Turkey citizenship by investment offers high-net-worth individuals a direct pathway to Turkish nationality through qualifying financial commitments. The most popular route requires a minimum real estate purchase of USD 400,000 with a three-year resale restriction annotated on the title deed. Alternative routes including bank deposits, government bonds, fund shares, and fixed capital investments set the threshold at USD 500,000. Applications may include a spouse and minor children. Yet investors consistently seek clarity on two critical fronts: the practical enforcement of the three-year holding period and the precise documentation each Turkish regulatory authority demands as proof of qualifying investment. This guide, last reviewed July 17, 2026, addresses every material eligibility question with citations to official Turkish government and regulatory sources.
Regulatory adjustments between 2022 and late 2023 refined the enforcement framework without altering headline thresholds. A December 12, 2023 amendment to the implementing regulation reflected in updated TKGM guidance tightened the documentation pipeline, specifying which agency issues the conformity certificate (uygunluk belgesi) and at what stage. Meanwhile, the Central Bank’s (TCMB) instructions on foreign-currency sales impose same-day reporting obligations on banks, yet receipt issuance can lag by several business days a gap that catches unprepared investors.
For fund-route applicants, the Capital Markets Board (SPK) requires an MKK (Central Securities Depository) block before settlement is finalized, and MKK conducts weekly monitoring throughout the three-year period. A failure to secure the block before completing payment is one of the most common errors advisers encounter. Understanding which documents each agency requires and obtaining them in the correct sequence is essential to avoid delays, additional costs, or outright application rejection.
Before committing funds, prospective applicants should verify they meet the following baseline criteria for Turkey citizenship by investment:
Not every real estate interest meets the threshold. The property must carry an independent title deed (tapu) classified as either kat mülkiyeti (condominium ownership) or kat irtifakı (construction easement with approved building plans). Bare agricultural land or parcels without qualifying development generally do not suffice. The TKGM’s guidance on the implementing regulation and its 2023 revision clarify these categories and set out how the General Directorate assesses eligibility at registration.
A licensed valuation report from an SPK-accredited appraisal firm is mandatory. The report must confirm the property’s market value meets or exceeds USD 400,000 (or foreign-currency equivalent). Currency conversion follows TCMB/SPK exchange-rate conventions applicable on the date of the deed transfer. Investors should ensure the valuation is commissioned before signing a purchase commitment, as discrepancies between the contract price and the appraised value are a leading cause of delays.
Applicants may aggregate the value of two or more independently titled properties to meet the USD 400,000 minimum. Each property must be registered with the three-year resale restriction on its respective title deed. All purchases contributing to the threshold must be documented and presented together during the attestation stage. Industry observers note that combining properties in different provinces can add administrative complexity, as each Land Registry office processes its own annotation independently.
The title deed transfer at the local Tapu office involves several linked steps: execution of the sale agreement, payment verification through a Döviz Alım Belgesi (foreign-currency purchase document issued by the bank upon converting foreign currency to Turkish lira), and registration of the three-year resale restriction (şerh) on the deed. A notary-witnessed promise of sale (satış vaadi sözleşmesi) may be used when a pre-agreement is needed before the formal transfer. Once the deed transfer is recorded, the Ministry of Environment, Urbanization and Climate Change acting through TKGM issues the conformity certificate (uygunluk belgesi), confirming the purchase meets CBI criteria.
Anonymized vignette Family investor (EMEA), property route: A family of four (principal investor, spouse, two minor children) purchased two independent apartment units in Istanbul with a combined tapu value of USD 420,000. Pre-purchase counsel confirmed clear title status and the licensed valuation. The Döviz Alım Belgesi and TKGM uygunluk letter were obtained without issue. The citizenship application to NVI proceeded smoothly, and approval was granted within approximately five months of attestation. Key lesson: pre-purchase title and valuation checks saved weeks of potential delay.
Buyers should budget for title deed transfer tax (typically 4 percent of the declared value, split by convention between buyer and seller), stamp duty on the contract, and for new-build properties from a developer potential VAT (KDV) implications. Tax treatment varies depending on whether the seller is a VAT-registered entity and on the property’s size and location. Independent local tax advice is recommended before completing any purchase.
Turkey offers several alternative investment pathways, each requiring a minimum of USD 500,000 and verified by a designated Turkish authority:
Each financial route requires a specific documentary chain. For fund shares, the investor must apply to the SPK for a suitability certificate and request that MKK apply a citizenship block (vatandaşlık blokajı) to the units. For bank deposits, the bank issues a formal confirmation letter stating the deposit amount and account restrictions, while the TCMB sale receipt verifies that foreign currency was properly converted. Key documents include:
Anonymized vignette Single investor (Asia), fund route: An investor allocated USD 500,000 to a GYF (real-estate investment fund). The SPK application and MKK block were requested before the fund settlement was finalized, ensuring the block was in place from day one. The TCMB sale to a local bank was completed and the receipt submitted alongside the SPK attestation. During the three-year retention, MKK weekly monitoring flagged temporary NAV volatility, but SPK guidance confirmed that exchange-rate fluctuations alone do not void eligibility. Citizenship was approved after standard administrative checks. Key lesson: secure SPK and MKK confirmations before finalizing payment.
Fund investors face risks that property buyers typically do not: net asset value (NAV) may fluctuate, a fund may undergo restructuring, or in rare cases closure. SPK guidance generally holds that market-driven valuation drops attributable to exchange-rate movements do not, by themselves, disqualify an applicant. However, issuer-initiated reductions or voluntary block removal during the three-year period will likely trigger review. MKK’s weekly control reports provide an automated monitoring layer.
| Route | Minimum (USD) | Attesting Authority | Proof Required | Holding Period | Enforcement Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Property (title deed) | 400,000 | Ministry of Environment / TKGM | Tapu + Döviz Alım Belgesi + licensed valuation + resale restriction on tapu | 3 years | Title encumbrance or sale before 3 years can trigger review |
| Bank deposit | 500,000 | BDDK (bank) + TCMB (sale) | Bank letter + TCMB sale receipt | 3 years | Bank/TCMB reporting routine; deposit must not be withdrawn |
| Government bonds | 500,000 | Ministry of Treasury | Purchase receipt + TCMB sale documentation | 3 years | Bonds must remain unsold; market liquidity risks apply |
| Fund shares (GYF/GSYF) | 500,000 | SPK + MKK | SPK suitability certificate + MKK block confirmation | 3 years | MKK weekly monitoring; block removal not permitted |
| Fixed capital / employment | Varies | Relevant ministry | Evidence of investment / employer registration | Varies | Requires ministry attestation; thresholds and proof differ by case |
The three-year holding period begins on the date the resale restriction is annotated on the title deed (for property) or the date the block/deposit is confirmed by the relevant authority (for financial routes). “Continuous” means uninterrupted the investor must not sell, transfer, gift, or attach additional encumbrances (such as mortgages taken after the purchase) to the qualifying asset during this period. For fund shares, the TKGM’s revised guidance and SPK’s own instructions make clear that the economic interest must remain with the applicant and that any attempt to restructure, novate, or circumvent the restriction will void the retention requirement.
Monitoring is not theoretical. For fund shares, the MKK runs weekly automated checks to verify that the citizenship block remains active. For bank deposits, the BDDK and TCMB oversee reporting by the depositary bank. If a violation is detected for example, a premature sale, withdrawal, or block removal the relevant agency notifies the General Directorate of Population and Citizenship Affairs (NVI) and the Directorate General of Migration Management (Göç İdaresi). Consequences can include revocation of the residence permit, suspension of the citizenship application, or if citizenship has already been granted initiation of a review process.
A Turkey citizenship by investment application may include the principal applicant’s spouse and minor children. As stated in the TKGM guide on the implementing regulation, children who are under 18 at the date of application are generally eligible for inclusion. Adult children are typically not covered under the investment-linked provision. Where a child is from a previous marriage, custody documentation must clearly establish the applicant’s legal authority. Step-children may be included depending on the legal custody arrangement and the requirements of the provincial civil registration office.
Each dependant must provide original or certified-copy civil-status documents: birth certificates, marriage certificates, and where applicable divorce decrees or custody orders. All documents from foreign jurisdictions must be apostilled (for Hague Convention countries) or legalized through the relevant Turkish consulate, then translated into Turkish by a sworn translator (yeminli tercüman). Incomplete apostilles or mistranslations are among the most frequently cited reasons for application delays.
Include all intended dependants at the initial application stage. Adding family members after the principal applicant’s citizenship has been granted introduces separate administrative procedures and can significantly extend the overall timeline.
All applicants must submit a valid passport (with at least six months remaining validity), biometric photographs, a birth certificate, and where applicable a marriage certificate. Each foreign-issued document must be apostilled or consulate-legalized and accompanied by a sworn Turkish translation. Originals and notarized copies are typically required.
A police clearance certificate is required from the applicant’s country of nationality and, in some cases, from any country where the applicant has resided for a significant period. Certificates should generally be recent (typically issued within the preceding six months).
Turkish authorities and local counsel will expect documentary proof of the origin of the investment funds. For property purchases, this includes bank statements tracing the transfer from the investor’s overseas account through to the Turkish receiving account, the TCMB Döviz Alım Belgesi, the sale contract, and (for corporate-sourced funds) notarized corporate resolutions or audited accounts. For fund and deposit routes, the bank confirmation letter, MKK block confirmation, and TCMB sale receipt are critical. Investors relying on asset sales or third-party funding should prepare notarized declarations explaining the source chain.
Engaging qualified local counsel for KYC (know-your-customer) and anti-money-laundering compliance checks is strongly recommended. Counsel should verify that the seller, the property, and the transaction structure do not raise red flags under Turkish AML legislation.
Before transferring any funds, investors should have: (a) written confirmation from local counsel that the property or financial product qualifies; (b) a current licensed valuation report (property route); (c) confirmation of the bank’s ability to issue the Döviz Alım Belgesi on the same day; and (d) for fund routes, a pre-arranged SPK suitability application and MKK block instruction.
The following checklist summarizes the essential items qualified counsel should verify and obtain at each stage of a Turkey citizenship by investment application:
A downloadable PDF version of this checklist including a one-page documents list and a timeline snapshot is available for investors and advisers who wish to use it as a working reference throughout the application process.
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