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Last updated: 22 May 2026
Understanding the current Greece Golden Visa requirements is essential for any non-EU investor considering a property-based route to Greek residency in 2026. Recent legislative clarifications, stemming from Law No. 5162/2024 and subsequent ministerial guidance, have reset minimum investment thresholds, introduced zone-specific pricing tiers, and tightened conditions around property size and letting. This guide sets out every rule an investor needs to satisfy, from zone-by-zone minimum values and the one-property/120 sqm conditions to short-term rental restrictions and a full legal due-diligence checklist. Whether the target is an Athens apartment, a Mykonos villa, or a portfolio of mainland units, the compliance steps below apply.
Law No. 5162/2024, published in the Government Gazette (FEK) in late 2024, introduced the most significant amendments to Greece’s investor-residence framework since its 2013 launch. The 2026 implementation guidance issued by the Greek Ministry of Migration & Asylum has since clarified several outstanding points, making it vital for applicants to work from the current rules rather than legacy summaries. For a detailed walkthrough of every legislative change, see the Greece Golden Visa: 2026 changes deep dive.
The headline shifts are threefold. First, Greece adopted a tiered property-threshold system that differentiates high-demand zones (such as Attica, Thessaloniki, Mykonos, and Santorini) from lower-demand mainland and island areas. Second, the legislation introduced a “single-property” condition alongside a minimum-size requirement of 120 square metres for certain threshold bands, designed to prevent micro-unit portfolio stacking. Third, the law expanded alternative investment pathways, including a formalised startup-equity route via the Elevate Greece national registry. Together, these changes reflect a policy intent to channel investment toward quality residential acquisitions rather than speculative micro-purchases, while diversifying the programme beyond real estate.
The Greece Golden Visa official site maintained by the Ministry of Migration & Asylum remains the authoritative source for application forms, document lists, and processing updates. Investors should cross-reference any commercial guidance with the official portal before making binding commitments.
While real estate remains the dominant pathway, the 2026 framework recognises several qualifying investment categories. The comparison table below summarises each route and its minimum commitment.
| Investment Option | Minimum Threshold (2026) | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Real estate property | €250,000 – €800,000 (zone-dependent) | Net of VAT where applicable; one-property and 120 sqm rules may apply, see thresholds table below. |
| Startup / Elevate Greece listed company | €250,000 (equity or qualifying investment) | Company must be listed on the Greek National Startup Registry; documentary proof of registration required. |
| Other (bonds, deposits, fund units) | Varies by category | Verify eligibility and documentary requirements directly via migration.gov.gr; specialist legal advice recommended. |
The property route is the focus of this guide. It offers the clearest compliance pathway for most investors: purchase a qualifying property (or properties, where permitted) meeting the zone-specific minimum, complete the notarial transfer, register the title, and file for the residence permit.
Under the provisions introduced by Law 5162/2024, non-EU nationals may invest at least €250,000 in a company certified by the Elevate Greece programme. The investment must be evidenced through audited accounts, share certificates, and proof of beneficial ownership.
Bond purchases, bank deposits, and regulated-fund units each carry their own minimum thresholds and documentation requirements. Because these routes attract fewer applicants and the rules are less settled in practice, obtaining specialist counsel before committing funds is strongly recommended.
The zone-based threshold system is the single most consequential change investors must grasp. Rather than a flat national minimum, Greece now assigns different minimum purchase values depending on the property’s geographic location and, in higher-tier zones, imposes additional conditions on property count and size.
| Zone / Area | Minimum Property Value (€) | Key Conditions |
|---|---|---|
| Attica (including Athens), Thessaloniki municipality, Mykonos, Santorini | €800,000 | Must be a single property; minimum 120 sqm usable area. |
| Other high-demand islands and select coastal municipalities | €400,000 | Single-property rule applies; 120 sqm minimum applies in designated municipalities. |
| Remaining mainland and lower-demand islands | €250,000 | Multiple properties may be combined to meet the threshold; no minimum-size condition. |
Source: Thresholds reflect the framework established by Law 5162/2024 and subsequent ministerial guidance published on migration.gov.gr. Exact municipal classifications may be updated by ministerial decision, always verify the current list before signing a preliminary contract.
In the top-tier zones (Attica, Thessaloniki, Mykonos, Santorini), investors must channel the entire minimum investment into a single property. Splitting €800,000 across two Athens apartments, for example, will not satisfy the requirement. The rule is intended to direct capital toward higher-value residential acquisitions and curtail the micro-unit accumulation strategy that previously flourished.
Alongside the single-property mandate, designated high-demand zones require the purchased unit to have a usable area of at least 120 square metres. “Usable area” follows the definition in Greek building regulations (typically excluding common areas, balconies beyond a set proportion, and storage rooms). Investors should insist that the property’s building permit and technical report confirm compliance before exchanging contracts.
An investor targeting a newly built two-bedroom apartment in central Athens must ensure the purchase price is at least €800,000, the property is a single unit, and its usable area meets or exceeds 120 sqm. By contrast, an investor purchasing two mainland properties, one for €150,000 and another for €100,000, in a qualifying lower-demand municipality may aggregate both to clear the €250,000 floor, with no single-property or size constraint.
Qualifying real estate under the Golden Visa framework includes residential apartments, houses, villas, and, in certain circumstances, commercial properties and land. Off-plan purchases are permissible provided the preliminary sale contract is notarised and the full purchase price demonstrably meets the minimum threshold. For off-plan, evidence of stage payments through a Greek bank account is critical, and the final notarial deed must be executed upon completion.
Bare land can qualify, but the investment value must still meet the zone threshold. Because undeveloped plots rarely reach €800,000 in high-demand areas without an attached construction project, this route is more common in the €250,000 mainland tier. Investors combining land purchase with a building contract should ensure the total outlay, land plus construction, is captured correctly in the notarial documentation.
Where the rules permit multiple-property aggregation (the €250,000 tier), all units must be registered in the applicant’s name. Mixed ownership structures (e.g., partial co-ownership with a spouse not on the Golden Visa application) can create compliance gaps. Legal counsel should review the title arrangement before the preliminary contract is signed. For a broader overview of recent legislative changes affecting property transactions, see the Greece property law changes 2026 guide.
One of the most misunderstood aspects of the Greece Golden Visa requirements concerns whether, and how, an investor may rent out a qualifying property. The Golden Visa legislation itself does not expressly prohibit letting. However, practical constraints and regulatory obligations can indirectly affect compliance.
Short-term letting (platforms such as Airbnb) triggers a separate registration and licensing regime at the municipal level. Properties offered for short-term rental must be registered on the Greek tax authority’s Short-Term Letting Registry (the “AADE registry”), and income is taxable in Greece. Crucially, in certain high-demand municipalities, local authorities have introduced caps or seasonal restrictions on short-term lets. Failure to comply can result in fines and, in theory, affect the property’s regulatory standing.
Industry observers expect Greek authorities to scrutinise letting arrangements more closely as the programme matures, particularly where high-demand-zone properties are purchased primarily for rental yield rather than genuine residential investment. Investors should build protective covenants into sale contracts, including representations that the property’s use is not restricted by zoning or municipal order, and seek up-to-date municipal clearance before committing. Further detail on Greece’s evolving short-term rental regime can be found in our guide to short-term rentals and the Airbnb legal framework in Greece.
The process of acquiring Golden Visa-eligible property in Greece follows a structured sequence. Skipping or compressing steps, particularly due diligence, is the single most common cause of application delays and rejections.
Before making an offer, a qualified Greek lawyer should conduct:
Investors must prepare the following core documentation:
Once due diligence is satisfactory, a preliminary sale agreement (prosynfonitiko) is typically signed at the notary’s office, with a reservation deposit paid (usually 10% of the purchase price). The notary then schedules the final deed signing. At execution, the buyer signs the notarial purchase deed, pays the remaining balance (confirmed by bank transfer), and the notary submits the deed for registration.
An AFM is mandatory before any property transaction. Opening a Greek bank account is equally essential, the purchase price must flow through a documented banking channel to satisfy both tax-authority and Golden Visa audit requirements. Power of attorney may be granted to a Greek lawyer to handle AFM issuance and bank-account opening on the investor’s behalf, provided the power of attorney is notarised and apostilled in the investor’s country.
After the notarial deed is executed, it must be registered at the competent Land Registry or Cadastre office. Only once registration is complete does the title formally transfer. The investor then assembles the Golden Visa application file, including the registered deed, proof of payment, AFM confirmation, insurance, and criminal-record certificate, and submits it to the Decentralised Administration or migration authority. Biometric data (fingerprints and photograph) are collected at a scheduled appointment.
Understanding the full cost of a Golden Visa property acquisition is critical for budgeting. The property transfer tax in Greece is one of the largest transactional costs, but notary, registration, and legal fees also apply.
| Fee Type | Rate / Amount | Timing / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Property transfer tax (resale / no VAT) | 3.09% of the declared purchase price | Paid before deed signing; applies to resale properties not subject to VAT. |
| VAT (new-build, first transfer) | 24% (where applicable) | Applies to properties with building permits issued after 1 January 2006; suspended for certain categories, verify current status with counsel. |
| Notary fee | Approximately 0.8%–1.5% of the purchase price | Payable at deed execution; includes preparation, certification, and registration submission. |
| Land Registry / Cadastre fee | Approximately 0.5%–0.7% | Payable upon registration of the deed. |
| Legal fees | Typically 1%–2% (negotiable) | Covers due diligence, contract review, Golden Visa filing assistance, and representation. |
| Golden Visa application fee | €2,000 per main applicant | Payable to the migration authority at the time of filing; additional fees for dependants. |
For new-build properties, the interplay between VAT and transfer tax requires careful structuring. Where VAT applies, the 3.09% transfer tax is generally not also levied. However, if the VAT suspension applies to a given category, the transfer tax reverts. These rules change periodically, so confirming the current regime with a tax-qualified lawyer before exchanging contracts is essential. Additional detail on the latest rates and exemptions is available in our Greece property law changes 2026 guide.
A rigorous due-diligence process is non-negotiable when the purchase also underpins a residency application. Any defect discovered after filing can delay or defeat the Golden Visa. The checklist below reflects best practice for Greek property acquisitions tied to the Golden Visa programme.
Once the property purchase is registered and all supporting documents are assembled, the Golden Visa application is submitted to the competent Decentralised Administration, or, in certain areas, through the Ministry’s digital platform as directed on migration.gov.gr.
The file typically includes the registered notarial deed, proof of the full purchase-price payment via bank transfer, a valid passport, AFM confirmation, health insurance, criminal-record certificate, and the application fee receipt. Family members (spouse, children under 21, and dependent parents of both spouses) may be included in the same application, each requiring their own documentation package.
Processing times are variable. Industry observers report that file assembly and document legalisation typically take two to six weeks, while the migration authority’s review and biometrics scheduling can range from two to several months depending on the applicant’s location and the backlog at the relevant office. The Golden Visa residence permit is issued for five years and is renewable, provided the qualifying investment remains in the applicant’s name. Renewals require updated proof of property ownership and valid insurance. Holders who wish to explore longer-term residency pathways should review the requirements for a five-year residence permit in Greece and, separately, the rules on Greek migration law and procedural compliance.
Golden Visa applications are rejected or delayed most often for avoidable reasons. The following red flags should be treated as deal-breakers unless fully resolved before the notarial deed is signed:
To mitigate these risks, experienced practitioners recommend including robust warranty and indemnity clauses in the preliminary sale agreement, using an escrow mechanism for the purchase-price deposit, and retaining a qualified Greek lawyer from the outset. The likely practical effect of the stricter 2026 rules will be a rise in rejections linked to the one-property and 120 sqm conditions, investors who attempt to circumvent these rules through creative structuring should expect increased scrutiny.
Scenario 1, Athens resale apartment (€800,000, single property). A non-EU investor purchases a 135 sqm resale apartment in the Athens municipality for €800,000. The 3.09% transfer tax applies (approximately €24,720). The property is a single unit exceeding 120 sqm. Due diligence confirms clear title and no encumbrances. The Golden Visa application is filed with the registered deed and approved within four months. Outcome: compliant.
Scenario 2, Mykonos new-build villa (€950,000, VAT applicable). An investor purchases a newly constructed 180 sqm villa on Mykonos for €950,000, inclusive of 24% VAT. The sale qualifies as a first transfer of a post-2006 building, so VAT, not transfer tax, applies. The single-property and 120 sqm rules are satisfied. However, the investor plans to let the villa on Airbnb during peak season. Legal counsel confirms the municipality has short-term letting registration requirements and seasonal caps. The investor registers with AADE and the municipality before commencing rentals. Outcome: compliant, provided municipal rules are followed.
Scenario 3, Two mainland properties totalling €300,000. An investor purchases two apartments in a qualifying lower-demand mainland town, one at €180,000 and one at €120,000. Neither the single-property nor the 120 sqm rule applies in this tier. Both deeds are registered in the investor’s name. Combined value clears the €250,000 floor. Outcome: compliant, with straightforward aggregation.
The 2026 Greece Golden Visa requirements are more nuanced than ever. Zone-based thresholds, the one-property and 120 sqm conditions, and tighter letting scrutiny mean that property selection, contract structuring, and due diligence must all be handled with precision. Investors who rely solely on promotional guides risk costly errors, from purchasing a property that falls short of the size threshold to discovering an undisclosed encumbrance after funds have been transferred.
The most effective safeguard is early engagement with a qualified Greek property lawyer who can conduct a full title and compliance review, advise on tax structuring, and manage the Golden Visa filing. For a curated list of specialists, visit the Greece lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kimon Papanikolaou at K.PAPANIKOLAOU-L.BOUTSIKARIS & ASSOCIATES LAW FIRM, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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