Antigua citizenship by investment remains one of the most established second-citizenship pathways in the Caribbean, offering qualifying applicants and their families full citizenship, a passport with broad visa-free travel, and the economic and lifestyle advantages of Antigua & Barbuda residency. This comprehensive legal guide is designed for high-net-worth individuals, families, and immigration advisory professionals who need a practical, source-linked roadmap from eligibility confirmation through passport collection grounded in the official rules of the Citizenship by Investment Unit (CIU) and the governing legislation.
Choosing the right investment option depends on your capital structure, family size, timeline expectations, and whether you want a tangible asset or a straightforward donation. Consider these guiding principles:
The following eight steps reflect the procedural framework set out by the CIU and the Citizenship by Investment Act, 2013. Each step identifies the key actions, documents, and official requirements an applicant must address.
The principal applicant must be at least 18 years of age, of good character, and in good health. Critically, the applicant must have no criminal convictions, no pending criminal charges in any jurisdiction, and no record of visa refusal to a country with which Antigua & Barbuda maintains a visa-free travel arrangement. Citizens of certain restricted countries may face additional scrutiny or, in some cases, ineligibility.
Family dependants who may be included on a single application typically encompass:
Each additional dependant attracts a separate due diligence fee and government processing fee, detailed in the CIU Schedule of Fees.
Once eligibility is confirmed, the applicant selects one of the four investment options. For real estate, the chosen project must appear on the CIU’s list of approved real estate developments. For business investment, the proposed enterprise requires prior or concurrent approval by the CIU and, ultimately, Cabinet. Applicants considering the NDF or UWI Fund routes do not need project-specific approval, but must still satisfy all other application criteria.
Industry observers expect the CIU to tighten approved-project criteria in line with the 2024 Amendment Regulations and the broader regulatory response to EU concerns, making early project verification essential.
Antigua & Barbuda law requires that every CBI application be submitted through a licensed agent or authorised representative. The CIU publishes a list of licensed agents on its website. Applicants should verify a prospective agent’s license number directly with the CIU, ask about the agent’s escrow and payment handling procedures, and request references before engagement. The agent prepares, reviews, and submits the entire application package on the applicant’s behalf.
The CIU application requires completion of several prescribed forms, referenced on the CIU’s How to Apply page:
All supporting documents must be certified copies apostilled or consularised as required and, where not in English, accompanied by certified translations. The full document checklist is set out in Section 6 below.
The CIU places significant emphasis on the origin and legitimacy of investment funds. Before submission, applicants should assemble a comprehensive source-of-funds package, including bank statements showing an adequate trail of funds, corporate financial documents, sale or purchase agreements, tax returns, and where applicable audited financial statements. A bank comfort letter or escrow confirmation may also be required. Gaps or inconsistencies in the chain of title for funds are one of the most common causes of application delays.
At the point of submission, the applicant must pay 10 % of the applicable government processing fee plus the full due diligence fee for the principal applicant and each dependant. The due diligence fee for the principal applicant is US $8,500. Additional dependant fees are set out in the CIU Schedule of Fees. These fees are non-refundable.
Once submitted, the application enters CIU’s multi-tier vetting process (see Due Diligence, Section 7 below). The licensed agent is the sole point of contact with the CIU during this phase.
If the CIU grants approval in principle, the applicant must make the remaining government processing fees and complete the chosen investment whether the NDF contribution, the real estate purchase (with title transfer), or the business investment (including escrow release). For real estate transactions, title evidence must be provided to the CIU. For business investments, Cabinet-level final approval and satisfaction of escrow conditions apply.
Upon completion of investment obligations, the applicant takes the oath or affirmation of allegiance to Antigua & Barbuda. This can be administered on the applicant’s first visit to Antigua or at an Antigua & Barbuda embassy or high commission abroad. Passports are issued and collected after the oath.
| Option | Minimum Investment | Processing Fee (Single / Family ≤4) | Due Diligence Fee (Principal) | Lock‑in / Conditions | Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Development Fund (NDF) | US $230,000 | US $10,000 / US $20,000 | US $8,500 | Non-refundable contribution; standard conditions | 3–4 months (straightforward cases) |
| Real Estate | US $300,000 | US $10,000 / US $20,000 | US $8,500 | 5-year resale restriction; approved project only | 4–6 months (title transfer dependent) |
| Business Investment | US $1,500,000 (single) / US $5,000,000 (joint; min US $400,000 per person) | Per CIU schedule | US $8,500 | Cabinet approval; escrow mechanics; operational requirements | 5–8+ months (Cabinet review) |
| UWI Fund | US $260,000 (family of 6+) | Per CIU schedule | US $8,500 | Includes one family member tuition credit at UWI | 3–5 months (typical) |
Takeaway: The NDF route is the fastest and most procedurally straightforward. Real estate offers an appreciating asset but adds title-transfer complexity and a five-year lock-in. Business investment suits commercial operators prepared for extended Cabinet-level vetting and escrow structuring. The UWI Fund is attractive for larger families combining citizenship with education planning.
The Citizenship by Investment Act, 2013 sets out the statutory framework for eligibility, grant, and revocation of citizenship obtained through investment. Key eligibility criteria include:
Family inclusion fees apply per dependant and vary by age and relationship. Consult the CIU Schedule of Fees for current per-person charges.
Grounds for refusal or revocation include fraud, misrepresentation, failure to complete investment obligations, national security concerns, or subsequent criminal conduct. The Act grants the Minister, on the recommendation of the CIU, authority to revoke citizenship in such circumstances.
The CIU requires all documents to be submitted as certified copies, with apostille or consular legalisation where applicable. Below is the master checklist aligned with CIU application requirements:
Certification notes: Some documents require notarisation (e.g., statutory declarations), while others require only an original sighting by the licensed agent or a certified-true-copy stamp. Police clearances typically have a limited validity period (usually 6 months), so applicants should time their requests to coincide with the submission window.
The CIU states that all applications are subject to rigorous due diligence, with specific due diligence fees charged per applicant. For the principal, the fee is US $8,500. The due diligence process involves multi-tier checks conducted by the CIU and its appointed international investigation partners:
Practical preparation: Assemble a clear, documented chain of title for all funds from original earning event (e.g., business sale, inheritance, employment) through banking channels to the designated escrow or investment account. Notarised sale agreements, bank comfort letters, and audited financials significantly reduce the risk of clarification requests.
The 2024 Amendment Regulations and the Government’s 2026 statements in response to EU scrutiny signal a continued trend toward enhanced vetting standards. Applicants whose files are flagged for additional inquiry should anticipate extended timelines and possible interview requests.
The CIU does not publish a guaranteed fixed processing period. Based on the procedural framework and published guidance, the following conservative timeline applies to clean, well-prepared applications (these are editorial estimates, not guarantees):
| Phase | Typical Duration | Key Actions |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-submission preparation | 2–6 weeks | Document assembly, certification, agent engagement |
| Submission & initial payments | 0–1 week | 10 % government fee + full due diligence fees paid |
| CIU vetting & due diligence | 6–12 weeks (typical) | Multi-tier checks; clarification requests may extend |
| Approval in principle & final payments | 2–6 weeks | Remaining government fees; investment completion |
| Passport issuance & oath | 2–4 weeks | Oath of allegiance; passport collected |
Overall range: 3–6 months for straightforward NDF applications; real estate and business investment applications may take longer due to title transfer, escrow mechanics, and Cabinet approvals respectively.
Key fee components (per the CIU Schedule of Fees):
Upon citizenship grant, the oath of allegiance can be taken either on the applicant’s first visit to Antigua or at an Antigua & Barbuda embassy or high commission. The passport is collected after the oath. There is no minimum physical residency requirement prior to citizenship grant; however, citizens are expected to maintain the conditions of their investment.
Real estate investors face a five-year resale restriction: the property may not be sold within five years of the citizenship grant unless the applicant reinvests in another CIU-approved project of equal or greater value.
Antigua & Barbuda citizenship does not automatically create a tax residence residents may become subject to local taxation depending on their physical presence and circumstances. Applicants should obtain independent tax and legal advice regarding their obligations in both Antigua & Barbuda and their country of origin.
Prospective applicants for Antigua citizenship by investment should take the following immediate actions:
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