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Last updated: 15 June 2026
Understanding the Greece spouse visa requirements is the essential first step for any foreign national who wants to join a partner living in Greece. Since Law 5275/2026 (Government Gazette A’ 17, 06.02.2026) restructured residence‑permit categories, family members’ work rights and single‑permit processing rules, the pathway from a Type D national visa to a full residence card has changed in several important ways. This guide walks through every stage of the spousal visa process, eligibility, documents, income and insurance proof, consular application steps, conversion to a residence permit after arrival, realistic processing times and appeal options, so that applicants can prepare a complete file and avoid the most common rejection triggers.
Yes. The spouse or registered partner of a Greek citizen or lawful resident can live in Greece by first obtaining a Type D (national) visa at a Greek consulate abroad and then converting it to a residence permit after arrival. Here is a quick summary of what that involves:
Law 5275/2026, published on 6 February 2026, is the most significant Greece family visa update in recent years. It overhauled the Immigration and Social Integration Code, introduced a single‑permit framework aligning with EU directives, and clarified the rights that accompany each residence‑permit category.
For spouse and family applicants, the key effects are threefold. First, the law consolidated several permit sub‑categories into clearer groups, making it simpler to identify which residence card a family member should apply for. Second, it explicitly confirmed that holders of a family‑member residence permit have the right to take up employment and self‑employment without needing a separate work authorisation, an important change that previously depended on ministerial decisions. Third, it aligned document‑verification and biometric‑collection procedures with Regulation (EU) 2024/1233, meaning that applicants should expect mandatory fingerprinting at the Decentralised Administration stage.
| Date | Event | Practical effect |
|---|---|---|
| 6 February 2026 | Law 5275/2026 published (FEK A’ 17) | New permit categories and single‑permit rules take effect |
| February–March 2026 | Implementing circulars issued by Ministry of Migration | Decentralised Administrations adopt new forms and procedures |
| Ongoing 2026 | Transitional period for pending applications | Applications filed before 6 Feb 2026 processed under prior rules unless applicant opts in to new framework |
The standard route for a spousal visa in Greece is the Type D national visa for family reunification, applied for at the Greek consulate or embassy in the applicant’s country of residence. This is the correct visa for third‑country nationals who are outside Greece and want to join a Greek‑citizen or resident spouse.
There are, however, alternative routes in specific situations. Nationals of countries that enjoy visa‑free entry to the Schengen area may enter Greece without a visa, but they cannot convert a tourist stay into a residence permit inside Greece unless they fall under the EU family‑member route described below. Attempting to stay beyond 90 days without a permit risks penalties under the Greece migration law on illegal stay.
If the sponsor is an EU or EEA citizen (not Greek) exercising free‑movement rights in Greece, the non‑EU spouse may apply directly for a family member of Greek citizen residence card, more precisely, a “residence card of a family member of a Union citizen.” This route can be initiated inside Greece without a D visa in certain circumstances, and the residence card is typically valid for five years. The procedural requirements differ from the standard D‑visa track: the applicant submits directly to the regional Decentralised Administration, presenting proof of the EU citizen’s registration certificate, the marriage certificate, and standard identity and insurance documents.
Eligibility for a family visa in Greece depends on demonstrating a genuine, legally recognised relationship and meeting several administrative preconditions:
Same‑sex marriages lawfully contracted abroad are recognised for immigration purposes in Greece. De facto (unregistered) partnerships, however, do not qualify for family reunification unless they are formalised into a registered civil union. Marriages registered late, for instance, a religious ceremony performed years ago and only recently transcribed into civil records, are accepted provided the official registration certificate is current and apostilled.
A complete and correctly authenticated file is the single most important factor in avoiding delays. The documents needed for a spousal visa can be grouped into applicant documents, sponsor documents and administrative items.
| Document | Where to obtain it | Authentication required |
|---|---|---|
| Valid passport (min. 12 months remaining, 2 blank pages) | Applicant’s national passport authority | Original, no apostille needed |
| Completed Type D visa application form | Greek consulate or MFA website (downloadable PDF) | Signed in original |
| Two recent passport‑sized photographs | Any photo service (ICAO standards) | N/A |
| Marriage certificate or registered partnership certificate | Civil registry of marriage country | Apostille (or consular legalisation for non‑Hague countries) + certified Greek translation |
| Criminal record certificate | Police / justice authority of applicant’s country | Apostille + certified Greek translation; must be recent (typically issued within the last 3 months) |
| Medical certificate (no communicable disease of public health concern) | Approved physician / hospital | Certified Greek translation |
| Health insurance, private coverage valid in Greece | Insurance company (Greek or international) | Greek translation of policy if issued in another language |
| Sponsor’s Greek ID or passport + residence permit (if applicable) | Sponsor provides original or certified copy | Certified copy |
| Sponsor’s proof of income (tax returns, payslips, bank statements) | Greek tax authority (AADE) / employer | Originals; if in Greek, no translation needed |
| Proof of accommodation (rental contract, title deed, utility bill in sponsor’s name) | Sponsor, registered with AADE (rental) or land registry (ownership) | Certified copy; see Greece property law changes 2026 for current ownership rules |
| Visa fee payment receipt | Greek consulate at time of application | Original receipt |
Practitioner experience shows that the following errors account for the majority of spousal visa rejections in Greece:
Greek consulates and the Decentralised Administration assess whether the sponsoring spouse can support the applicant without recourse to public funds. There is no single published euro‑amount threshold for Greece spouse visa requirements, but the practical benchmark is that the sponsor’s income should be broadly equivalent to the statutory minimum wage for a couple, with an uplift for dependants.
Acceptable proof of income includes the sponsor’s most recent annual tax return (Ε1 form from AADE), payslips from the last three to six months, an employer letter confirming salary and contract status, or, for self‑employed sponsors, the latest tax assessment and business registration documents. Bank statements showing consistent savings or regular deposits strengthen the application.
Accommodation proof must show that the couple has suitable housing. A registered rental agreement (uploaded to the AADE electronic platform) or a title deed in the sponsor’s name satisfies this requirement. Utility bills corroborate the address.
Health insurance is non‑negotiable at both the D‑visa and residence‑permit stages. For the visa application, private insurance covering hospitalisation and emergency care in Greece is required. After the residence permit is issued and the spouse registers for employment, they become eligible for public social insurance (EFKA), which then satisfies the ongoing insurance obligation.
While not always mandatory, a short declaration from the sponsor can strengthen the file. A practical template reads: “I, [full name], Greek citizen / holder of residence permit no. [X], residing at [address], hereby declare that I will provide accommodation and financial support to my spouse, [applicant full name], passport no. [X], for the duration of their stay in Greece. I enclose my tax returns and rental agreement as evidence of my means.” The letter should be signed, dated and, where the consulate requires, accompanied by a certified copy of the sponsor’s ID.
The consular stage is the gateway to a spousal visa in Greece. Here is the step‑by‑step process:
Expect questions such as: “When and where did you marry?”, “Where does your spouse live and work in Greece?”, and “Do you have children together?” Answer honestly and concisely. Bring supporting evidence (photographs, correspondence records, joint financial accounts) in case the consul wants additional proof of a genuine relationship. If the interview is conducted in Greek or English and you need an interpreter, check with the consulate beforehand about language support.
Once in Greece on a valid D visa, the applicant must apply for a residence permit before the visa expires. Applications are submitted to the Aliens and Immigration Department of the Decentralised Administration in the region where the couple resides, for the Athens area, this is the Apd Attikis.
The submission process involves:
The Decentralised Administration reviews the file and, if complete, issues a residence card. For spouses of Greek citizens, the card is typically valid for three years (renewable), while family members of EU citizens receive a card valid for five years.
This is a common concern. Provided the residence permit application was submitted before the D visa expired, the blue receipt protects the applicant’s legal stay. The applicant may remain in Greece, and, critically, may also travel within the Schengen area with the receipt and a valid passport, although re‑entry rules should be confirmed with the immigration office in each case. If the D visa is about to expire and no appointment is available, contact the Decentralised Administration immediately to request an expedited submission slot or interim documentation.
The total processing time for a Greece spouse visa from initial consular application to residence card in hand is highly variable. The table below provides realistic ranges based on current practitioner observations.
| Step | Typical processing time | What commonly causes delays |
|---|---|---|
| Type D visa application (consulate) | 4–12 weeks | Incomplete documents; security checks; high‑season backlogs |
| Enter Greece and submit residence permit application | 1–6 months (Decentralised Administration processing) | Biometric appointment availability; missing translations; regional caseload differences |
| Residence card issuance (after approval) | 2–8 weeks | Card production delays; postal delivery issues |
In a best‑case scenario, the entire process from consular application to card in hand takes roughly three to four months. In a slower scenario, particularly in high‑demand regions such as Attica, it can stretch to nine months or more. Applicants should plan accordingly and ensure that their health insurance and passport validity cover the maximum expected timeline.
Under Law 5275/2026, holders of a family‑member residence permit are entitled to take up employment and self‑employment in Greece without needing a separate work authorisation. This is a significant practical benefit confirmed by the 2026 legislative reform.
To begin working, the spouse must:
Social entitlements, including access to the public healthcare system (ESY), unemployment benefits and pension accrual, flow from EFKA registration once contributions are made. The spouse’s residence card, combined with an AFM and EFKA number, provides full integration into the Greek tax and social security system. Those interested in starting a business in Greece should note that the family‑member permit covers self‑employment as well.
A refusal, whether at the consular D‑visa stage or the residence‑permit stage, is not necessarily final. The applicant has the right to challenge the decision through administrative remedies.
At the consular level, the applicant may file a recourse (αίτηση θεραπείας) to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, typically within a set deadline stated in the refusal letter. Including additional or corrected documents with the recourse can resolve straightforward issues such as a missing apostille.
At the residence‑permit stage, a rejection by the Decentralised Administration can be challenged through an administrative appeal (ενδικοφανής προσφυγή) and, if that fails, an application to the administrative courts. Critically, filing an appeal may suspend the deportation obligation while the case is reviewed, but this depends on the specific grounds and should be verified with legal counsel.
Industry observers note that early legal advice, before the first consular appointment, materially reduces the risk of refusal. If a refusal has already occurred, professional representation at the appeal stage significantly improves the chances of reversal, particularly where the refusal relates to document authentication errors or misinterpretation of the sponsor’s eligibility. Use the lawyer directory to find an immigration lawyer in Greece.
Use this quick‑reference checklist to ensure nothing is missed. Print it or save it for offline use.
For a downloadable one‑page PDF version of this checklist and further guidance, visit the Greece immigration lawyer directory.
Meeting the Greece spouse visa requirements under Law 5275/2026 involves a clear, if sometimes lengthy, two‑stage process: obtaining a Type D visa at the consulate, then converting it to a residence permit after arrival. Preparing a complete, correctly apostilled and translated document file, and understanding the income, insurance and accommodation evidence expected, is the most effective way to avoid refusals and reduce processing delays. For case‑specific guidance on family reunification in Greece, explore the immigration lawyer directory or browse related guides, including the family reunification process in Portugal for comparative context.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Alkinoos Thomas Konis at Nexus Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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