The Greece Golden Visa remains one of Europe’s most attractive residency-by-investment programmes, offering non-EU nationals and their families a five-year renewable residence permit in exchange for a qualifying investment most commonly in Greek real estate. Following the 2024–2026 legislative reforms, including the codification under Law 5275/2026, investors and advisers face updated regional investment thresholds, tighter AML/KYC requirements, and new e-submission procedures. This guide cuts through the complexity with a practical, step-by-step roadmap grounded in official sources.
This page is designed for high-net-worth individuals, family offices, and professional advisers seeking clear, actionable guidance. Here is what you will find:
All factual claims are referenced to official government sources and are current as of the last review date. Readers should verify thresholds and fees at the time of filing, as amounts are subject to periodic adjustment.
The Greece Golden Visa is a residence-by-investment permit that grants qualifying third-country nationals and their immediate family members the right to reside in Greece for five years, with unlimited renewals provided the underlying investment is maintained. The programme was originally established under Law 4251/2014 (the Immigration and Social Integration Code) and has been updated through successive amendments, most recently consolidated in Law 5275/2026.
The permit carries several distinctive advantages. There is no minimum-stay requirement holders are not required to live in Greece to maintain their residency status. Family coverage extends to the investor’s spouse, children up to the age of 21, and the parents of both the investor and spouse. Holders enjoy visa-free travel throughout the Schengen Area for up to 90 days in any 180-day period.
The Golden Visa is primarily associated with real-estate investment, but other qualifying routes exist, including capital contributions to Greek companies, government bonds (where applicable under the current framework), and strategic investments above specified thresholds. For the vast majority of applicants, however, property acquisition remains the most straightforward and popular pathway.
It is important to distinguish the Golden Visa from other Greek residence categories. Unlike the independent financial means permit, the Golden Visa does not require proof of regular income or permanent settlement. Unlike EU Blue Cards or employment permits, it does not confer work rights in Greece although holders may invest in and manage their own companies.
The application process follows a defined sequence: pre-investment preparation, property acquisition, electronic submission through the MITOS e-services portal, biometric enrolment, and residence-card issuance. Each step carries specific documentary requirements. Below is the complete numbered sequence.
Before committing capital, conduct thorough due diligence on both the investment route and the target region. Regional thresholds vary significantly, and the choice of location directly affects the minimum qualifying expenditure.
Time-saver tip: Choosing property for the Golden Visa requires careful analysis of regional price maps, rental yield potential, and investment-tier boundaries. Engage local counsel early to map these factors before travel.
Appointing a qualified Greek lawyer and granting a Power of Attorney is a critical early step. The POA enables your counsel to act on your behalf for property transactions, AFM applications, bank-account opening, and filing the Golden Visa application reducing the number of trips to Greece.
Time-saver tip: Grant the POA before your first visit to Greece. This allows your lawyer to begin AFM and bank-account procedures while you finalise property selection.
Greece’s anti-money-laundering framework has been significantly strengthened in recent years. The FATF Mutual Evaluation Report on Greece confirmed increased supervisory scrutiny over real-estate transactions linked to investor residence programmes. Preparing a robust source-of-funds evidence pack before engaging with Greek banks and notaries is essential.
Failure to prepare adequate AML documentation is among the most common causes of delay. Banks and notaries may refuse to proceed without satisfactory evidence, and incomplete documentation can trigger regulatory reporting obligations.
Once due diligence is complete and source-of-funds documentation is assembled, the property transaction proceeds through several formal stages.
Every investor must obtain an AFM (Arithmos Forologikou Mitroou tax identification number) before completing a property transaction or filing a Golden Visa application. The Independent Authority for Public Revenue (AADE) administers the process.
Time-saver tip: Begin the AFM application as soon as the POA is executed. Your lawyer, acting as tax representative, can apply on your behalf before you arrive in Greece. Detailed guidance on how to get an AFM in Greece is available through local counsel.
A Greek bank account is essential for the property transaction (as payment must be made by bank transfer to a Greek bank) and for ongoing tax and property-management obligations. Banks apply rigorous KYC procedures consistent with Greece’s strengthened AML framework.
Practical guidance on how to open a Greek bank account for investors, including institution-specific KYC checklists, is available from qualified local counsel.
With the property acquired, AFM obtained, and bank account operational, the formal Golden Visa application is prepared and submitted electronically through the Ministry of Migration’s designated platform. The Ministry’s official Golden Visa page sets out the complete document list.
For family members, additional documents are required: marriage certificate, birth certificates, and proof of dependency (as applicable), all apostilled and officially translated into Greek.
After electronic submission, the applicant must attend a biometrics appointment at the competent police or immigration authority, or at a designated biometric-capture centre.
Following a positive decision by the Ministry, the residence card (a biometric plastic card) is produced and made available for collection at the issuing authority.
After receiving the residence card, the investor must maintain the qualifying investment for the duration of the permit. Key obligations include:
Investors who wish to sell their qualifying property before the permit expires may do so but residency is maintained only if a substitute qualifying investment of equal or greater value is made before or simultaneously with the sale. The Ministry’s guidance confirms that the substitute investment must meet the applicable threshold at the time of substitution.
For comprehensive guidance on Golden Visa renewal and selling property, consult qualified local counsel.
The Greece Golden Visa is renewable every five years, provided the qualifying investment is maintained. Renewal applications should be filed well in advance of the card’s expiry date.
| Zone Category | Minimum Real-Estate Investment | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Standard zones (most of mainland Greece, many islands) | €250,000 | Single property or multiple properties meeting the aggregate threshold; payment by bank transfer required. |
| High-demand zones (Athens central, Thessaloniki, Mykonos, Santorini, and other designated areas) | Higher threshold (as specified by Ministerial Decision currently significantly above €250,000) | Exact amounts vary by zone and are subject to periodic revision; verify the current threshold for your target region on the Ministry’s official page. |
| Islands with fewer than 3,100 residents (where applicable) | Potentially reduced or standard threshold | Subject to specific regulatory provisions; confirm eligibility and threshold with counsel. |
Note: All thresholds are sourced from the Ministry of Migration’s official Golden Visa page. Investors must verify the applicable minimum at the time of purchase, as thresholds are adjusted by Ministerial Decision.
| Feature | Greece | Portugal | Spain |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum real-estate investment | From €250,000 (zone-dependent) | Real-estate route suspended (as of 2023); fund-based alternatives from €500,000 | €500,000 (programme under review/suspended as of 2025) |
| Permit duration | 5 years (renewable) | 2 years initial, then renewable | 2 years initial (if reinstated), then renewable |
| Minimum stay requirement | None | 7 days per year (average) | None (historically) |
| Path to citizenship | 7 years of legal residence + language/integration requirements | 5 years of legal residence | 10 years of legal residence |
| Family coverage | Spouse, children up to 21, parents of both spouses | Spouse, dependent children, parents | Spouse, children under 18 |
Editorial note: The Portuguese and Spanish programmes are subject to significant recent legislative changes. This table is provided for high-level comparison only and should not be relied upon for current programme availability.
To qualify for the Greece Golden Visa, applicants must satisfy the following eligibility criteria and provide the associated documentation.
Documentary evidence required:
Special cases: Timeshare arrangements, land purchases with a building permit for construction, and corporate-investment routes each carry distinct qualification criteria and documentation requirements. The Ministry of Migration publishes clarifications on these alternate structures. Investors pursuing non-standard routes should engage qualified legal counsel to confirm eligibility before committing funds.
| Stage | Optimistic | Median | Conservative |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-purchase due diligence & POA | 2 weeks | 4 weeks | 6–8 weeks |
| AFM + bank account opening | 1 week | 2–3 weeks | 4–6 weeks |
| Property transfer & registration | 2 weeks | 4 weeks | 8 weeks |
| E-submission to decision | 1 month | 2–3 months | 4–6 months |
| Card printing & issuance | 2 weeks | 4 weeks | 6–8 weeks |
| Total (end-to-end) | ~3 months | ~5–6 months | ~9–12 months |
Note: All fees are subject to change. Investors should verify current amounts with their legal counsel and the Ministry at the time of filing.
The Greece Golden Visa is renewed every five years, provided the qualifying investment remains in place. The renewal application requires updated documentation including a current certificate of encumbrances, proof of continued ownership, valid health insurance, and a current passport. Common pitfalls at renewal include:
Industry observers consistently identify the following investor mistakes as the most common causes of delay, refusal, or post-issuance complications:
The following checklist summarises the core documents required for a Greece Golden Visa application. A downloadable one-page PDF version of this checklist is available from Global Law Experts content operations.
The Greece Golden Visa process involves multiple Greek public authorities, strict documentary requirements, and evolving legislative thresholds. Engaging qualified legal counsel at every stage from POA drafting and AFM application through to property due diligence, bank-account opening, and application submission significantly reduces risk and processing time.
For additional guidance on related topics, the following resources are available:
Global Law Experts’ local counsel network includes qualified practitioners across Greece who can assist with every aspect of the Golden Visa application process.
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