St Kitts and Nevis Citizenship by Investment.
The original Caribbean CBI programme — a more premium route for clients who value programme standing, speed and the fact that St Kitts and Nevis is not listed in the current Dominica-specific partial US visa suspension.
St Kitts and Nevis operates the original citizenship-by-investment programme, established in 1984. It is generally positioned as the more premium Caribbean route, with a higher minimum contribution than Dominica but stronger historic standing and, under the current 2026 position, the fact that St Kitts and Nevis is not listed in the current Dominica-specific partial US visa suspension.
Moore Law advises on whether St Kitts and Nevis is suitable for the client’s objectives, models the true family cost including biometric-enrolment requirements, prepares the due-diligence file, coordinates tax and reporting issues and supervises the authorised agent from application through to passport issuance.
Last reviewed:
Applications are subject to eligibility, due diligence, authorised-agent submission, investment completion and final approval by the relevant government authority.
Moore Law view.
St Kitts and Nevis is usually the stronger choice where a client values programme age, institutional reputation, speed and the fact that St Kitts and Nevis is not listed in the current Dominica-specific partial US visa suspension. It has a clean premium narrative: the original Caribbean CBI programme, still central to the market.
The higher contribution should be accepted only where it buys something meaningful for the client’s facts. For some families, the difference between Dominica and St Kitts is modest once dependants and due-diligence fees are modelled. For others, the gap is material.
St Kitts is generally the premium route. Whether the premium is justified depends on the client’s facts, and US visa or entry outcomes must never be assumed.
St Kitts and Nevis at a glance.
Last reviewed:
| Programme established | 1984 |
|---|---|
| Minimum SISC contribution | US$250,000 for a main applicant or family of up to four |
| Additional dependants | US$25,000 for each additional dependant under 18; US$50,000 for each additional dependant aged 18 or over |
| Public Benefit Option | From US$250,000 in an approved public-benefit project |
| Developer’s Real Estate | From US$325,000 in an approved development, generally resaleable after seven years |
| Private Real Estate | From US$325,000 for a condominium unit or share; from US$600,000 for a single-family private home |
| Application route | Through an authorised agent |
| Interview | Main applicant interview required; dependants aged 16 or over may be required to attend if necessary |
| Biometric enrolment | Mandatory for new applications submitted from 14 April 2026 onwards. Current official biometric fees are US$2,500 for the main adult applicant aged 16 or over, US$2,000 for the second adult applicant and US$1,300 for children under 16, subject to official confirmation at the time of booking. |
| Existing Citizenship Programme citizens | Citizens who obtained citizenship through the Citizenship Programme are required to complete biometric enrolment by 31 July 2027. Passports issued before 14 April 2026 remain valid during the transition period, but only biometric-enabled passports are accepted for travel after 31 July 2027. |
| Indicative planning timeline | CIU decision window of 120–180 days from acknowledgement; approximately 4–6 months as a planning assumption for a clean file |
| Main caution | Higher entry cost and biometric-enrolment logistics should be considered before choosing the route |
Programme rules, fees, timelines, family eligibility and travel access are subject to change.
Who St Kitts and Nevis may suit.
St Kitts and Nevis is usually considered where the client wants a more premium Caribbean programme and is prepared to pay more for reputation, current positioning and process discipline.
- Clients who want the original and longest-running Caribbean CBI programme.
- Applicants who value programme standing and a cleaner premium narrative.
- Clients who prioritise current US positioning over the lowest contribution route.
- Families of up to four where the SISC contribution can be relatively efficient.
- Clients who accept biometric-enrolment logistics as part of a stronger passport-integrity framework.
- Clients who want a route that sits comfortably inside a wider private-client, legal and tax plan.
St Kitts and Nevis investment routes.
St Kitts and Nevis offers several routes. The right route depends on whether the client prefers a contribution, a public-benefit project or real estate.
Sustainable Island State Contribution
A non-refundable contribution to St Kitts and Nevis’ sustainable development priorities. For many clients, this is the cleanest and most straightforward route.
| Main applicant or family of up to four | US$250,000 |
|---|---|
| Additional dependant under 18 | US$25,000 |
| Additional dependant aged 18 or over | US$50,000 |
| Due diligence — main applicant | US$10,000 |
| Due diligence — dependant aged 16 or over | US$7,500 |
Public Benefit Option
A contribution to an approved public-benefit project. This route may be relevant where a client wants the investment linked to a defined public project rather than the SISC.
| Main applicant | US$250,000 in a unit of an approved public-benefit project |
|---|---|
| Spouse and dependants | Post-approval fees apply |
| Due diligence | Applies |
Developer’s Real Estate
Investment in an approved development. This route may suit clients who want an asset alongside citizenship, subject to holding period, purchase costs and project selection.
| Minimum investment | US$325,000 |
|---|---|
| General holding period | Seven years |
| Post-approval and purchase costs | Apply |
Private Real Estate
Purchase of approved private real estate, including condominium units, shares in designated developments or single-family private homes.
| Condominium unit or share | From US$325,000 |
|---|---|
| Single-family private home | From US$600,000 |
| General holding period | Seven years |
| Post-approval and purchase costs | Apply |
St Kitts SISC route — indicative family cost.
The figures below are planning estimates for the SISC route. They combine the contribution, due-diligence fees and current official biometric/passport-modernisation fees. They are rounded and must be confirmed before funds are committed or biometric appointments are booked.
| Applicant profile | SISC contribution | Due diligence | Biometrics / passport-modernisation | Indicative government-file total before professional fees |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single adult | US$250,000 | US$10,000 | US$2,500 | approx. US$262,500 |
| Couple, no children | US$250,000 | US$17,500 | US$4,500 | approx. US$272,000 |
| Couple + 1 child under 16 | US$250,000 | US$17,500 | US$5,800 | approx. US$273,300 |
| Couple + 2 children under 16 | US$250,000 | US$17,500 | US$7,100 | approx. US$274,600 |
The SISC contribution is generally flat for a family of up to four. The main cost drivers are adult dependants, biometric/passport-modernisation fees, real estate, post-approval fees where applicable and any additional due-diligence or processing requirements.
The figures above do not include Moore Law professional fees, authorised-agent fees, courier costs, legalisation, translation, third-party costs, bank charges, real-estate purchase costs, post-approval real-estate fees or any additional official charges that may apply to the client’s specific route.
Due diligence, interview and biometrics.
St Kitts and Nevis applies a rigorous due-diligence process. The main applicant is required to attend an interview, and dependants aged 16 or over may be required to attend if deemed necessary by the CIU.
The biometric-enrolment programme is now part of the passport-modernisation framework. For new applications submitted from 14 April 2026 onwards, biometric enrolment is a mandatory component once the application reaches approval in principle. Enrolment takes place at officially designated locations through the government platform.
For UAE-based clients, the availability of regional enrolment locations can be helpful, but logistics should still be planned early.
A stronger document-integrity framework is positive, but it adds operational steps that must be managed properly.
Biometric enrolment logistics.
For new applications submitted from 14 April 2026 onwards, biometric enrolment is part of the application pathway once approval in principle is reached. The CIU states that enrolment takes place exclusively at officially designated locations through the official Government biometric platform.
For UAE-based clients, current official materials list Dubai as an operating collection location and Abu Dhabi as a consular location from the second phase. Availability, booking, fees and location should be checked at the time of approval in principle.
Biometric enrolment should be treated as part of the application budget and timeline, not as a minor post-approval detail.
Programme risks to consider.
St Kitts and Nevis is strongly positioned, but it is still a CBI programme operating in a changing international environment.
EU/Schengen review risk
Schengen visa-free access is subject to EU policy. The revised EU visa-suspension mechanism expressly addresses investor citizenship schemes where citizenship is granted without a genuine link.
Biometric-enrolment logistics
Biometric enrolment strengthens passport integrity but requires practical coordination for the applicant and dependants.
Travel-access volatility
Visa-free and visa-on-arrival access can change. Mobility should be treated as a current planning assumption rather than a permanent guarantee.
Higher entry cost
The minimum SISC contribution is higher than Dominica. The client should understand what the premium is buying.
Tax residence distinction
St Kitts citizenship does not automatically create tax residence in St Kitts and Nevis or end tax obligations elsewhere.
Source-of-funds burden
Applicants must provide a clear, lawful and documented source-of-funds and source-of-wealth position.
How Moore Law works on a St Kitts matter.
Moore Law advises before the client commits to St Kitts and Nevis. We compare it against Dominica and any other suitable route, model the real cost by family composition, assess the current regulatory position and prepare the source-of-funds and tax analysis.
The authorised agent submits the formal application to the CIU. Moore Law instructs and supervises that agent on the client’s behalf, ensuring that the matter is handled as a legal and tax advisory engagement rather than a simple filing.
- Programme suitability and risk assessment.
- Family-cost modelling.
- Source-of-funds and source-of-wealth preparation.
- Authorised-agent engagement and oversight.
- Interview and biometric-enrolment preparation.
- Tax, banking, corporate and estate structuring where required.
St Kitts and Nevis process.
Private consultation
We confirm the client’s objectives, nationality, residence, family composition, source-of-funds position and travel priorities.
Eligibility review
We review obvious bars, nationality restrictions, prior visa refusals, sanctions exposure, reputational risks and family eligibility.
Programme suitability
We confirm whether St Kitts is the better route or whether Dominica, another route or no CBI route is more appropriate.
Authorised-agent instruction
The application is handled through an authorised agent. Moore Law engages, instructs and supervises the agent on the client’s behalf.
File preparation
Identity documents, family records, police certificates, source-of-funds evidence and supporting materials are assembled and checked.
Submission, due diligence and interview
The authorised agent submits the file. The applicant undergoes due diligence and the interview process required by the CIU.
Approval in principle, investment and biometrics
If approved in principle, the qualifying contribution or investment is completed and biometric enrolment is coordinated as part of the passport process.
Programme rules, fees, biometric requirements and processing updates should always be verified against the official CIU sources before funds are committed.
- St Kitts and Nevis CIU
- Sustainable Island State Contribution
- Public Benefit Option
- Developer’s Real Estate
- Private Real Estate
- Biometrics
External government and institutional sources. Programme figures and regulatory positions should be verified against these before they are relied upon.
Common questions.
Why is St Kitts and Nevis considered a premium CBI route?
St Kitts and Nevis operates the original Caribbean citizenship-by-investment programme, established in 1984. It is often selected by clients who value programme age, standing, process discipline and current US positioning.
What is the minimum SISC contribution?
The Sustainable Island State Contribution is currently US$250,000 for a main applicant or a family of up to four. Additional dependant and due-diligence fees apply.
Does St Kitts require an interview?
The main applicant is required to attend an interview. Dependants aged 16 or over may also be required to attend if deemed necessary by the CIU.
Is biometric enrolment required?
Yes. For new applications submitted from 14 April 2026 onwards, biometric enrolment is a mandatory component once the application reaches approval in principle. Current official fees are US$2,500 for the main adult applicant aged 16 or over, US$2,000 for the second adult applicant and US$1,300 for children under 16, subject to confirmation on the official platform at the time of booking.
Do existing St Kitts CBI citizens need biometric enrolment?
Yes. The CIU states that citizens who obtained citizenship through the Citizenship Programme must complete enrolment by 31 July 2027. Passports issued before 14 April 2026 remain valid during the transition period, but after 31 July 2027 only biometric-enabled passports are accepted for travel.
Does St Kitts require residence before citizenship?
There is no residence requirement to qualify under the current CBI route, but the applicant must satisfy all eligibility, due-diligence, interview and investment requirements.
Does St Kitts citizenship create tax residence?
No. Citizenship and tax residence are separate questions. Holding St Kitts citizenship does not automatically create tax residence or end obligations elsewhere.