Citizenship for a non-refundable contribution to the National Development Fund, the most popular and straightforward option.
Individuals and families seeking second citizenship with strong travel and low presence requirements.
Our licensed advisors assess your eligibility, build a strategy to strengthen your application, and manage the process end to end, so you submit a complete, competitive application with confidence.
You earn citizenship by making a qualifying investment, with the most popular route being a non-refundable contribution to the National Development Fund starting from around USD 230,000 for a family of up to four.
A main applicant can include a spouse, dependent children and dependent parents (generally over 55) in an NDF application, and the minimum contribution stays the same. Government and due-diligence fees, however, are charged per person.
A frequent mistake is assuming the headline contribution is the only cost; in reality you also pay per-person government processing fees and due-diligence fees, which grow with family size.
No. There is no requirement to relocate, but you must spend at least five days in Antigua and Barbuda within the first five years of becoming a citizen.
No. Antigua and Barbuda permits dual citizenship, so you keep your existing nationality unless your home country forbids holding two.
The NDF is a one-time non-refundable contribution to a government fund with nothing to manage afterwards, while real estate requires buying an approved property of at least US$300,000 and holding it for five years.
The NDF contribution is a one-time payment toward citizenship and is not made until your application is approved, so a refusal does not mean you lose the contribution itself. Due diligence and processing fees paid earlier in the process are generally non-refundable.