property to a mid-priced but still fast option. As of 2026 the USD 400,000 figure holds, alongside the USD 500,000 thresholds on the capital, deposit, bond, and fund routes.
Authorities have also tightened the mechanics around appraisals and currency. The mandatory government-authorized valuation and the requirement to transfer funds in US dollars through the official banking system were reinforced to prevent under- and over-valuation games that were common in the early USD 250,000 era. Practically, this means you cannot reach the threshold on paper with an inflated contract price - the appraised value must genuinely meet USD 400,000.
The broader 2024-2026 backdrop is that several countries have been narrowing or closing investment-migration routes, particularly in Europe, while Turkey has kept its CBI program open and stable at the higher threshold. If you are weighing which programs are still available and which have shut, our roundup of countries that ended golden visas puts Turkey's continued availability in context. For now, Turkey remains one of the few open, fast, passport-delivering programs - but given the history of revisions, treat current figures as a snapshot and confirm them before you commit capital.
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Frequently asked questions
How much for Turkish citizenship by investment?
As of 2026 the cheapest route is USD 400,000 in real estate, held for at least three years. The alternative routes each require USD 500,000 - a fixed capital investment, a bank deposit, government bonds, or shares in a qualifying real-estate or venture capital fund - or, separately, creating jobs for 50 Turkish citizens. On top of the investment you should budget for the title-deed transfer fee (around 4% of property value), legal and processing fees (often USD 8,000 to USD 20,000), an appraisal report, and government and passport issuance fees. The real-estate route is the most popular because the property is a resaleable asset rather than a sunk donation.
How long does Turkey CBI take?
A well-prepared application typically takes about three to four months from signing the power of attorney to receiving your Turkish passport. This is among the fastest citizenship-by-investment timelines in the world because there is no residency period to serve first. The main causes of delay are appraisals coming in below the USD 400,000 threshold, incomplete source-of-funds documentation, and background-check holds. Working with a reputable licensed Turkish law firm that front-loads these issues is the single biggest factor in hitting the three-to-four-month range.
Does Turkey allow dual citizenship?
Yes. Turkey permits dual (and multiple) citizenship, so you are not required to renounce your existing nationality to become Turkish. However, your home country may have its own rules - some nations do not allow dual citizenship, and a few require notification or impose conditions. For most US, UK, Canadian, Australian, and EU citizens, holding a Turkish passport alongside their original one is fully legal. Always confirm your home country's position before acquiring the second nationality.
Can Turkish citizens get the US E-2 visa?
Yes. Turkey has an E-2 Treaty Investor agreement with the United States, so Turkish citizens are eligible to apply for the US E-2 visa. The E-2 lets a treaty national invest a substantial amount in a US business and live in the United States to operate it, renewably, with a spouse and children included. This is the main strategic reason investors from countries without an E-2 treaty - such as China and India - acquire Turkish citizenship first, then use it to qualify for the E-2. Note the E-2 is a non-immigrant visa, not a green card, and most advisers expect you to hold Turkish citizenship for a period before filing, so plan the timeline with a US immigration attorney.
Is Turkey CBI a golden visa or actual citizenship?
It is actual citizenship by investment, not a golden visa. A golden visa gives you a residence permit and only a slow, conditional path toward citizenship years later. Turkey's program gives you the passport directly - the qualifying investment is itself the route to citizenship, with no residency wait, no minimum stay, no language test, and no interview. This is the central reason Turkey is categorised as CBI and compared with programs like Caribbean citizenship rather than with European or UAE residency schemes.
Does a Turkish passport let me live in the EU or Schengen?
No. Turkey is not a member of the European Union, and a Turkish passport does not grant the right to live or work in the EU, nor does it provide visa-free entry to the Schengen Area. Becoming a Turkish citizen gives you Turkish rights and a Turkish travel document, which reaches roughly 110-plus countries visa-free or visa-on-arrival as of 2026 but excludes Schengen. If your goal is European residence or an EU passport, you should be looking at European golden visas instead, not Turkey.
Can I sell the property after getting citizenship?
You must hold the qualifying real estate for at least three years - a no-sale annotation is placed on the title deed (tapu) for that period. After the three-year hold expires you can in principle resell the property, which is why the real-estate route is often described as a recoverable asset rather than a donation. Your citizenship is not revoked when you later sell, provided you genuinely held the investment for the required period. Be aware that Turkish property prices and the lira can move significantly, so your dollar resale value is not guaranteed, and any gain may be taxable in Turkey.
Do I have to live in Turkey or learn Turkish?
No. Turkey's CBI program has no physical residency or minimum-stay requirement, no language test, and no interview. You can complete most of the process remotely through a lawyer holding power of attorney and never need to relocate. This is a key difference from golden visas and ordinary naturalisation, which usually require years of physical residence and language proficiency. You simply make and maintain the qualifying investment, pass the background checks, and receive citizenship.
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