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🇨🇴 Colombia

Colombia Pensionado Visa

Colombia's retirement residency for pensioners and Social Security recipients. $1,200/month in qualifying income clears it, US East Coast time zones, and a ten-year path to a Colombian passport.

Financial req
$1,200/mo income
Processing
3 to 4 months
Naturalization
10 years
Presence required
180+ days / year
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The basics of the Pensionado Visa

What it is

The Pensionado Visa (M-11 category) is a three-year renewable Colombian residency permit for non-Colombian citizens with stable foreign-source passive income – typically a US pension, Social Security, annuity, or a documented retirement-account distribution. You demonstrate monthly income at or above three times Colombia's minimum wage (about $1,200/month for 2026), apply through the Colombian consulate, and receive a Cédula de Extranjería within fifteen days of arrival. Permanent residency (R-visa) is available after five years; citizenship petition becomes possible after ten years of legal residency.

Who it’s for

  • US retirees with Social Security plus a modest pension or annuity
  • Federal, state, or military pensioners with documented twelve-month income history
  • Couples who want a US-time-zone Latin American base at a fraction of US coastal costs
  • Families wanting a ten-year path to a Colombian passport without deploying capital
  • Clients who actually plan to live in Colombia substantially, not store optionality

Why it’s beneficial

No Latin American residency has a lower financial bar combined with a real path to citizenship. The threshold is roughly three times Colombia's minimum wage – among the lowest pensioner thresholds anywhere – and most US Social Security recipients clear it on the SSA payment alone. The US Eastern time-zone alignment keeps your US life cadence intact, and the cost-of-living delta against any US coastal city means a comfortable life is possible on Social Security plus a modest supplement.

Key benefits

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

  1. Lowest pensioner threshold in the Americas

    Demonstrate roughly $1,200/month for the main applicant – three times Colombia's minimum wage. Most US Social Security recipients clear it on the SSA payment alone. Spouse adds 50%, each child adds an additional minimum-wage equivalent.

  2. Ten-year path to citizenship

    Ten years of legal residency on the Pensionado clock unlocks naturalization. Reduced to two years if you marry a Colombian citizen or have a Colombian-born child. The clock counts time on the M-visa plus any subsequent permanent residency.

  3. US Eastern time zone

    Colombia sits on UTC−5 year-round, no daylight-saving. Your nine AM is New York's nine AM. Family calls, US business filings, and your Medicare and SSA correspondence all stay on cadence – a structural advantage other retirement destinations don't offer.

  4. Family included on the same file

    Spouse or registered partner, dependent children up to age 25 (in education and unmarried), and dependent parents over 65 join under the principal application. Each family member gets the same residency rights and the same ten-year clock.

  5. Healthcare that consistently surprises

    Medellín hospitals rank among Latin America's top medical institutions. Private health insurance runs $100-$250 per month for comprehensive coverage. Most procedures cost a fraction of US private rates, and the medical-tourism corridor from the US is already established.

  6. Eternal-spring climate in Medellín

    Medellín sits at 5,000 feet on the equator – year-round temperatures in the high sixties to mid-seventies. No air conditioning, no heating, no seasonal misery. Bogotá runs cooler, the coast warmer. Pick the climate, then pick the city.

Financial requirements

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

Passive-income demonstration

$1,200/month

Demonstrate stable foreign-source passive income at or above three times Colombia's minimum wage (currently $1,160/month for 2026, with a buffer we recommend). Eligible sources: US Social Security, defined-benefit pensions, military or federal pensions, annuities with documented twelve-month history, and qualifying retirement-account distributions. Spouse adds 50%; each child adds an additional minimum wage.

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, SSA award letter and pension confirmations, twelve months of bank statements, US tax returns, proof of Colombian accommodation, and the Colombian-counsel power of attorney.

  3. Income documentation review

    We pre-verify your income documentation against the consular threshold and translation-and-apostille requirements. The Pensionado looks simple until the consulate asks for additional evidence of stability – the SSA award letter alone is rarely enough.

  4. Consular submission

    Submit your visa application through the Colombian consulate covering your US state. Most consulates process complete Pensionado files in 30-60 days. You attend a single appointment for biometrics and document review.

  5. Arrival and Cédula appointment

    You enter Colombia on the M-visa stamp. Within 15 days of arrival, you register at Migración Colombia and apply for your Cédula de Extranjería. The Cédula arrives within 5-10 business days.

  6. Maintain compliance and renew

    Spend at least 180 days per year in Colombia. Continue to demonstrate income at each renewal. Renew at year three. Convert to permanent residency (R-visa) at year five; petition for Colombian citizenship at year ten.

Processing

Temporary residency

Permanent residency

Citizenship

3-4 months

Years 1-5

Years 5-10

Year 10+

Pensionado 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.

DimensionColombia PensionadoColombia Investor VisaLearn moreColombia Digital NomadLearn more
Minimum financial bar$1,200/mo passive income$50K business or $165K property$1,200/mo active income
Presence required180+ days / year2+ days / year180+ days / year
Processing3-4 months3-6 months2-3 months
Time to citizenship10 years10 years10 years (via M-visa conversion)
Right to work in ColombiaNo (passive income only)Yes (your own business)No (foreign income only)
Family inclusionSpouse, children, parentsSpouse, children, parentsSpouse, children, parents
Capital recoverableIncome-based (n/a)Property: yes. Business: equityIncome-based (n/a)

The Pensionado fits retirees and pensioners actually living in Colombia. The Investor Visa fits clients deploying capital with minimal day-count. The Digital Nomad fits remote workers in the short term but typically converts to an M-visa to reach the citizenship clock. 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 know which consulates move SSA-only files and which ones bounce them. The Pensionado looks simple until the documentation phase stalls.

Honest recommendations

About a third of Pensionado inquiries end with our recommendation against engagement. We tell you when Panama or Mexico fits cleaner.

Pro counsel from the start

Every engagement runs with US-licensed counsel from the first call. Medicare gaps, treaty mechanics, and Roth-conversion timing are planned before you move.

What income sources count toward the Pensionado threshold?

Stable, regular, foreign-source passive income: US Social Security, defined-benefit pensions, military or federal pensions, annuities with documented twelve-month history, qualifying retirement-account distributions (IRA, 401(k), 403(b) with consistent withdrawal pattern), and US-aligned annuity contracts. The consulate weights stability heavily – twelve months of consistent statements matter more than a one-time large balance.

Does Social Security count by itself?

Yes – most US Social Security recipients clear the $1,200/month threshold on the SSA payment alone, and the SSA award letter is the cleanest single piece of evidence the Colombian consulate sees. SSA continues to pay regardless of where you live; it deposits to a US bank account as usual, and you transfer to Colombia via wire or fintech bridge.

Do I have to spend a minimum number of days in Colombia?

To maintain the Pensionado, you cannot be outside Colombia for more than 180 consecutive days. To keep the citizenship clock running and to demonstrate the genuine connection naturalization requires, you need to accumulate substantial Colombian presence (the consensus standard is 180+ days per year). Falling short can lead to non-renewal or break the citizenship-clock continuity.

What about Medicare and US healthcare while abroad?

Medicare doesn't pay for routine care outside the US. Most Pensionado holders carry Colombian private health insurance ($100-250/month) for in-country care and either maintain Part A only (no premium) or pay the Part B premium to keep US coverage available during return trips. Some clients drop Part B entirely; reinstatement carries late-enrollment penalties, so we map this carefully at the Consult.

What about US taxes once I become a Colombian tax resident?

Once you cross 183 days in Colombia, you become a Colombian tax resident. US worldwide-income filing continues for US citizens; Colombia taxes you on worldwide income at progressive resident rates topping at 39%. The US-Colombia treaty handles double-taxation through foreign-tax credits. US-licensed counsel maps your specific picture before residency is triggered.

What is the total cost beyond the income demonstration?

Plan on $1-2K in government and administrative fees (visa, Cédula, family-member fees), $3-5K in Colombian legal fees through our partner counsel, and $500-1,000 in translation and apostille costs. Total cash outlay for a clean single-applicant engagement typically lands in the $5-8K range, plus accommodation deposit and lease.

Can I switch to the Investor Visa later?

Yes, though it's rare. The Pensionado runs the same ten-year citizenship clock as the Investor Visa, so switching mid-stream resets nothing but the M-visa category. Most Pensionado clients stay on the Pensionado because the costs are lower and the access to citizenship is identical. We map both at the Consult if you anticipate a future business venture in Colombia.

Ready to talk?

Two paths in. If the Pensionado 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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