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🇦🇷 Argentina

Argentina Rentista Visa

The shortest path to a Latin American passport. $1,500/month in passive income clears it, two years of residency unlocks the citizenship petition, US East Coast time zones throughout.

Financial req
$1,500/mo income
Processing
4 to 6 months
Naturalization
2 years
Presence required
183+ days / year
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The basics of the Rentista Visa

What it is

The Rentista (income-based) visa is Argentina's long-running passive-income residency. You demonstrate stable foreign-source passive income at or above roughly $1,500/month (the threshold scales with the Argentine minimum wage), apply through the Argentine consulate that covers your US state, attend a single Dirección Nacional de Migraciones appointment in Argentina, and receive a two-year temporary residency. The temporary visa converts to permanent residency at year two; at the same point, you can file the federal-court citizenship petition. End-to-end citizenship typically takes three to four years.

Who it’s for

  • US retirees and pensioners with Social Security plus a modest supplement
  • Remote workers and contractors with documented passive or quasi-passive income
  • Founders with consistent distribution income from a US-incorporated business
  • Families wanting the fastest path to a Latin American passport (3-4 years end-to-end)
  • Clients who actually want to live in Buenos Aires, Mendoza, or Bariloche substantially

Why it’s beneficial

Argentina has the shortest naturalization clock in the Western Hemisphere – two years of legal residency, then a federal-court petition. No other major Latin American jurisdiction is faster. The Rentista is the cleanest operational route into that clock, with the lowest financial bar and the most established consular process. The US Eastern time-zone alignment, the European-feel cities, and the dollar-stretching cost-of-living arbitrage that has held for two decades are structural bonuses.

Key benefits

The outcomes the Rentista Visa actually delivers, beyond the headline numbers. The six that matter most to our clients.

  1. Shortest path to a Latin American passport

    Two years of legal residency unlocks the citizenship petition. Federal-court processing adds 12-24 months; total end-to-end is three to four years. No other major hemisphere jurisdiction is faster.

  2. Lowest income threshold in the region

    Demonstrate roughly $1,500/month in foreign-source passive income – among the lowest passive-income thresholds for any Latin American residency. Most US Social Security recipients clear it on the SSA payment plus a modest pension or supplement.

  3. US Eastern time zone

    Argentina sits one hour ahead of US Eastern. Your nine AM is the East Coast's eight AM. Family calls, US business operations, and SSA correspondence stay on cadence – a structural advantage few non-US destinations offer.

  4. Buenos Aires runs on European logic

    Wide boulevards, café culture, a literary tradition, and a Mediterranean food rhythm. Most clients describe Buenos Aires as Paris on a different continent – at a fraction of European cost.

  5. USD-paid lifestyle arbitrage

    Despite currency volatility, dollars buy outsize value. Premium two-bedrooms in Recoleta or Palermo run $1,000-1,800/month. Long steak dinners with wine run $30-50.

  6. Family on the same application

    Spouse or registered partner, dependent children, and dependent parents qualify under a single application. Each family member receives the same residency rights and the same two-year clock to citizenship eligibility.

Financial requirements

The financial threshold to qualify, with the documentation we walk every client through.

Passive-income demonstration

$1,500/month

Demonstrate stable foreign-source passive income at or above the Rentista threshold (roughly $1,500/month, indexed to the Argentine minimum wage). Eligible sources: US Social Security, defined-benefit pensions, military or federal pensions, annuities with documented twelve-month history, rental income from US property, and consistent dividend or interest income.

Choosing the right route is half the work. We model the comparison against your portfolio in the Consult.

How the process works

  1. Contact us

    Reach out and tell us about your situation. From there, you’ll either book a 60-minute Freedom Consult (if you’re weighing options across countries) or get started on this route directly (if you already know it’s the right fit).

  2. Engagement and document gathering

    We coordinate the document pack: FBI background check (apostilled), birth and marriage certificates, twelve months of bank and brokerage statements, pension or annuity confirmations, US tax returns, and the Argentine-counsel power of attorney.

  3. Consular submission

    Submit your visa application through the Argentine consulate covering your US state. Most consulates process complete Rentista files in 60 to 90 days. You attend a single appointment for biometrics and document review.

  4. Arrival and Migraciones appointment

    You enter Argentina on the visa stamp within 90 days of issuance. Within 30 days of arrival, you register at Dirección Nacional de Migraciones and receive your DNI (national ID for foreigners).

  5. Two years of legal residency

    Spend at least 183 days per year in Argentina. The two-year clock runs from your initial visa approval. At year two, your temporary residency converts to permanent residency, and you become eligible to petition for Argentine citizenship.

  6. Federal-court citizenship petition

    Our Argentine-licensed counsel files your naturalization petition with the federal courts. Court processing typically runs 12-24 months. A working-level Spanish-language interview is part of the petition.

  7. Citizenship granted

    Upon successful petition, you take the oath and receive your Argentine passport. End-to-end timeline from visa engagement to passport in hand is typically three to four years.

Processing

Temporary residency

Permanent residency

Citizenship

4-6 months

Years 1-2

Year 2+

Years 3-4

Rentista Visa versus the alternatives

How this program stacks against the closest credible options for the same visitor. We don’t earn more if you choose one over another.

DimensionArgentina RentistaArgentina CBI (forthcoming)Learn moreColombia PensionadoLearn more
StatusOperational todayPending legislationOperational today
Minimum financial bar$1,500/mo passive incomeTBD$1,200/mo passive income
Processing4-6 monthsTBD3-4 months
Presence required183+ days / yearTBD180+ days / year
Time to citizenship3-4 years end-to-endTBD10 years
Family inclusionSpouse, children, parentsTBD (likely yes)Spouse, children, parents
Worldwide taxYes (183+ days)TBDYes (183+ days)

The Rentista is Argentina's operational route today. The forthcoming Argentina CBI may shortcut this if enacted. The Colombia Pensionado is the closest regional alternative for clients prioritizing low day-count thresholds. We don't earn more if you pick one over another.

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Why clients work with us

Three reasons families pick Freedom Files over the do-it-yourself path or a single-jurisdiction agent.

First-hand experience

We have run Argentine Rentista engagements across multiple administrations and consular regimes. We know which consulates move SSA-only files and which bounce them for additional documentation.

Honest recommendations

About a third of Rentista inquiries end with our recommendation against engagement. We tell you when the forthcoming CBI is worth waiting for or when Colombia fits cleaner.

Pro counsel from the start

Every engagement runs with US-licensed counsel from the first call. Argentine currency mechanics and US tax treaty positions are mapped before you move.

How does the two-year citizenship clock actually work?

Argentine law allows naturalization after two years of legal residency, counted from the date your temporary residency is approved. After two years, you submit a citizenship petition to the federal courts. The petition itself can take 12-24 months to process, so the realistic end-to-end horizon is three to four years from the first visa approval. We coordinate with Argentine-licensed counsel through the court phase.

What income sources count toward the Rentista threshold?

Stable, regular, foreign-source passive income: US Social Security, defined-benefit pensions, military or federal pensions, annuities with twelve-month history, rental income from US property, and consistent dividend or interest income. The consulate weights stability heavily – twelve months of consistent statements matter more than a single large balance.

What about Argentina's currency volatility?

Argentina's peso has been chronically volatile for two decades, with periods of high inflation and tight currency controls. For Americans earning in USD, this has consistently been an arbitrage – dollar-priced budgets buy outsize value. We help clients structure income and assets to avoid forced peso conversion. Most US residents hold and spend in USD via fintech and informal channels well-established within the expat community.

Do I have to learn Spanish?

Daily life in Palermo, Recoleta, and Mendoza's expat zones runs comfortably with intermediate Spanish; English is widely spoken in business, hospitality, and most service contexts. The naturalization process involves interviews in Spanish, so a working level of the language is necessary by the time you petition.

What happens to my US taxes once I move?

The US taxes citizens on worldwide income regardless of residency. Argentina taxes residents on worldwide income after 183 days, with US-Argentina foreign-tax-credit mechanics that mitigate double taxation in most cases. US-licensed counsel coordinates the filing overlap before you trigger Argentine tax residency.

Can my family come with me?

Yes. Spouses or registered partners, dependent children, and dependent parents qualify under a single application. Each family member receives the same residency rights and the same two-year clock to citizenship eligibility.

Should I wait for the forthcoming CBI program?

For most clients, no. The Rentista clock runs in parallel to any CBI legislation: if the CBI launches with workable terms, you can convert or apply directly; if it doesn't, you've already built two years toward an Argentine passport via the residency route. We map both at the Consult.

Ready to talk?

Two paths in. If the Rentista Visa is clearly the right program for your family and you’re ready to engage, contact our team directly. If you’re weighing this against other programs and want an honest read on the right move, the Freedom Consult is the sixty-minute conversation that ends the loop.

Contact our team →

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