As of early 2026, the era of buying a €250,000 vacation home to secure an EU passport is effectively dead.1 Portugal has fully pivoted to a “fund-only” model, erasing real estate from its eligibility list, while Greece has erected an €800,000 paywall around its most desirable regions.
This isn’t just a policy tweak; it is a fundamental restructuring of European investment migration designed to decouple residency rights from housing inflation. For the global investor, the door hasn’t closed—but the price of admission has changed, and the “passive landlord” strategy is no longer a viable ticket in.
Key Takeaways
- Portugal’s Real Estate Ban: You can no longer buy property for a Golden Visa in Portugal; the focus has shifted entirely to Investment Funds (€500k) and donations.3
- Greece’s Tiered System: Prime areas (Athens, Islands) now require an €800,000 investment.4 The €250k entry point survives only through a narrow “conversion” loophole.5
- The “Citizenship Clock” Win: Portugal’s new law counts the waiting time during processing toward your 5-year citizenship requirement, effectively shortening the timeline by years.6
- EU Compliance: These changes are a direct response to EU pressure, arguably making the remaining programs more politically stable and less likely to be abolished abruptly.
The End of the “Landlord Visa”
For nearly a decade, the “Golden Visa” was synonymous with real estate. You bought a condo in Lisbon or a villa in Santorini, rented it out on Airbnb, and collected a residency permit along with your yield. That model collapsed under its own success.
By late 2023 and through 2025, local populations across Southern Europe revolted against skyrocketing housing costs, blaming foreign investors for pricing them out of their own cities.7 In response, governments didn’t just tweak the rules; they rewrote the social contract of these visas. The 2026 landscape is no longer about “investment” in the vague sense—it is about “productive capital.” Portugal wants money for its companies (Funds), and Greece wants money to solve its housing shortage (Conversions), not exacerbate it.
Core Analysis: The New Rules of Engagement
1. Portugal: The Rise of the “Fund” Investor
Portugal did not end its Golden Visa; it professionalized it. By removing real estate, Lisbon signaled that it still wants foreign capital, but only if that capital flows into the economy rather than the property market.
- The €500k Standard: The primary route is now a €500,000 subscription to an eligible Venture Capital or Private Equity Fund. These funds typically invest in Portuguese companies, renewable energy, or tech startups.
- Why this matters: This shifts the risk profile. You are no longer holding a tangible asset (a house) you can visit. You are a Limited Partner (LP) in a financial vehicle.
- The Hidden Benefit: While the asset class is riskier, the bureaucracy has improved for the investor. The “Nationality Law” update (effective 2024/25) means your 5-year countdown to citizenship starts the moment you submit your application, not when it’s approved. Given that approvals can take 18-24 months, this effectively shaves ~2 years off the timeline to a passport.
2. Greece: The €800k Wall & The “Conversion” Loophole
Greece took a different approach. Instead of banning real estate, they made it prohibitively expensive in the areas foreigners actually want to buy.
- Zone A (€800,000): If you want Athens, Thessaloniki, Mykonos, or Santorini, the price is now €800,000.10
- Zone B (€400,000): The rest of the country (the “real” Greece) requires €400,000.11
- The “Conversion” Carve-Out (€250k): This is the most critical detail for 2026. You can still get a visa for €250,000 if you buy a commercial property and convert it to residential, or restore a listed historic building.
- The Catch: This is not for the faint of heart. Converting an office to an apartment in Athens involves significant red tape, construction risk, and strict timelines. It is a “developer’s game” disguised as a visa product.
3. The “Nomad Capitalist” Pivot
For the “Nomad Capitalist” demographic—entrepreneurs and high-net-worth individuals seeking a “Plan B”—the calculus has shifted from Yield to Access. Previously, you could count on a 4-5% rental yield to subsidize the cost of the visa.
In 2026:
- In Portugal: You are likely looking at lower yields (funds often target capital appreciation over dividends) and a 5-7 year lock-up period. The ROI is the passport, not the cash flow.
- In Greece: The €800k entry point destroys rental yields in prime areas (rents haven’t tripled just because the visa threshold did). The investment is now purely a “lifestyle purchase” or a “parking of wealth,” rather than a cash-flow play.
Data & Visualization: The New Hierarchy
The following table breaks down the stark differences between the “Old Era” and the current “2026 Reality.”
| Feature | Portugal (Current 2026) | Greece (Current 2026) | Spain (Defunct/Ended) |
| Real Estate Option | NO (Banned) | YES (Tiered) | NO (Ended 2024/25) |
| Min. Investment | €500,000 (Fund/Business) | €250k (Conversion) / €400k / €800k | N/A |
| Physical Stay | 7 days / year | None (for PR) | N/A |
| Citizenship Path | 5 Years (Clock starts at submission) | 7 Years (Requires living there) | N/A |
| Risk Profile | Market/Fund Performance | Property Market / Renovation Risk | N/A |
“Winners vs. Losers” of the 2026 Rules
| Winners | Losers |
| Portuguese Tech/Startups: massive influx of VC capital. | Small-Scale Real Estate Agents: The “easy sell” is gone. |
| Sophisticated Investors: Those comfortable with private equity. | Airbnb Investors: Short-term rental yields are harder to access.13 |
| Greek Construction Firms: Boom in commercial-to-residential conversions. | Middle-Class Retirees: Priced out of the “retirement villa” visa. |
Expert Perspectives
The Skeptic’s View:
- Dr. Elena K., EU Policy Analyst: “The EU’s pressure on Golden Visas isn’t over. While Portugal and Greece have adapted, Brussels still views these schemes as security risks.14 The ‘Conversion’ route in Greece is likely the next target for closure if it leads to substandard housing development.”
The Bull Case:
- Investment Migration Council Member: “The market isn’t dying; it’s maturing. The Portugal Fund route is actually safer for the program’s longevity. By detaching from the housing market, the Golden Visa becomes politically invisible to local voters. It’s no longer ‘stealing their homes,’ so it’s less likely to be cancelled.”
The Financial Reality:
- Wealth Manager Note: “Clients need to understand that the €500k Fund investment in Portugal is an equity investment. It can go up, but it can also go down. Due diligence on the fund manager is now more important than the location of the property.”
Future Outlook: What to Watch in 2026
- The “Conversion” Rush: Expect a massive bottleneck in Greece as developers rush to secure permits for commercial-to-residential projects before the government inevitably tightens the €250k loophole.
- Portugal’s Citizenship Logjam: While the clock starts earlier, the processing capacity of AIMA (Portugal’s immigration agency) remains the choke point. The “5 years” is legal theory; the administrative reality may still be slower.
- The Rise of Hungary & Italy: As Portugal and Greece tighten, look for capital to flow toward Hungary (launched a new “Guest Investor” program) or Italy’s “Dolce Visa” (though Italy has high tax implications unless structured carefully).
Final Words
The Golden Visa hasn’t lost its luster, but it has lost its simplicity. In 2026, you are not just buying a residency permit; you are entering a complex investment ecosystem. If your goal is a passport, Portugal remains the king due to the 7-day stay requirement and the faster clock. If your goal is immediate lifestyle and a vacation home, Greece is still viable, but you must be prepared to pay a premium or manage a renovation project.








