What Is a Golden Visa?
"Golden visa" is not an official legal term. It is a colloquial label used by media, immigration consultants, and investors to describe any government program that grants residency or citizenship in exchange for investment. No country has a law titled "Golden Visa Act" — the term is a marketing shorthand that has become universally understood.
The phrase gained popularity in the 2010s as European countries like Portugal, Spain, Greece, and Malta launched programs offering residency to non-EU nationals who bought property or invested capital. Over time, the label expanded to cover programs far beyond Europe — Caribbean citizenship-by-investment schemes, the UAE's long-term residency visa, Panama's investor programs, and now Paraguay's Investor Pass.
Because "golden visa" is informal, it creates confusion. Two people talking about "golden visas" may be describing completely different things. One might mean a renewable residency card that never leads to citizenship. The other might mean a direct passport in six months. The programs that fall under this label differ dramatically in what they offer, what they cost, and what strings are attached.
Three Types of "Golden Visa" Programs
Programs that people call "golden visas" fall into three broad categories. Understanding which type a country offers is essential before comparing options.
Type 1: Investment for Residency
You invest, and the government gives you a residence permit — temporary or permanent. This is what most European "golden visas" actually are. You get the right to live in the country, and in some cases, travel freely within a bloc like the Schengen Area.
Citizenship is not guaranteed. You may become eligible to apply for naturalization after a waiting period (5–10 years in most cases), but you still have to meet language, integration, and other requirements. Some programs — like the UAE Golden Visa — offer no path to citizenship at all.
Type 2: Investment for Fast-Track Citizenship
You invest, and the government gives you residency with a shortened or accelerated path to citizenship. This is not a direct passport — you still hold residency first — but the timeline to naturalization is faster, or the requirements are relaxed, compared to ordinary immigration.
Some countries in this category require genuine residence during the waiting period. Others allow minimal physical presence. The key distinction from Type 1 is that the program is designed with citizenship as the expected endpoint, not just a theoretical possibility.
Type 3: Citizenship by Investment (Direct Passport)
You invest, and the government grants you citizenship and a passport directly — usually within months. There is no residency waiting period, no language test, and no integration requirement. This is the fastest route to a second passport, and also the most expensive relative to what the passport provides in travel freedom.
These programs are concentrated in the Caribbean (Dominica, St. Kitts & Nevis, Grenada, Antigua & Barbuda, St. Lucia) and a few small nations (Vanuatu, Nauru). The EU has been pressuring these countries to tighten due diligence, and prices rose significantly in 2024 when all five Caribbean nations agreed to a $200,000 minimum floor.
Why the distinction matters
When someone searches "Paraguay golden visa," they may be expecting any of these three things. Paraguay's Investor Pass is a Type 1 program — investment for permanent residency — with a path to citizenship after 3 years through the existing naturalization process. It is not citizenship by investment, and the government does not sell passports.
Is the Paraguay Investor Pass a Golden Visa?
Functionally, yes. Officially, no.
Paraguay's Investor Pass has the same basic structure as golden visa programs worldwide: you invest a specified amount in the local economy, and the government grants you residency. It shares key features with established programs — direct permanent residency, multiple investment options, minimal physical presence, and a path to citizenship.
But the Paraguayan government does not call it a golden visa. The official name is "Paraguay Investor Pass", and it was launched on April 17, 2026 by the Ministry of Industry and Commerce (MIC) and the National Directorate of Migration (Migraciones). The official announcements use the term "Investor Pass" throughout — never "golden visa."
Some media outlets, immigration consultants, and investors have started referring to it as Paraguay's golden visa because that is the label people know. The comparison is reasonable — the program occupies the same niche — but the official terminology matters if you are dealing with government offices, legal documents, or immigration filings.
Paraguay Investor Pass at a Glance
Three investment options: tourism projects ($150K), real estate or stocks ($200K), or SUACE business plan ($70K). See full Investor Pass breakdown.
How Paraguay Compares to Golden Visa Programs Worldwide
The table below compares Paraguay's Investor Pass to the most-searched golden visa and citizenship-by-investment programs globally. All figures are current as of April 2026.
| Country | Min. Investment | What You Get | Citizenship Path | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paraguay | $70K–$200K | Direct permanent residency | 3 years (naturalization) | Active (Apr 2026) |
| Portugal | €250K–€500K | Temporary → permanent | 5–10 years* | Active (reformed) |
| Greece | €250K–€800K | 5-year renewable permit | 7 years (naturalization) | Active |
| Spain | — | — | — | Closed (Apr 2025) |
| Malta | ~€150K all-in | Permanent residency | CBI closed; naturalization | Residency active |
| Cyprus | €300K + income | Permanent residency | 8 years (naturalization) | Active |
| Italy | €250K–€2M | 2-year investor visa | 10 years (naturalization) | Active |
| Panama | $200K–$750K | Permanent residency | 5 years (naturalization) | Active |
| UAE | ~$545K | 10-year residency | None | Active |
| Turkey | $400K | Direct citizenship + passport | Immediate | Active |
| Caribbean (5 nations) | $200K–$250K | Direct citizenship + passport | Immediate | Active |
| Ireland | — | — | — | Closed (Feb 2023) |
* Portugal's citizenship timeline is changing from 5 to 10 years. Parliament voted April 1, 2026 to extend the period; awaiting presidential action as of this writing. Caribbean minimums rose to $200K+ in July 2024 under a regional agreement. All figures are minimum stated investment — additional fees, due diligence costs, and legal expenses apply.
European Golden Visa Programs in 2026
Europe is where the term "golden visa" originated, and the landscape has changed dramatically. Spain and Ireland have closed their programs entirely. Portugal ended its real estate route and may extend the citizenship timeline to 10 years. Greece raised its thresholds significantly. The EU has signaled it wants to phase out investment-based residency programs altogether.
Portugal — Active but Reformed
Investment: €250K (cultural heritage) to €500K (investment funds). Real estate route ended October 2023.
What you get: Temporary residency, renewable. Permanent residency after 5 years. 7 days/year physical presence.
Citizenship: Was 5 years. Parliament voted April 1, 2026 to extend to 10 years — awaiting presidential signature. Processing backlog is ~40 months.
vs Paraguay: Portugal costs 2–4x more upfront (€250K–€500K vs $70K–$200K), has a longer and uncertain citizenship timeline, and a massive processing backlog. Portugal does offer EU citizenship and Schengen access — which Paraguay cannot match. See full Paraguay vs Portugal comparison.
Greece — Active, Thresholds Raised
Investment: €250K (building conversions only) to €800K (Athens, Thessaloniki, Mykonos, Santorini). Tiered by zone since January 2025.
What you get: 5-year renewable residency permit. No minimum stay requirement.
Citizenship: 7 years of tax residency + Greek language exam (B2 level).
vs Paraguay: Greece's cheapest option (€250K) costs more than Paraguay's most expensive new route ($200K). Greece offers Schengen access; Paraguay offers Mercosur access, a territorial tax system, and a faster citizenship path (3 vs 7 years).
Spain and Ireland — Closed
Spain closed its golden visa on April 3, 2025, citing the housing affordability crisis. Ireland closed its Immigrant Investor Programme in February 2023, with no replacement. Both programs are gone permanently.
The closures matter because they show the direction of EU policy. European golden visas are shrinking — fewer options, higher thresholds, longer timelines. Programs that exist today may not exist in the same form in 2–3 years.
Other Active European Programs
Malta: Permanent residency from ~€150K all-in. Citizenship-by-investment closed after EU court ruling (April 2025). No citizenship path through the investment program.
Cyprus: €300K real estate + €50K/year proven income. Permanent residency from day one. Citizenship after 8 years.
Italy: €250K (startup investment) to €2M (government bonds). 2-year renewable investor visa. Citizenship after 10 years. Applications up 63% in 2025.
Hungary: €250K+ in real estate fund or donation. New program launched in 2024.
Caribbean Citizenship by Investment and Other Programs
If your goal is a second passport — not just residency — the Caribbean and a handful of other countries offer direct citizenship by investment. These are Type 3 programs: you invest, you get a passport. No waiting period, no language test, no residency requirement. But the passports vary in travel freedom, and the landscape has shifted.
Caribbean CBI — All Prices Rose in 2024
In March 2024, all five Caribbean CBI nations signed a Memorandum of Agreement setting a $200,000 regional minimum, effective July 1, 2024. This ended years of undercutting. Current donation minimums:
| Country | Donation Min | Real Estate Min | Passport Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dominica | $200,000 | $200,000 | 3–6 months |
| Antigua & Barbuda | $230,000 | $325K–$400K | 3–4 months |
| Grenada | $235,000 | $270,000 | 3–4 months |
| St. Lucia | $240,000 | $300,000 | 3–4 months |
| St. Kitts & Nevis | $250,000 | $400K–$800K | 3–6 months |
vs Paraguay: At $200K, Dominica's donation minimum matches Paraguay's real estate route — but the Caribbean gives a passport instead of residency. Caribbean passports do not provide EU or US visa-free access, and Vanuatu lost its EU access in December 2024. Paraguay offers a Mercosur passport (visa-free in South America), territorial taxation, and a genuine place to live — not just a travel document. And Paraguay's SUACE route at $70K costs a third of the cheapest Caribbean option.
Turkey — Direct Citizenship at $400K
Turkey grants direct citizenship and a passport for a $400,000 real estate purchase (held for 3 years) or $500,000 bank deposit. Processing takes 3–6 months. The main draw is E-2 treaty investor visa eligibility with the US — a backdoor to American residency that most golden visa programs cannot offer.
vs Paraguay: Turkey costs more ($400K vs $200K max) and gives a passport immediately. But Turkey has high inflation, a less stable economy, and no territorial tax system. Paraguay offers territorial taxation, a growing economy, and a path to citizenship in 3 years for less than half the cost.
Panama — Territorial Tax Competitor
Panama's Qualified Investor Visa requires $300K real estate, $500K stock market, or $750K bank deposit. It grants immediate permanent residency. Citizenship after 5 years. Panama also has a territorial tax system and uses the US dollar.
vs Paraguay: Panama's minimum investment ($300K) is higher than Paraguay's maximum new route ($200K). Panama's Friendly Nations Visa is cheaper but requires $200K bank deposit or local employment. Paraguay has a faster citizenship path (3 vs 5 years) and lower cost of living. See full Paraguay vs Panama comparison.
UAE Golden Visa — 10-Year Residency, No Citizenship
The UAE Golden Visa requires ~$545,000 (AED 2 million) in real estate, or qualification as a skilled professional. It grants 10-year renewable residency. There is no path to citizenship — naturalization requires 30 years of residency and is granted at the ruler's discretion.
vs Paraguay: The UAE costs nearly 3x more, does not lead to citizenship, and has no territorial tax system (the UAE simply has no income tax currently, but policy could change). Paraguay offers a constitutional path to citizenship, territorial taxation written into law, and a permanent residency that does not expire after 10 years. See full Paraguay vs Dubai comparison.
Where Paraguay's Investor Pass Wins
Paraguay's program is new, and that carries some risk — implementation details are still being deployed. But in several key areas, it outperforms established golden visa programs:
Lowest Entry Point in South America
The SUACE route at $70,000 is the cheapest investor residency in the region. Panama starts at $200K. Uruguay requires significant business investment. Chile and Argentina have no comparable programs.
Fastest Citizenship Path
3 years from permanent residency to naturalization eligibility. Portugal: 5–10 years. Greece: 7 years. Panama: 5 years. Cyprus: 8 years. Italy: 10 years. Only Caribbean CBI programs are faster — and they cost roughly the same or more for just a passport, not a place to live.
Territorial Tax System
Paraguay does not tax foreign-sourced income. Portugal taxes foreign income after NHR expires (5 years). Greece taxes worldwide income. Only Panama offers a comparable territorial system among golden visa competitors.
Direct Permanent Residency
No temporary phase. Portugal and Italy give temporary residency first. Greece gives a renewable permit. Paraguay gives permanent residency from day one — the same status as Cyprus and Panama at a fraction of the cost.
Frequently Asked Questions
The Bottom Line
Paraguay's Investor Pass is not officially a golden visa — but it does what golden visa programs do: residency through investment, with a path to citizenship. At $70K–$200K, it is priced below every European option and competes directly with Caribbean CBI programs, while offering a territorial tax system and a genuine place to live that citizenship-by-investment programs cannot match.
If you are comparing golden visa programs worldwide, Paraguay belongs on your shortlist — especially if you want territorial taxation, a fast citizenship timeline, or the lowest-cost investor residency in South America.
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