(GREECE) New Golden Visa applications plunged in 2025, falling by 46.7% in January through July compared with the same period last year, as tougher rules and higher prices reshaped the market. Official figures show requests dropped from 9,399 to 5,011 applications, while only 757 approvals were issued and 4,249 remained pending within this year’s flow.
Renewal activity fell even faster: 668 renewal applications were filed in 2025, down from 4,022 a year earlier—an 83.4% decline. The sudden slowdown follows sweeping reforms under Law 5100/2024, which pushed minimum property investments to €800,000 in prime zones such as Athens, Thessaloniki, Mykonos, and Santorini, €400,000 in the rest of the country, and kept €250,000 only for narrowly defined projects like the restoration of listed heritage buildings or conversion of unused commercial or industrial buildings into homes.

Short-term reaction and the grace period
For months, the market sent mixed signals. Investors rushed to secure the lower rate during a short grace period, locking in €250,000 with a 10% deposit by August 31, 2024, and completing purchases by February 28, 2025. That early push helped lift activity at the start of 2025: from January to April, 3,477 applications were filed, a 25% increase from the same months in 2024.
But once the grace window closed and the new thresholds fully applied, demand cooled. By midyear, Greece’s once‑busy Golden Visa pipeline had slowed, even as the state recorded its first modest cut in the long-term backlog—down from 52,821 to 52,399 pending cases by April 2025.
Key rule changes and practical effects
The latest rules do more than raise the price. They also change how people can use the property and what qualifies:
- Minimum thresholds
- €800,000: Athens, Thessaloniki, Mykonos, Santorini
- €400,000: Other regions
- €250,000: Only for listed-building restorations or completed commercial-to-residential conversions
- Property size
- Minimum 120 m² for standard property routes
- Use rules
- Short‑term rentals (e.g., Airbnb) are banned for Golden Visa homes
- Breach can lead to permit cancellation and a €50,000 fine
- Single-property rule
- Investors must buy a single property rather than combine several smaller units
- Restoration/conversion path
- For the €250,000 route, restoration of a listed building or conversion of a non‑residential site is allowed, but the conversion must be completed before the investor applies.
These changes remove the easy buy‑to‑rent model that many small investors relied on and push the program upmarket.
Important: Owners can no longer rely on short‑term rental income to cover costs. Expect to budget for full ownership expenses—taxes, building fees, insurance, repairs—without peak-season nightly rates.
Market shift and policy rationale
According to VisaVerge.com analysis, the steep fall in applications lines up with when the stricter terms took hold—especially after September 1, 2024, when higher thresholds started to apply to new buyers. For much of the past decade, Greece offered one of Europe’s lowest price points for residency by investment, drawing families and small investors who could spend around €250,000 on a modest flat in tourist areas and rely on short‑term rentals. That path is now far narrower.
Officials say the redesign aims to:
– Cool overheated neighborhoods (particularly in Athens and key islands)
– Reduce pressure on central housing markets
– Steer investment toward smaller cities and towns
– Encourage restoration and conversion projects that can revive old buildings and add housing supply
If projects are well chosen and completed on time, the changes could support urban renewal. If not, higher thresholds may simply move investment out of reach for many.
Alternative route: startup-linked residence permit
Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis promoted a new channel linked to entrepreneurship. In September 2024 he announced a five‑year residence permit tied to a €250,000 investment in Greek startups.
- Objective: Bring funding and talent into growing companies and attract a different investor profile (e.g., tech founders).
- Status as of August 2025: Details still pending.
- Potential: If designed well, this could become a viable alternative to property-based residency for those unwilling or unable to invest €400,000–€800,000 in real estate.
Industry reaction and program appeal
Industry voices emphasize continuing interest despite higher barriers:
- “Interest in Greece’s Golden Visa program remains strong and continues to grow, driven by its unique lifestyle appeal and strategic investment opportunities,” said Carolina Figueiredo of Arton Capital.
- Anna Semenyuk of Immigrant Invest noted that residence rights and Schengen access remain attractive even after the price jump.
Still, the numbers show many previous buyers can no longer reach the higher property levels, and the ban on short‑term rentals removes a common income plan that helped justify purchases.
Practical application steps in 2025
The standard steps remain familiar, but with stricter checks and planning needed:
- Choose a qualifying property that meets the price, size, and location rules.
- Complete the purchase and gather required documents:
- Property contract
- Proof of funds (matching the exact location threshold)
- Health insurance
- Clean criminal record
- Translate and notarize all papers in Greek.
- File the application.
- Travel to Greece for biometric collection (fingerprints, photos).
- If approved, receive a five‑year residence permit (can include spouse, children under 21, and parents of both spouses).
Processing times:
– Often 2–3 months after filing, but local offices still face heavy caseloads and a large overall backlog.
– Applicants should plan travel, school schedules, and moves with potential delays in mind.
Renewals and the 2025 drop
Renewals fell dramatically: 668 in 2025 versus 4,022 a year earlier—an 83.4% decline. Possible explanations include:
– Some buyers already secured long‑term status
– Property sales by earlier buyers
– Reassessment due to tighter property‑use rules
Regardless, the sharp drop confirms the program is entering a new phase.
Regional and developer implications
- The €800,000 floor in prime zones pushes the program into luxury territory.
- The €400,000 minimum elsewhere is more accessible but still high compared with past norms.
- Developers outside hot zones may benefit if they can deliver modern, 120 m²+ homes at or near the lower threshold.
- The €250,000 niche for restorations and conversions could revitalize older districts but requires:
- Heritage-standard restoration work
- Completed conversions before application
- Patience for longer timelines and technical checks
Example scenario
A family finds a 95 m² apartment in central Athens listed at €420,000. Under today’s rules:
– The unit fails the 120 m² minimum.
– Price is below the €800,000 threshold for that zone.
Options include:
– Moving to a larger property in a secondary city where €400,000 applies
– Exploring a restoration project (if feasible)
– Accepting long‑term leasing or personal use rather than short‑term rentals
Quick reference: current framework
- Thresholds: €800,000 (prime zones); €400,000 (elsewhere); €250,000 (listed restorations or completed conversions).
- Property size: 120 m² minimum for standard routes.
- Use rules: Short‑term rentals banned; breach can cancel permit and cause a €50,000 fine.
- Transitional window: 10% deposit by August 31, 2024, and completion by February 28, 2025 — now closed to new buyers.
- Processing: Often 2–3 months, but backlogs remain large; a slight drop was recorded in April 2025.
Practical advice for applicants
- Ensure the property purchase contract is clean and compliant.
- Verify proof of funds matches the exact location threshold.
- Obtain full insurance and notarized Greek translations of all documents.
- Keep copies and a clear payment record.
- Use legal counsel to clarify timing, fees, and refusal risks.
- Stay reachable for biometric appointments and monitor case status frequently.
Warning: If a property is too small, fails the location rule, or has unresolved legal issues, the application can stall or be refused.
What to expect next
- Authorities may adjust terms to balance foreign investment and local housing needs.
- If demand remains weak at higher thresholds, activity may shift to regions where €400,000 buys more space.
- Developers responding with well‑planned projects could spread investment beyond a few hot spots.
- The long backlog will take time to clear, especially because many pending files were filed under older rules.
Applicants and advisors seeking official updates, application guidance, and legal texts can consult the Greek Ministry of Migration and Asylum, which publishes program rules and notices.
The 2025 data point to a new reality: Greece is no longer the cheapest doorway to European residency through real estate. Property‑based Golden Visa applications have fallen sharply, but the program still appeals to high‑net‑worth buyers seeking a European base, family stability, and Mediterranean living. If the startup route opens with clear terms, a fresh wave of applicants could follow. Until then, expect lower volumes, a slow release of the backlog, and a market adjusting to a higher bar.
This Article in a Nutshell
After Law 5100/2024 raised Golden Visa investment thresholds and banned short-term rentals, applications fell 46.7% to 5,011 and renewals dropped 83.4%. New rules require €800k in prime zones, €400k elsewhere, 120 m² minimum, and restrict €250k to completed restorations or conversions. A startup-linked €250k route is proposed but details are pending.