(ITALY) Italy’s fast‑growing Investor Visa, often called the Golden Visa, is open to non‑EU citizens, including many Indian investors who want a flexible path to live, work, and study in Italy while keeping global business ties. First introduced in 2017 and fully operational in 2025, the program grants a two‑year residence permit in exchange for a qualifying investment, with the option to renew for three‑year periods as long as the investment is maintained. Holders also get Schengen travel, which helps with short trips across much of Europe for business or family needs.
At its core, the Investor Visa connects private capital with national goals: more funding for Italian companies, research, and public‑interest projects, in return for residency rights. Unlike several European programs scaled back in recent years, Italy’s version remains flexible. There is no full‑time stay rule, which means investors can split their time, keep companies running abroad, or manage portfolios in different markets without risking their status in Italy. According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, interest has risen as other European countries tightened their Golden Visa routes, and Italy kept a clear set of options with predictable thresholds.

Investment options and thresholds
The investment menu has four choices with different costs and risk levels. Applicants must choose one route; mixing routes to reach the threshold is not allowed.
- €250,000 — equity stake in an Italian innovative startup (high‑growth, research and tech focus).
- €500,000 — equity investment in an Italian limited company (suitable for exposure to more established firms).
- €2,000,000 — purchase of Italian government bonds (lower capital preservation risk).
- €1,000,000 — philanthropic donation to a public interest project (no financial return).
Each route has different due diligence and operational needs:
– For startups: confirm the company’s status as an innovative startup, review cash needs, runway, and governance.
– For limited‑company equity: study financials and verify the company is headquartered and operating in Italy.
– For bonds: confirm settlement and holding rules that satisfy the program.
– For donations: secure formal confirmation from the public body that it can receive funds for a public‑interest purpose.
Eligibility and key requirements
The program is open to adults 18 or older who:
– Hold a valid non‑EU, non‑EEA, non‑Swiss passport.
– Can show lawful, transferable funds for the selected investment.
– Present clean criminal record certificates.
– Have comprehensive health insurance covering care in Italy.
– Provide proof of accommodation and basic means to support themselves.
Important operational rules:
– The investment must be completed within three months of arriving in Italy on the visa.
– The investment must be maintained for renewals.
– There is no requirement for full‑time physical residence to retain the status, provided the investment remains in place and other conditions are met.
Family inclusion
Family unity is a major benefit:
– The main applicant can request residence for a spouse and dependent children.
– Family members can enroll in local schools, access the national health system under set rules, and build daily life in Italy’s cities and regions.
– This helps families plan school and university paths in Europe, while keeping business ties in countries like India.
Longer‑term pathways
Italy provides a long‑term horizon for settled investors:
– After five years of lawful stay, a resident may apply for EU long‑term residency (more stable status across the bloc).
– After ten years, some may qualify for Italian citizenship, subject to language and integration checks.
These are separate processes with their own requirements and timelines, but they offer a clear multi‑year plan for those who wish to put down roots.
Policy overview and process steps
Officials designed the Investor Visa to be clear on entry costs and tight on safeguards. Applicants upload a document package to the official portal, where a government Investor Visa Committee reviews legal and financial checks. If the Committee approves, it issues a Nulla Osta, a certificate stating there is no barrier to issuing the two‑year visa.
Key program facts:
– Initial permit length: 2 years
– Renewal periods: 3 years each (if the investment stays in place)
– Investment deadline: within 3 months of arrival on the visa
– Schengen travel: up to 90 days in any 180‑day period
– No full‑time stay rule: physical presence in Italy is not required to keep the status, subject to maintaining the investment
The program is aimed at connecting private capital with national priorities while preserving investor flexibility and family stability.
How the application works — step‑by‑step
Most applicants follow a clear sequence with checkpoints. Italy’s digital front door speeds up the early phase.
- Register and file the Nulla Osta request on the Italian Investor Visa Portal.
- Upload: passport copy, CV, proof funds are lawful and transferable, police clearances from places lived in recent years, and a signed commitment detailing the chosen route and recipient.
- Provide consent letters from the recipient company or body if needed.
- The Investor Visa Committee reviews the file.
- The law allows about 30 days for this stage.
- The Committee can approve, refuse, or request more documents. If refused, reasons are provided.
- If approved, use the Nulla Osta to apply for the two‑year Investor Visa at the Italian consulate or embassy.
- Attend the consulate within the allowed window with originals and any required translations/legalizations.
- Enter Italy and, within eight days of arrival, apply for the residence permit at the local immigration office.
- This starts your lawful stay clock.
- Complete the investment within three months and provide proof of execution in the agreed form and amount.
- For renewal after two years, show the investment remains in place and that you still meet core requirements (health insurance, clean records).
Applicants should budget for costs beyond the investment amount:
– Legal fees, translations, apostille charges, consular fees, permit fees — these all add up.
– Timelines can vary by consulate and file complexity, so plan travel and school calendars with a buffer.
Practical considerations and risks
Tax and residency:
– The no full‑time stay rule may help with tax planning, but cross‑border tax advice is essential.
– Keeping tax residency in India can be possible in some cases if days abroad are limited, but every family’s profile differs.
Investment risks and tradeoffs:
– Currency risk, regulatory risk, and business risk affect startup and equity routes.
– Government bonds are steadier but require more capital.
– Donations satisfy the requirement without investment risk but are an expense, not an asset.
Family and daily life logistics:
– Healthcare access depends on local rules and private cover, especially early on.
– Schools may require translated transcripts.
– Housing contracts help with accommodation proof and ease the first months.
– Many investors appoint a local advisor to coordinate steps and reduce delays.
Impact on investors and families
The Investor Visa has become a bridge for people who do not fit standard work or student tracks but can commit capital and want legal residency in a major European economy. It supports mobility for business owners who need frequent Schengen travel while keeping a stable home in Italy.
For Indian applicants, the program’s flexibility and clear money thresholds are attractive. Many families balance children’s studies in Europe with ongoing companies in Mumbai, Bengaluru, or Delhi. The Investor Visa lets the main applicant or spouse spend time where the business needs them without losing Italian residency.
Limitations to note:
– The Investor Visa is not a fast track to free movement for work in other EU states — Schengen travel is for short stays only.
– The government will verify that funds are lawful and remain in place; if the investment stops, the permit can be at risk during renewal.
– Families should factor in exchange‑rate exposure, especially when income is in rupees and costs are in euros.
Even with these limits, Italy’s Investor Visa remains one of the most flexible routes in Europe: it sets clear minimums, offers a straightforward digital start, and lets global investors keep active lives across borders. For those ready to commit capital and plan carefully, Italy offers a practical, family‑friendly route into Europe’s legal residency system.
This Article in a Nutshell
Italy’s Investor Visa (Golden Visa) grants non‑EU citizens a two‑year residence permit in exchange for one of four qualifying investments: €250,000 in innovative startup equity, €500,000 in limited company equity, €2,000,000 in government bonds, or €1,000,000 as a philanthropic donation. Launched in 2017 and fully operational by 2025, the program allows Schengen travel and renewal for three‑year periods if the investment is maintained. Applicants must be 18+, hold a non‑EU passport, show lawful transferable funds, provide police clearances, health insurance, and accommodation proof. The process begins with a Nulla Osta request on the official portal; the committee reviews files within about 30 days. Investments must be completed within three months of arrival and maintained for renewals. Families (spouse and dependents) can be included, and long‑term pathways include EU long‑term residency after five years and possible Italian citizenship after ten. Applicants should budget for legal and consular fees and seek tax and legal advice due to residency, tax, and currency risks.