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🇬🇷 Greece

Greece FIP Visa

EU residency for retirees and passive-income holders. €3,500/month in foreign-source income clears it, pairs naturally with Greece's 7% pensioner tax regime, and runs the same seven-year naturalization clock as the Golden Visa.

Financial req
€3,500/mo income
Processing
2 to 3 months
Naturalization
7 years
Presence required
183+ days / year
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The basics of the FIP Visa

What it is

Greece's FIP visa (Financially Independent Person, also called the Visa V) is a residency permit for non-EU nationals who want to live in Greece on stable foreign-source income without working in Greece. You demonstrate €3,500/month in passive or active foreign-source income, sign an undertaking not to take Greek employment, and apply through the Greek consulate that covers your US state. The visa is granted for two years initially and renews in three-year increments. Permanent residency becomes available at year five; the citizenship petition can be filed at year seven with B1-level Greek.

Who it’s for

  • US retirees with Social Security plus pensions or annuities clearing €3,500/month
  • Remote workers with US-employer salaries who don't need Greek employment rights
  • Founders running US-incorporated businesses remotely
  • Couples wanting to base in Greece full-time and access the 7% pensioner regime
  • Patient planners with a seven-year horizon to a Greek (and EU) passport

Why it’s beneficial

The FIP fits clients who actually want to live in Greece. Combined with the 7% pensioner tax regime (15 years on all foreign-source income for qualifying retirees), the structure is among the most efficient EU passive-income residencies for Americans. The Golden Visa's no-minimum-stay rule means investor clients can hold EU residency without relocating; the FIP is the parallel for clients who want the lifestyle alongside the citizenship clock.

Key benefits

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

  1. 7% pensioner tax regime

    Qualifying retirees pay a flat 7% rate on all foreign-source income including pensions, dividends, interest, capital gains, and rents. The regime runs for fifteen years. Unlike Italy's regional version, Greece's applies nationwide.

  2. Two-to-three-month processing

    Consular processing of complete FIP files typically runs 30 to 60 days. Among the fastest EU passive-income visas to issue.

  3. EU mobility from day one

    Greek residency unlocks the Schengen Area immediately. Athens has direct service to most European capitals; intra-EU travel is functionally domestic.

  4. Family on one application

    Spouse or registered partner, dependent children, and dependent parents qualify on the principal application. Each family member gets the same residency status and the same seven-year clock.

  5. Cost of living below the EU average

    Outside Athens's most fashionable districts and the most famous Cycladic islands, Greece runs 20-40% below US coastal-city benchmarks. Mediterranean lifestyle at a fraction of comparable Italian or French pricing.

  6. Path to EU citizenship

    Seven years of legal residency unlocks the citizenship petition. The clock runs through both Golden Visa and FIP routes; the FIP path is the lower-financial-bar entry point.

Financial requirements

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

Most popular

Monthly Income Demonstration

€3,500/month

Demonstrate €3,500/month in stable foreign-source income (passive or active, but not from Greek sources). Family thresholds scale: +20% for spouse, +15% per child. Eligible sources include US Social Security, pensions, annuities, dividends, rental income, and consistent contractor income. You sign an undertaking not to take Greek employment.

Lump-Sum Savings Demonstration

€126,000

Alternative to monthly income: demonstrate liquid savings sufficient to cover the income threshold for the full three-year initial visa term (€3,500 × 12 × 3 = €126,000). Family thresholds scale at the same ratios as the monthly route. The savings option fits clients with substantial liquidity but irregular monthly income, or those who prefer a one-time demonstration over twelve-month statements.

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 statements, pension or income confirmations, Greek health insurance, Greek accommodation proof, and the Greek-counsel power of attorney.

  3. Consular submission

    Submit the FIP application through the Greek consulate covering your US state. Most consulates process complete files in 30 to 60 days.

  4. Arrival and Decentralized Administration appointment

    You enter Greece on the visa stamp. Within three months of arrival, register at the Decentralized Administration to validate the visa and receive your residency card.

  5. Optional tax-residency election

    If you intend to shift tax residency to Greece and qualify for the 7% pensioner or €100K non-dom regime, file the election with the Greek tax authority within the relevant filing window. Election is optional; the residency itself does not force tax residency.

  6. Renewal and permanent residency

    Renew the FIP every three years by demonstrating continued financial means. Spend at least 183 days per year in Greece to maintain the citizenship-clock continuity. Permanent residency available at year five.

  7. Citizenship petition at year seven

    After seven years of legal residency, file the naturalization petition. The application requires a B1-level Greek-language exam, a civics interview, demonstrated integration, and consistent tax filing.

Processing

Temporary residency

Permanent residency

Citizenship

2-3 months

Years 1-5

Years 5-7

Year 7+

FIP 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.

DimensionGreece FIP VisaGreece Golden VisaLearn morePortugal D7 VisaLearn more
Minimum financial bar€3,500/mo income€250K property or startup€920/mo passive income
Processing2-3 months2-4 months4-6 months
Presence required183+ days / yearNone183+ days / year
Time to citizenship7 years7 years10 years
Pensioner tax regime7% flat (15 years)7% flat (15 years)Standard (NHR ended 2024)
Right to work locallyNo (no Greek employment)No (passive only)No
Family inclusionSpouse, children, parentsSpouse, children, parentsSpouse, children, parents

The FIP fits clients who actually want to live in Greece on foreign income. The Golden Visa fits investors who want EU residency without day-count obligations. Portugal's D7 is the closest passive-income parallel with materially lower financial bar but a 10-year naturalization 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 the Greek consular cadence and the Decentralized Administration validation process from active engagements. The FIP looks simple until the ask for additional income documentation arrives.

Honest recommendations

About a third of FIP inquiries end with our recommendation against engagement. We tell you when the Golden Visa, Portugal D7, or Italy fits cleaner.

Pro counsel from the start

Every engagement runs with US-licensed counsel from the first call. The 7% pensioner regime and Greek tax-residency mechanics are mapped before the election is filed.

What income sources qualify?

Stable, regular, foreign-source income (passive or active): US Social Security, defined-benefit pensions, military or federal pensions, annuities, rental income from US property, dividend income, royalty streams, and consistent contractor income from foreign clients. The consulate weights stability heavily; twelve months of consistent statements matter more than a single large balance.

Can I work remotely for a US company on the FIP visa?

The FIP commitment is to not work in Greece. Remote work for a US employer paying you in the US is generally treated as not 'working in Greece' for visa-compliance purposes. The cleaner remote-work option is Greece's Digital Nomad Visa, which is built for active foreign income and may qualify you for the 50% Greek-source tax discount during the visa term. We map your specific situation at the Consult.

How does the 7% pensioner tax regime work?

Foreign retirees who transfer tax residency to Greece can elect a flat 7% rate on all foreign-source income, including pensions, dividends, interest, capital gains, and rents. The regime runs for fifteen years. Eligibility requires the applicant to be the recipient of a qualifying foreign pension and not to have been a Greek tax resident in five of the previous six years. Unlike Italy's regional 7% regime, the Greek version applies nationwide.

Do I have to learn Greek?

Daily life in Athens, Thessaloniki, and the tourist islands runs comfortably in English in most professional and service contexts. The naturalization application requires a B1-level Greek-language assessment, which most clients build through immersion plus formal tutoring during the seven-year residency window.

What is the total cost beyond the income demonstration?

Plan on €2-3K in government and administrative fees (visa, residency card, family-member fees), €5-8K in Greek legal fees through our partner counsel, €1-2K in translation and apostille costs, and Greek private health insurance (€800-1,500/year per adult). Total non-investment cash outlay typically lands in the €10-15K range, plus accommodation lease.

Can I switch to the Golden Visa later?

Yes. Both routes run the same seven-year citizenship clock and lead to the same permanent residency status. If you decide to deploy €250K+ into Greek property or a fund and prefer the no-minimum-stay flexibility, you can convert at renewal. We map both at the Consult.

Will I have to give up my US citizenship?

No. The United States and Greece both permit dual citizenship. You can hold both passports indefinitely if you complete the naturalization process.

Ready to talk?

Two paths in. If the FIP 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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