Second Passports Aren’t Just for the Rich

One of the most common questions I get asked is how to obtain a second passport if you have limited resources. Plenty of people would like to have one, but the costs can appear daunting.

There are several routes to a second citizenship—and thus a passport. Each involves specific variables, over which you may have different degrees of control. Your own pathway to a second passport will depend on how your circumstances interact with those variables.

The good news is that if you really want one, a second passport is almost always entirely within reach. Let’s see how.

Let’s start with some terminology:

  • Citizenship is full membership in a national community, and includes a passport.
  • Residence is the right to live without restriction in a foreign country, but without that country’s citizenship and passport (like a U.S. green card).

A visa is permission to be in a country for a specific time period.

Routes to Citizenship

There are three broad routes to a second passport:

  • By sanguinity, i.e. by descent or other affinity to the national community (e.g. religion). The most common is for people born in the U.S. to parents from a foreign country, who often acquire that citizenship automatically. Some countries give citizenship to foreigners descended from at least one grandparent from that country (sometimes even further back). Countries that offer this route include Italy, Greece, Turkey, Bulgaria, Lebanon, Armenia, Romania, Afghanistan, The Philippines, Croatia, Estonia, Hungary, Ireland, Israel, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Rwanda, Serbia, Slovakia, South Korea, and Ukraine.
  • By naturalization, which usually involves a specific period of prior residence in the country and/or marriage to a citizen. The first step is usually permanent residence, often linked to marriage, a job, starting a business or other commitment to the country. Once a permanent resident, you must live in the country for a period—usually five years—before acquiring citizenship. (Note that marriage to a foreign citizen doesn’t always confer automatic residence.)
  • By economic contribution, which involves an investment in the country or payment of a fee. Some countries, particularly island nations, offer this in exchange for investment in real estate, a business, or in a government development fund. They include St. Kitts and Nevis, Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, Cyprus, Malta, and (rarely granted) Austria. The least expensive of these is Dominica, which costs $100,000 plus processing fees. None of these citizenships are automatic; all involve a due diligence process and evaluation by an immigration board.

Pros and Cons

Besides cost and level of effort, there are two questions you need to ask about a second citizenship.

First, do you—or would you—want to live there? It’s not always required that you do, but if it is—or if you need to leave the U.S.—is it a place you’d like to live?

Second, how widely can you travel visa-free with that country’s passport? A passport from a European Union country gives you automatic residence rights within the entire EU. Passports from most of the Caribbean islands give you visa-free tourist access to the EU. On the other hand, some of the passports I listed above won’t get you anywhere easily, except the country of issue.

Second Passport on a Budget

Let’s say you really want a second passport, but you’re not super-wealthy.

One option is Dominica. A husband and wife can obtain citizenship for about $100,000, once fees are included. You can use that passport to travel freely throughout the EU—but you can already do that with a U.S. passport. But if you wanted to leave the U.S. permanently, your only option would be to live on a beautiful but tiny island—and you’d have to acquire a property there.

Another option is Uruguay. Any visitor to Uruguay can apply for permanent residence and remain there while the application is processed, as long as you have a place to stay and can support yourself—about $1,500 a month minimum. You can become a citizen after three years (two years for retirees) during which you need to spend most, but not all, of your time in Uruguay. You’d get visa-free access to the EU as well as the MERCOSUR countries (Brazil, Argentina, and Chile). And you’d have the option to live in one of the most beautiful, peaceful and prosperous countries in the world—albeit one a little out of the way.

Only You Can Decide

People often ask me to tell them the best country for them. I can’t do that. Instead, I offer a set of guidelines and a decision tree that can help you decide for yourself based on your own circumstances.

Nevertheless, if one of the parameters of your decision-making is finances, I’d have to say that Uruguay beats all-comers hands-down when it comes to a low-cost second passport.

Ted Baumann is International Living’s Chief Global Diversification Expert. He’s traveled to nearly 90 countries and is a dual citizen of the United States and South Africa. Ted has been published in international research journals, as well as in media outlets such as Barrons, Forbes, and Cheddar. Learn more about Our New Chief Global Diversification Expert here.

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