The citizenship by investment Antigua program allows qualifying individuals and their families to obtain an Antigua and Barbuda passport through a defined economic contribution. Established under the Citizenship by Investment Act, 2013, the program is administered by the Citizenship by Investment Unit (CIU) and remains one of the most established second-citizenship pathways in the Caribbean.
Key facts at a glance:
If you are evaluating whether the program suits your personal or family circumstances, a free eligibility assessment is the logical first step before committing funds or documentation effort.
The Antigua and Barbuda CBI program attracts substantial online attention, and the information landscape in 2026 is crowded with commercial guides, agent-driven marketing, and occasionally outdated figures. Minimum investment amounts, government fee structures, and processing timelines are frequently cited but not always sourced to the CIU’s own published materials. This can create confusion particularly for high-net-worth individuals making a binding financial commitment that typically exceeds USD 250,000.
This guide is written with a legal-first editorial approach. Every cost figure, eligibility rule, and procedural step is grounded in the Citizenship by Investment Act, 2013, the CIU’s published schedule of fees, and official program materials. Where third-party data is used such as passport mobility rankings it is drawn from institutional sources and identified as such.
The purpose is straightforward: to give prospective applicants and their advisors a single, trustworthy reference point that separates verified government facts from market noise. Citizenship by investment in Antigua is a regulated legal process, not a retail product, and the quality of legal guidance at the outset materially affects outcomes, timelines, and risk exposure.
For readers exploring our CBI legal services, this guide also serves as a foundation for the personalised advice and cost modelling that follow an initial eligibility consultation.
The program is open to individuals of any nationality, subject to important exclusions and due-diligence requirements set out in the Citizenship by Investment Act. The principal eligibility criteria are as follows:
Meeting the eligibility threshold does not guarantee approval. The CIU retains sole discretion to refuse any application, and the decision is not subject to appeal under the Act.
The program offers four qualifying investment channels. Each carries different minimum amounts, holding periods, and practical considerations. The official figures below are drawn from the CIU’s schedule of fees. Applicants must select one route at the outset and cannot switch routes mid-application without restarting the process.
The NDF is the most frequently chosen route due to its simplicity. The applicant makes a non-refundable contribution to the government’s National Development Fund, which finances public-sector infrastructure, education, and hurricane relief.
The minimum NDF contribution is USD 230,000 for a family of up to four persons. For a single applicant without dependents, the contribution amount may differ applicants should confirm the current individual rate with the CIU or qualified counsel.
In addition to the NDF contribution, applicants pay:
All fee amounts are published on the CIU schedule of fees and are subject to periodic government revision.
A critical legal point: the NDF contribution is a binding, non-refundable commitment. Applicants should ensure that their eligibility is thoroughly assessed before funds are transmitted. The role of the authorised agent through whom all applications must be submitted is distinct from the role of independent legal counsel. Engaging a qualified lawyer to review the application, verify the agent’s terms, and confirm the fee structure before execution is strongly recommended.
Applicants may qualify by purchasing an interest in a CIU-approved real-estate development with a minimum value of USD 300,000. The property must be held for a minimum of five years from the date of registration before it can be resold. If the subsequent buyer intends to use the same property for their own CBI application, the resale must also meet the CIU’s prevailing minimum threshold.
Key legal and practical considerations:
A single applicant may invest a minimum of USD 1,500,000 into an approved business venture. Alternatively, two or more applicants may make a joint investment totalling at least USD 5,000,000, with each individual contributing a minimum share as prescribed by the CIU. The investment may take the form of direct equity participation in a new or existing enterprise, or investment in a pre-approved project.
Business investments are subject to government review to ensure they deliver tangible economic benefits typically measured by job creation, technology transfer, or contribution to export revenue. The CIU monitors compliance post-approval, and failure to maintain the investment or deliver the promised benefits can result in sanctions, including citizenship revocation under the Act.
This route is less commonly used than the NDF or real-estate options due to its higher capital requirement and the operational complexity of managing a Caribbean business venture. However, for investors with genuine commercial interest in the region, it can offer both citizenship and a productive asset. Prospective applicants should obtain independent business valuations and legal structuring advice before committing capital.
Understanding the full cost of citizenship by investment in Antigua requires distinguishing between the qualifying investment (NDF contribution, property purchase, or business capital), government-imposed fees, and any professional service charges. The table below summarises the core government costs per the CIU schedule of fees:
| Fee Category | Details |
|---|---|
| NDF contribution (family ≤ 4) | USD 230,000 (minimum) |
| Real-estate minimum purchase | USD 300,000 |
| Business investment (single) | USD 1,500,000 |
| Due-diligence fee principal applicant | Per CIU published schedule |
| Due-diligence fee spouse | Per CIU published schedule |
| Due-diligence fee dependent (12–17) | Per CIU published schedule |
| Government processing fee | Per applicant, per CIU schedule |
| Passport fee | Per person |
Agent and professional fees are separate from government charges and vary significantly. Authorised agents typically charge a flat service fee or a percentage of the investment amount. Independent law firms may bill on an hourly or fixed-fee basis for legal review, document preparation, and escrow management. Applicants should request a transparent, itemised fee breakdown from any professional before engagement and should be wary of “all-inclusive” quotes that do not separately identify government charges.
The application process follows a structured workflow. While the CIU’s published decision window is typically 60–90 days from receipt of a complete application, the end-to-end timeline from initial consultation to passport in hand is often longer, particularly for real-estate applicants. The steps below reflect the standard legal workflow:
Practical caveat: Real-estate closings can add four to eight weeks beyond the CIU’s decision window. Applicants choosing the Step-by-step Antigua CBI application checklist & documents route should build this into their timeline expectations.
One of the program’s strengths is its generous family coverage. Qualifying dependents who may be included on a single application are:
Each additional dependent incurs supplementary government fees (due diligence, processing, and passport charges) as detailed in the CIU schedule of fees.
Sample scenarios (NDF route, illustrative):
The exact total varies with the number and category of dependents. Prospective applicants should request a bespoke cost model based on their specific family composition a service Global Law Experts provides as part of its initial assessment.
The Antigua and Barbuda passport offers significant international mobility. According to the Henley Passport Index 2026 release, holders enjoy visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to a substantial number of destinations worldwide. Key access highlights include:
For business travellers and families seeking a credible second passport, the Antigua passport eliminates visa-application friction for most key commercial and personal travel corridors. A deeper breakdown is available in our forthcoming Antigua passport visa-free guide.
Antigua and Barbuda does not impose personal income tax on worldwide income for most individuals. There is no capital gains tax, inheritance tax, or wealth tax at the national level. However, obtaining citizenship does not automatically make the holder tax-resident in Antigua, and it does not extinguish tax obligations in the holder’s country of origin or primary residence.
Applicants should obtain independent tax advice in both their home jurisdiction and Antigua before making assumptions about the fiscal benefits of CBI. The distinction between citizenship, residency, and tax residency is critical and frequently misunderstood.
No citizenship-by-investment program is risk-free. Applicants should be aware of the following:
Mitigation strategies include pre-application source-of-funds documentation, independent legal escrow for real-estate purchases, and comprehensive background checks on any developer or agent before engagement.
Antigua and Barbuda is one of several Caribbean nations offering citizenship by investment. The table below provides a high-level comparison. Where official programme sources are not available for comparator jurisdictions, figures are labelled as typical market ranges. Readers are advised to consult each program’s official materials and qualified legal counsel for current figures.
| Feature | Antigua & Barbuda | Dominica | St Kitts & Nevis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum donation | USD 230,000 (family ≤ 4) | ~USD 200,000 (typical market range) | ~USD 250,000 (typical market range) |
| Minimum real estate | USD 300,000 | ~USD 200,000 (typical market range) | ~USD 325,000 (typical market range) |
| Processing time | 60–90 days | ~60–90 days (typical) | ~60–90 days (typical) |
| Schengen access | Yes (visa-free) | Yes (visa-free) | Yes (visa-free) |
| UK access | Yes (visa-free) | Yes (visa-free) | Yes (visa-free) |
| Family inclusions | Spouse, children, parents/grandparents 55+, siblings | Spouse, children, parents/grandparents | Spouse, children, parents/grandparents |
| Residency obligation | 5 days in 5 years | None | None |
Each program has distinct advantages depending on family size, investment preferences, and long-term plans. A detailed analysis is available in our forthcoming Caribbean CBI comparison guide.
Global Law Experts provides a legal-first approach to citizenship by investment in Antigua and Barbuda. Our role is not that of a commercial agent but of an independent legal resource that ensures applicants receive accurate information, transparent cost modelling, and access to vetted local counsel on the ground.
Our services include:
Whether you are a single applicant or a multi-generational family, the right legal foundation at the outset protects your investment and your citizenship. Request your free eligibility assessment to begin.
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