The search for a European golden visa almost always starts with two goals: the legal right to live and work inside the EU, and a reduction in tax on business income, dividends, or capital gains.
The problem is that most golden visa programs deliver the first goal but not the second. Greece will accept EUR 250,000 in real estate and give you an EU residency permit. What it will not do is reduce your dividend tax rate.
This is the gap that most golden visa guides do not address. Here is what the 2026 landscape actually looks like.
Active Golden Visa Programs in Europe in 2026
Greece: The minimum investment threshold varies by location. In Athens and other major urban areas, the floor is EUR 800,000 in real estate. In less populated regions, EUR 250,000 applies. Processing time is typically 3 to 6 months. Greece operates a non-dom regime (the 7-year flat tax at EUR 100,000 per year for foreign-source income), but this is separate from the golden visa and requires its own application.
Portugal: The Portuguese golden visa has undergone significant changes. Real estate investment in most urban areas is no longer eligible. In 2026, the main qualifying route is EUR 500,000 invested in approved Portuguese investment funds or venture capital vehicles. Property purchases no longer qualify in Porto, Lisbon, or coastal areas. Processing times have stretched to 12 to 18 months in some cases.
Spain: EUR 500,000 in unencumbered real estate (no mortgage counted toward the threshold). Spain's golden visa gives you the right to live and work in Spain, where income tax reaches 47% above EUR 300,000. There is an associated Beckham Law regime for incoming workers, but this expired after its 6-year window and was never intended for golden visa holders specifically.
Italy: EUR 500,000 invested in Italian companies (or EUR 1,000,000 in Italian startups, or EUR 1,000,000 in philanthropic donations). Italy operates a flat EUR 100,000 annual tax on foreign-source income for new residents, which can stack effectively with the investor visa program for wealthy individuals with foreign passive income.
Malta: The Malta Permanent Residency Programme requires EUR 150,000 in government contributions plus EUR 375,000 in real estate (or EUR 14,000 per year in rent). This is not a citizenship route but provides indefinite residency with travel rights across the Schengen area.
Countries That Ended Their Golden Visa
Cyprus suspended its citizenship-by-investment program in 2021 following regulatory concerns. Ireland ended its Immigrant Investor Programme in 2023. Several Eastern European countries never launched formal programs.
The closure of these programs has redirected demand toward the remaining active schemes and, increasingly, toward pure tax residency approaches that do not require property investment at all.
The Tax Problem With Golden Visas
Here is what most guides skip: acquiring a golden visa residency permit does not automatically make you a tax resident of that country, and being a tax resident of Greece or Spain is often worse for your tax position than staying where you are.
Greek income tax tops out at 44%. Spanish income tax reaches 47%. If your goal is tax optimization, a golden visa in either country is counterproductive unless you pair it with a specific tax regime that requires a separate application.
Investors frequently discover this 18 months into the process.
Cyprus Non-Dom: The Investment-Free Alternative
Cyprus cancelled its golden visa but replaced it with something more powerful for founders and investors: Cyprus Non-Dom status.
The Non-Dom regime requires no minimum investment. It requires genuine tax residency in Cyprus, which can be established under the 60-day tax residency rule: spend 60 days in Cyprus across the calendar year, do not spend more than 183 days in any single other country, and do not be a tax resident of another jurisdiction.
The tax result: dividends from a Cyprus company are taxed at 2.65% GHS only. No income tax on dividends. No Special Defence Contribution for Non-Dom individuals. Capital gains on shares and crypto: zero. The effective rate for a founder extracting dividends from a Cyprus Ltd lands around 17% to 18% on distributed profits (15% corporate tax, then 2.65% on the remainder), with an all-in effective rate often cited as approximately 5% when the corporate profits are partially retained.
For EU relocation, you first obtain the Yellow Slip, the MEU1 registration certificate that formalizes your right to reside as an EU citizen. This costs a few euros and takes a few weeks. Compare that to EUR 500,000 in investment funds for the Portuguese golden visa.
Golden Visa vs Cyprus Non-Dom: Side by Side
| Factor | Greece Golden Visa | Portugal Golden Visa | Cyprus Non-Dom |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum investment | EUR 250,000+ | EUR 500,000 (funds) | None |
| Processing time | 3-6 months | 12-18 months | 4-8 weeks (MEU1) |
| Income tax on dividends | ~5% (if using non-dom regime separately) | Progressive up to 48% | 2.65% GHS only |
| Capital gains on shares | 15% | 28% | 0% |
| EU citizenship path | No (just residency) | Yes (after 5 years) | Yes (after 5-7 years) |
| Physical presence required | 1 day/year to renew | 7 days over 2 years | 60 days/year |
Who Should Choose What
Golden visas make sense if your primary goal is EU residency with minimal physical presence and you have significant capital to deploy. The Portuguese golden visa is the strongest citizenship pathway. The Greek program offers the lowest minimum investment in key regions.
Cyprus Non-Dom makes sense if your primary goal is tax optimization. There is no investment requirement. The company formation costs under EUR 2,000. The tax savings on EUR 100,000 of dividends are approximately EUR 30,000 to EUR 35,000 per year compared to Germany or France. A golden visa program would cost EUR 250,000 to EUR 500,000 upfront and would not deliver the same tax outcome.
If you want both EU residency and tax optimization, Cyprus provides both without any investment minimum. The tradeoff is 60 days of physical presence per year, which most founders find manageable.
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