Turkey citizenship by investment remains one of the most accessible and strategically valuable programmes for high-net-worth individuals seeking a second passport with global reach. Under the programme, foreign nationals who make a qualifying investment most commonly the purchase of real estate valued at a minimum of USD 400,000 can acquire Turkish citizenship for themselves and their immediate families. Six distinct investment routes exist, each verified by a designated government authority, and each subject to a mandatory holding period.
In 2026, enforcement of valuation standards and foreign-exchange traceability requirements has intensified. The Land Registry and Cadastre Directorate (TKGM) now conducts closer scrutiny of conformity certificate applications, while the Capital Markets Board (SPK) has tightened oversight of authorised appraisers. Applicants who rely on outdated guidance or who trust claims of “passport in under four months” risk costly delays and outright refusal. This guide provides a conservative, lawyer-led walkthrough grounded in the official requirements of the Turkish Investment Office, TKGM, the Presidency of Migration Management (Göç İdaresi), the General Directorate of Civil Registration and Nationality (NVI), and SPK regulations.
This page is designed for high-net-worth individuals evaluating a second citizenship, immigration advisers structuring client cases, real-estate investors exploring the Turkish market, and lawyers coordinating cross-border applications. Whether you are comparing Turkey’s programme against alternatives or preparing to file an application, the numbered process below, document checklist, fee guidance and realistic timelines will equip you with actionable, compliance-focused intelligence.
Turkey offers six qualifying routes. Real estate is the most popular because it provides a tangible, income-generating asset. Bank deposits (USD 500,000 minimum) and government bonds (USD 500,000) offer simpler administration but lock capital without rental yield. Venture-capital or real-estate fund shares (USD 500,000) suit investors comfortable with fund structures. Fixed capital investment (USD 500,000) and job creation (50 employees minimum) target operational entrepreneurs. Each route has a distinct verifying authority and liquidity profile. Property investors benefit from potential capital appreciation and rental income but bear due-diligence and valuation risk. Financial routes offer faster verification but no physical asset. The choice should be driven by your liquidity needs, risk tolerance and long-term objectives not solely by speed of processing.
Before exchanging any funds, instruct experienced local counsel to conduct a full title search at the Land Registry (TKGM). Critical checks include: confirming the seller is the registered owner, identifying liens, mortgages or encumbrances, verifying the property has not been used in a prior citizenship application, and ensuring it is not located within a restricted military zone. Due diligence should also cover the property’s zoning status, building permits (yapı ruhsatı), occupancy certificate (iskan) and compliance with municipal regulations. Any deficiency discovered after payment can derail the entire application or worse, result in a conformity-certificate refusal months later. This step typically takes one to four weeks depending on the complexity of the property chain. A how-to-buy-property-in-Turkey-for-citizenship checklist can systematise this process.
Payment structure is a compliance-critical step. The purchase price must be paid in foreign currency through a Turkish bank, and the bank will issue a Döviz Alım Belgesi (DAB) a Foreign Exchange Purchase Certificate confirming the conversion of foreign currency into Turkish lira at the official rate. The DAB proves that the investment capital originated offshore and was properly converted, which is a mandatory element of the conformity-certificate application. Wire transfers must be traceable end-to-end: from the applicant’s overseas account, through the Turkish bank, to the seller’s account. Cash payments, third-party transfers, or cryptocurrency conversions are not accepted. Any break in the audit trail even a minor discrepancy between the DAB amount and the declared purchase price can trigger a request for additional documentation or outright rejection. Agree the payment protocol with your bank and legal counsel before signing the sale contract.
An official property valuation must be carried out by an SPK-authorised appraisal company. The valuation report must confirm the property’s market value meets or exceeds the USD 400,000 threshold at the exchange rate applicable on the valuation date. In 2026, TKGM has increased its scrutiny of valuation reports, cross-checking appraised values against comparable transactions in the district. If the appraised value falls below the purchase price or appears inflated relative to market data the conformity certificate may be refused or delayed. Investors should select an appraiser with a strong track record in citizenship-related valuations and ensure the report complies with SPK valuation standards (Communiqué III-62.3). Typical turnaround for a valuation report is one to four weeks. Do not rely on informal broker estimates; only SPK-licensed reports are accepted.
With the title deed (tapu), sale contract, DAB, and SPK valuation report in hand, the next step is to apply to TKGM for the Taşınmaz Yatırımı Tespit Belgesi also known as the Uygunluk Belgesi (Certificate of Conformity). This certificate confirms that the transaction meets all legal requirements for citizenship purposes. TKGM will also place a three-year non-sale annotation (şerh) on the title deed, preventing the property from being sold or transferred during the qualifying period. The conformity certificate is the single most critical document in the real-estate route: without it, no citizenship application can proceed. Processing times vary significantly from two weeks in straightforward cases to twelve weeks or more where valuation discrepancies or documentation gaps arise. Ensure every document is complete and consistent before submission to avoid rejection and re-filing delays.
Before filing for citizenship, applicants must hold a valid residence permit. The investor residence permit is applied for through the e-ikamet online portal managed by the Presidency of Migration Management (Göç İdaresi), followed by an in-person appointment at the provincial migration office (İl Göç İdaresi Müdürlüğü). Required documents typically include a valid passport, biometric photographs, proof of health insurance, a registered Turkish address, and evidence of the qualifying investment. The residence permit card is usually issued within two to eight weeks of the appointment. Note that this is an administrative prerequisite it does not by itself confer long-term residency rights independent of the citizenship application. The residence permit must remain valid throughout the citizenship review process.
The citizenship dossier is submitted to the General Directorate of Civil Registration and Nationality (NVI), either at a provincial population directorate or, in some cases, via an authorised representative. The file must include the conformity certificate, investor residence permit, apostilled and translated personal documents (birth certificates, marriage certificate, police clearances), source-of-fund evidence covering at least twelve months, and completed application forms for the main applicant and each family member. Every foreign-language document must be officially translated into Turkish by a sworn translator and apostilled in the country of origin or legalised through the relevant embassy chain. Incomplete files are the single most common cause of avoidable delay a comprehensive checklist reviewed by experienced counsel is essential.
Once the file is accepted, NVI forwards it for a multi-agency security review. This typically includes background checks through the National Intelligence Organisation (MİT), Interpol databases, and MASAK (Turkey’s financial-intelligence unit). The review assesses criminal history, terrorism-financing risk, and sanctions exposure. Processing times are highly variable: straightforward applications from low-risk nationalities may clear in four to six weeks; complex cases involving multiple nationalities, corporate structures, or adverse media can take significantly longer. Applicants have no direct visibility into this stage, and there is no formal mechanism to expedite it. Maintaining a clean, well-documented source-of-fund trail from the outset is the most effective way to avoid extended delays at this stage.
Turkish citizenship by investment is formally granted by Presidential decision. Once the security review is cleared and the Ministry of Interior recommends approval, the file is submitted to the Presidency for final authorisation. The decision is then published in the Official Gazette (Resmî Gazete), at which point the applicant legally becomes a Turkish citizen. From the date of the Presidential decision, the new citizen’s civil-registration records are created at NVI. This step can take anywhere from two to eight weeks after the security review concludes.
After the Official Gazette publication, the applicant attends the relevant Nüfus Müdürlüğü (population directorate) to register and obtain a Turkish national identity card (kimlik). With the kimlik in hand, a Turkish passport application is submitted at the passport office or a provincial security directorate. Passport issuance typically takes one to three weeks. The Turkish passport currently provides visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to over 110 countries and territories. Biometric enrolment is required in person for both the ID card and the passport this step cannot be completed by power of attorney.
Many steps in the turkey citizenship by investment process can be managed remotely through a notarised power of attorney (vekaletname). The POA must be executed at a Turkish consulate or embassy abroad, or by a foreign notary with subsequent apostille and sworn Turkish translation. A POA enables your legal representative to sign the sale contract, apply for the conformity certificate, submit the citizenship application, and attend certain appointments on your behalf. However, biometric steps residence-permit appointment, ID-card registration, and passport issuance require the applicant’s physical presence in Turkey. Plan at least two trips: one for the residence-permit biometric appointment and one for ID/passport collection. Some applicants consolidate these into a single extended visit.
| Investment Route | Minimum Threshold | Verifying Authority | Holding Period | Key Operational Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Real estate | USD 400,000 | TKGM (Land Registry) | 3 years | Tangible asset; rental income possible; requires SPK valuation + DAB |
| Bank deposit | USD 500,000 | BRSA (Banking Regulation and Supervision Agency) | 3 years | Simple execution; capital locked without yield above deposit rate |
| Government bonds | USD 500,000 | Ministry of Treasury and Finance | 3 years | Low-risk sovereign instrument; limited liquidity during hold |
| Fund shares (venture capital / real-estate fund) | USD 500,000 | SPK (Capital Markets Board) | 3 years | Diversified exposure; fund selection critical; SPK oversight |
| Fixed capital investment | USD 500,000 | Ministry of Industry and Technology | N/A (capital deployed) | Requires operational business; ongoing compliance obligations |
| Job creation | 50 employees (minimum) | Ministry of Labour and Social Security | Continuous employment | Labour-law compliance; social-security registration required |
Real estate dominates applicant volumes because the USD 400,000 threshold is the lowest, the asset is tangible, and rental income can partially offset the cost of holding. Financial routes (deposits, bonds, fund shares) appeal to investors who want administrative simplicity and do not wish to manage property. Job creation and fixed-capital routes are best suited to entrepreneurs already operating or planning to operate a business in Turkey. In all cases, the Investment Office’s official guidance should be consulted for the latest threshold and verification details.
The legal foundation for Turkey citizenship by investment is Article 12 of Turkish Citizenship Law No. 5901, as amended, together with implementing regulations set by Presidential decision. The real-estate route requires a minimum purchase value of USD 400,000, confirmed by an SPK-licensed valuation. The bank-deposit, government-bond, and fund-share routes each require USD 500,000. Fixed-capital investment requires a minimum deployment of USD 500,000, and the job-creation route requires employing at least 50 persons. All thresholds are assessed at the applicable exchange rate on the date of the relevant verification.
Turkish law imposes area-based purchase restrictions on nationals of certain countries, particularly in military and security zones. These restrictions are periodically updated by Cabinet determination. Crucially, a property that has already been used by another investor for a citizenship application cannot be reused even if it was subsequently sold after the original investor’s three-year holding period expired. The three-year non-sale annotation placed by TKGM on the title deed is a binding restriction: attempting to sell or transfer the property before the annotation expires will void the citizenship qualification and may result in the revocation process being initiated.
The following documents are required for a complete turkey citizenship by investment application. Organise them by category and confirm completeness with counsel before submission.
Applicant personal documents:
Property and investment documents:
Residence and application documents:
Financial evidence:
Note on translations and apostilles: All foreign-language documents must carry sworn Turkish translations and be apostilled (or legalised if the issuing country is not an Apostille Convention signatory). Biometric steps residence-permit appointment, ID-card registration, passport issuance require the applicant to attend in person.
| Step | Best (weeks) | Average (weeks) | Worst (weeks) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Property due diligence | 1 | 2–4 | 6+ |
| Official valuation | 1–2 | 2–4 | 6 |
| Conformity certificate (TKGM) | 2 | 4–8 | 12 |
| Investor residence permit | 2–6 | 4–8 | 12 |
| Citizenship decision & Official Gazette | 4–8 | 8–16 | 24+ |
| ID card & passport issuance | 1–2 | 2–3 | 4+ |
The turkey citizenship process timeline is shaped by documentation quality, valuation accuracy, source-of-fund clarity, and the outcome of security screening. Best-case end-to-end completion is approximately three to four months; the average is six to nine months; complex cases can extend beyond twelve months. Incomplete files, valuation shortfalls, and adverse findings during security vetting are the primary drivers of delay.
Risk-mitigation checklist: Pre-contract legal due diligence; SPK-licensed appraiser selection; DAB-compliant bank payment protocol; three-year hold annotation verification at TKGM; and final document review by experienced counsel before submission.
The turkey citizenship by investment programme permits the main applicant to include their spouse and dependent children under 18 in a single application. Adult dependants with certain disabilities may also qualify subject to NVI assessment. Each included family member requires a complete set of personal documents apostilled birth certificates, passport copies, photographs, and police clearances where applicable. Family members should be included at the time of the initial application; children born after citizenship is granted are automatically entitled to Turkish citizenship by descent. Consult NVI guidance for the latest documentation requirements for dependants.
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