Who Turkish citizenship by investment is for
Türkiye runs one of the most accessible citizenship-by-investment (CBI) programmes in the world — often marketed as the Turkey golden visa, though it grants something stronger than a visa. Unlike most countries, it grants full citizenship and a passport, not just residency, in a matter of months, with no requirement to live in Türkiye, speak Turkish or renounce your existing nationality. That combination makes it one of the few genuine fast-track passports available to foreigners today.
This route tends to suit:
- Investors who want a second passport for travel freedom, business mobility and a hedge against political or economic risk at home.
- Property buyers who were going to invest in Istanbul, Antalya or the Aegean coast anyway, and want the passport as a bonus. Our Turkish real estate lawyers run the purchase and title checks as part of the file.
- US-bound entrepreneurs planning to use the Turkish passport to qualify for the US E-2 treaty-investor visa (covered in its own section below).
- Families who want citizenship for a spouse and minor children in a single application.
- People from countries with weaker passports who want visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to a large part of the world.
We act only for the investor — never for a developer or seller — so our advice on whether this is right for you is independent of any commission.
Recent rule changes you should know (2025–2026)
This programme is set by regulation, not by parliament, so the detail shifts. Several tightenings landed in 2025–2026 that older guides still get wrong. Here is what is current as of 2026.
- Spouse residence permit + in-person biometrics. The spouse must now also obtain a residence permit, and the main applicant and spouse are generally required to attend in Türkiye for fingerprinting and biometrics. The process is largely remote, but plan for at least one short in-person visit.
- Criminal-record certificate is now mandatory for the main applicant and the spouse — no longer case-by-case.
- Off-plan purchases must sit in a single contract. Since 1 January 2023, for preliminary/off-plan sales the full USD 400,000 must be in one notarised contract; separate off-plan contracts cannot be combined.
- No more FX guarantee on deposits. The currency-protected deposit scheme (KKM) was terminated by the Central Bank in August 2025, so the USD 500,000 bank-deposit route now carries full Turkish-lira currency risk over the three years.
None of these block a well-prepared application. They simply mean an out-of-date checklist — or an agent working from a 2021 playbook — will cost you time. We work from the current rules.
The legal framework: Law No. 5901 and its Regulation
Turkish nationality is governed by the Turkish Citizenship Law No. 5901 and its Implementing Regulation. The general rule is naturalisation after five years of lawful residence. The investment programme is a special exception under the Regulation (article 20): it lets the State grant citizenship by Presidential decree to foreigners who make a qualifying investment, without the residence period.
The grant is discretionary
Since 2018 the grant is made by Presidential (Cumhurbaşkanı) decree. Meeting the financial criteria creates a very strong, well-established pathway, but it is not an automatic legal entitlement — applicants must also pass security and background checks. This is why we make no guarantees of outcome; anyone who promises a 100% certain result is misrepresenting Turkish law. What we do is build a clean, complete, low-risk file that gives your application the best possible footing.
The five qualifying investment routes
The Regulation sets out several qualifying investments. You only need to satisfy one. Each route requires the investment to be maintained for at least three years and verified by the competent authority. The table below compares them at a glance.
| Route | Minimum | What you hold | Verified by |
|---|---|---|---|
| Real estate (most popular) | USD 400,000 | Property with a 3-year no-sale annotation on the tapu | Ministry of Environment, Urbanisation & Climate Change |
| Bank deposit | USD 500,000 | Cash locked 3 years (no FX guarantee since Aug 2025) | Banking Regulation & Supervision Agency (BDDK) |
| Fixed-capital investment | USD 500,000 | Capital in a Turkish company | Ministry of Industry & Technology |
| Bonds / fund shares | USD 500,000 | Government debt, or real-estate / venture-capital fund shares | Ministry of Treasury & Finance / Capital Markets Board (SPK) |
| Job creation | 50 employees | A substantial operating business | Ministry of Labour & Social Security |
Most individual clients choose between the property route and the bank-deposit route; we model both below. The fixed-capital and job-creation routes suit investors building a real operating business — work that overlaps with our company formation team, and which often pairs with a fixed-capital contribution our corporate lawyers structure.
Property vs. bank deposit: which route fits you
The two routes most foreigners weigh up are property and a bank deposit. They behave very differently over the three-year hold. Here is the honest comparison we walk clients through.
| Factor | Property (USD 400,000) | Bank deposit (USD 500,000) |
|---|---|---|
| Capital required | Lower (USD 400,000) | Higher (USD 500,000) |
| What you hold | A tangible asset that may appreciate | Cash earning a fixed return |
| Liquidity in years 1–3 | Locked by tapu annotation | Locked by withdrawal commitment |
| Currency / FX risk | Lira asset value moves; can be hedged by buying a margin above threshold | Full lira risk; no KKM FX guarantee since Aug 2025 |
| Extra transaction costs | Transfer tax, VAT, valuation, notary | Minimal |
| Typical processing | Faster end (clean files) | Often slower (extra verification) |
| After 3 years | Sell, keep or rent the property | Withdraw the funds |
The valuation report and CBRT exchange-rate mechanics
Two technical points trip up more property applications than anything else: the valuation report and the currency / exchange-rate rules. Get these wrong and the file is rejected at the Land Registry or the Ministry stage.
The three-value rule
In practice, three separate figures all need to clear the threshold for a property file:
- the price actually paid through Turkish banking channels, evidenced by a foreign-currency purchase document (DAB);
- the appraised value in the SPK-licensed valuation report; and
- the value declared on the tapu at transfer.
If any one of these falls below the threshold, the file fails — even if the others are comfortably above it. A common, avoidable mistake is declaring a low value on the tapu to save on transfer tax.
Combining properties — and the off-plan trap
For completed transfers, you can combine several properties, each with its own tapu, in one citizenship file to reach USD 400,000. But for preliminary / off-plan (noter satış vaadi) sales, since 1 January 2023 the full amount must sit in a single notarised contract — separate off-plan contracts cannot be added together.
How USD is converted: the CBRT effective rate
The thresholds are in US dollars, but Turkish property is priced and registered in Turkish lira. Conversion uses the Central Bank of the Republic of Türkiye (CBRT) effective selling rate on the relevant date. Because the lira moves, the lira figure you need to satisfy USD 400,000 shifts day to day.
Documents you will need
The exact list depends on your nationality and route, but for a typical property-route family application expect to provide:
Personal and family documents
- Valid passports for every applicant (investor, spouse, children).
- Birth certificates for children and, where relevant, the investor.
- Marriage certificate (to include a spouse).
- Recent passport-style photographs to Turkish biometric specification.
- A criminal-record / police-clearance certificate — now mandatory for both the main applicant and the spouse.
- Proof of any prior or current residence permit in Türkiye, if applicable.
- Health insurance valid in Türkiye.
Investment and financial documents
- Title deed (tapu) with the three-year no-sale annotation (property route).
- SPK-licensed valuation report.
- Foreign-currency purchase document (DAB) evidencing funds that entered through Turkish banks.
- Certificate of Conformity (Uygunluk Belgesi) from the relevant Ministry.
- For capital routes: bank, BDDK, SPK or Ministry confirmation of the qualifying investment.
If you cannot travel for every step, a properly drafted power of attorney (vekâletname) lets us act for you on the purchase and much of the process — see our guide on granting a power of attorney for use in Türkiye. We keep the wording broad enough to be useful but tightly scoped for your protection.
Step by step: from valuation to passport
The property route is the most involved; capital routes follow the same back half (residence permit, citizenship file, decree) once the investment is verified. The short version:
- Due diligence & valuation — title and charge checks, seller eligibility, and the SPK-licensed valuation. Nothing is paid to a seller until the property is cleared.
- Purchase & funds transfer — funds move through Turkish banking channels so the DAB issues, and the tapu transfers with the three-year no-sale annotation registered.
- Certificate of Conformity — we file for the Uygunluk Belgesi with the relevant Ministry, confirming the investment qualifies.
- Residence permit — investor and spouse obtain the CBI residence permit (see the law note below).
- Citizenship application — the full file goes to the Directorate of Population and Citizenship Affairs / Provincial Directorate of Migration Management.
- Security checks & Presidential decision — vetting, then the citizenship decree; on approval you collect ID cards and passports.
Costs and a realistic timeline
Beyond the qualifying investment itself, budget for transaction and government costs. All figures below are indicative and change with regulation, exchange rates and the specific property.
Indicative additional costs (property route)
- Title-deed transfer tax — a percentage of the declared value, payable on the tapu transfer.
- SPK valuation report — a few hundred US dollars per property.
- Notary, sworn translation and apostille — typically a few hundred US dollars in total.
- Government application and ID/passport fees for each family member.
- Legal fees — our work is on a transparent fixed fee, agreed in writing before we start, with no success-fee surprises.
Indicative timeline
From a clean, ready file we typically see the citizenship decree in roughly four to eight months, and sometimes longer. Clean real-estate files sit at the faster end; bank-deposit and fund routes usually run longer because of the extra verification. Timing depends on the route, document completeness, security-check timing and current authority workload. We give you a realistic schedule for your specific case and tell you plainly if anything in your profile is likely to add time.
Common pitfalls (and how to avoid losing your money)
Most failed or delayed applications are not bad luck — they are avoidable mistakes, usually made by buyers who used an agent rather than an independent lawyer. The table below pairs the pitfall with how we prevent it.
| Pitfall | How we prevent it |
|---|---|
| Over-valuation / inflated price — a USD 250,000 property "appraised" at USD 400,000. The central check catches it; the file is rejected and you have overpaid. | Independent valuation and price benchmarking before you commit. |
| Sanctioned or ineligible seller — can sink the deal and your banking. | We screen the seller against sanctions and eligibility rules before any money moves. |
| Property already "used" for citizenship — generally cannot be re-used within the restricted period. | We verify each property's citizenship history before you buy. |
| Circular / related-party transactions — routing money in a loop is targeted by the rules as fraud and voids the application. | We structure the purchase so it is clean and arm's-length. |
| Hidden charges on the title — a mortgage (ipotek), lien, injunction or annotation can block transfer. | Our title search clears these before you pay. |
Your family, dual citizenship and what the passport gives you
Who is included
One qualifying investment covers the main investor, their spouse, and dependent children under 18 in a single application. Adult children (18 or over) are not automatically included and need their own qualifying basis. Plan family timing carefully — a child close to 18 should be added before they age out.
Dual citizenship is allowed
Türkiye permits dual (and multiple) citizenship, so you do not have to give up your existing nationality. You should, however, check your home country's rules — a few countries restrict or tax dual nationals, and that is a question for a lawyer there.
What a Turkish passport actually gives you
- Visa-free or visa-on-arrival travel to a large number of destinations (commonly cited at around 110–120 as of 2026 — check the current list, as it changes).
- Eligibility for the US E-2 treaty-investor visa (see below) — a major draw for entrepreneurs.
- The right to live, work, own property and run a business in Türkiye without permits.
- No residence or language requirement to obtain or keep the citizenship.
- Citizenship passes to your descendants.
The US E-2 treaty-investor angle
One of the most valuable — and most misunderstood — features of Turkish citizenship is the US E-2 visa. Türkiye is a treaty country with the United States, so a Turkish citizen who makes a substantial investment in a genuine US business can apply for an E-2 treaty-investor visa to live in the US and run that business.
Why this matters
Many nationalities — notably citizens of India, China and others not on the E-2 treaty list — cannot use the E-2 visa at all. Acquiring Turkish citizenship can open that door. For entrepreneurs who want a US presence without the long green-card backlog, the path of Turkish citizenship → US E-2 visa is a well-known strategy — see our note on legal considerations for US entrepreneurs in Türkiye.
We do not file your US visa — that is US immigration work — but we structure the Turkish citizenship so it is clean, properly documented and fit for an E-2 application down the line. If part of the plan is a Turkish operating company, our commercial contract lawyers can paper the structure correctly.
How Lexin Legal handles your file end to end
We act for the investor only, in English, on a fixed fee agreed up front. We are not paid by developers, so our recommendation on property and route is independent of any sales commission.
What we do
- Independent strategy — we model the property versus capital routes for your situation, after tax and currency, before you commit a cent.
- Full due diligence — title search, charge checks, seller screening (sanctions and citizenship-history checks) and price benchmarking.
- The whole transaction — valuation, banking and DAB, the tapu transfer with the no-sale annotation, and the Certificate of Conformity.
- The citizenship file — residence permits for investor and spouse, document apostille and translation, and the citizenship application through to the Presidential decree.
- Largely remote handling — with a power of attorney we run most of the process without you in Türkiye, though investor and spouse should plan for a short in-person visit for biometrics.
One firm, one English-speaking point of contact, one fixed fee — from the first valuation to the passport in your hand.
For a realistic assessment of your eligibility, route and timeline, contact us and we will review your situation and give you a clear, written plan. You can also read more in our explainer on acquiring Turkish citizenship through investment and our guide to the bank-deposit route.
How we handle your file
Eligibility and strategy
We review your nationality, goals and budget, then recommend the route — property or capital — that fits, with the costs and timeline set out in writing.
Due diligence
We run title, charge, seller and sanctions checks, benchmark the price, and arrange the SPK-licensed valuation before any money moves.
Investment and banking
We move funds through Turkish banking channels for the DAB, complete the tapu transfer with the three-year no-sale annotation, or verify your chosen capital investment.
Certificate of Conformity
We obtain the Uygunluk Belgesi from the relevant Ministry confirming your investment qualifies under the programme.
Residence permit
We file for the CBI residence permit that forms part of your citizenship file.
Citizenship application
We assemble and submit the full file — investment proof, conformity certificate, apostilled and translated personal documents — for every family member.
Decree and passports
We track the security checks and Presidential decision, and on approval help you collect Turkish ID cards and passports.
Turkish citizenship by investment FAQ
How much do I need to invest for Turkish citizenship?
The most common route is buying property worth at least USD 400,000 and keeping it for three years. The capital routes — bank deposit, fixed-capital, government bonds or investment-fund shares — require USD 500,000, and a fifth route requires creating 50 jobs. These figures are current as of 2026 but are set by regulation and can change.
Is Turkish citizenship by investment the same as a Turkey golden visa?
It is often marketed that way, but it grants more than a visa. A golden visa usually gives residence; the Turkish programme grants full citizenship and a passport once you make a qualifying investment of USD 400,000 in property or USD 500,000 in capital and pass the checks.
Do I have to live in Türkiye to get or keep citizenship?
No. There is no residence or physical-presence requirement, no language test and no obligation to give up your current nationality. You hold the property or investment for three years; you do not have to live here — though the investor and spouse should plan a short visit for biometrics.
Can I keep my current passport?
Yes. Türkiye allows dual and multiple citizenship. You should separately check whether your home country restricts dual nationality, as a few do — that is a question for a lawyer in that country.
Are my spouse and children included?
Yes. One qualifying investment covers the main investor, the spouse and dependent children under 18 in a single application. Adult children (18 or over) are not automatically included and need their own basis. Note that under the 2025 rules the spouse must also obtain a residence permit and a criminal-record certificate.
How long does the whole process take?
From a complete, clean file we typically see the citizenship decree in roughly four to eight months, sometimes longer. Clean real-estate files are at the faster end; bank-deposit and fund routes usually run longer because of extra verification. Timing also depends on document completeness, security-check timing and authority workload.
Can I sell the property after I get citizenship?
You can sell once the three-year no-sale period registered on the title deed has passed. Selling earlier breaches the condition and puts the citizenship at risk.
Why do I need an SPK-licensed valuation report?
The programme requires the qualifying value to be confirmed by an appraisal company licensed by the Capital Markets Board (SPK). The appraised value must meet the USD 400,000 threshold, and the report is checked centrally — you cannot rely on the contract price alone.
What is the three-value rule?
For a property file, three figures must each clear the threshold: the price actually paid through Turkish banks (evidenced by the DAB), the SPK valuation, and the value declared on the title deed. If any one falls short, the file fails — so never under-declare the tapu value to save tax.
Can I combine several properties to reach USD 400,000?
For completed transfers, yes — multiple properties, each with its own title deed, can be combined in one citizenship file. But for preliminary/off-plan (noter satış vaadi) sales, since 1 January 2023 the full amount must sit in a single notarised contract; separate off-plan contracts cannot be added together.
Can I do this without travelling to Türkiye?
Largely, yes. With a properly drafted power of attorney we complete the purchase and run most of the process remotely, in English. Under the 2025 rules, however, the investor and spouse generally need to attend in person for fingerprinting and biometrics, so plan for at least one short visit.
Is a Turkish passport visa-free to Europe, the UK or the US?
Not currently. A Turkish passport gives strong visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to many countries (commonly cited at around 110–120 as of 2026), but not the Schengen area, the UK or the US. If living in Europe is your only goal, be clear about that before investing.
How does Turkish citizenship help with the US E-2 visa?
Türkiye is a US E-2 treaty country, so a Turkish citizen who invests in a genuine US business can apply for the E-2 treaty-investor visa. This is valuable for nationals of non-treaty countries. US authorities expect a genuine connection, so plan the timing — often cited as around three years of holding the nationality — with a US immigration attorney.
Can a property that was already used for citizenship be used again?
Generally no, not within the restricted period. A property a previous owner already used to obtain citizenship cannot usually be re-used. We check each property's citizenship history before you buy to avoid a rejection after completion.
Is the citizenship guaranteed if I make the investment?
No. Meeting the financial criteria creates a strong, well-established pathway, but the final grant is a discretionary Presidential decree and applicants must pass security checks. Anyone promising a guaranteed result is misrepresenting the law. We build a clean, complete file to give your application the best footing.
How is Lexin Legal paid, and do you work for developers?
We act for the investor only, on a transparent fixed fee agreed in writing before we start. We are not paid commission by developers, so our advice on property and route is independent.