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The countries with the highest demand for Greek golden visas

Greece’s residence-for-investment programme is one of the most attractive in Europe. To acquire residency, one only needs to spend €250,000 on property purchases, or buy a hotel or tourist furnished apartments in a timeshare contract. The main applicant’s spouse, their parents and children under 21 years of age are also eligible for residence.

According to state investment agency Enterprise Greece, the country granted investors 2,300 golden visas (5,700 visas, including those issued to family members) between 2013 and 2017. Chinese, Russian, Turkish, Iraqi and Lebanese nationals received the most residence permits – about 80% of all the visas issued.

1. China

China has been actively expanding its presence in Greece over the past few years. In 2016, Chinese port operator COSCO, one of the largest in the world, acquired 51% of the Piraeus Port Authority for €280.5 million, and in June 2017, State Grid Corp. purchased a 24% stake in state-owned power grid operator ADMIE for €320 million. The active expansion of China into Greek infrastructure can be explained by the affordability of Greek assets and the country’s favourable geographical location that makes it is an important trading partner and transportation gateway for the New Silk Road between Europe and the Middle East.

The Chinese also received the most Greek golden visas. According to Enterprise Greece, between 2013 and 2017, golden visas were issued to 1,011 Chinese investors (2,525, including family members).

According to the Chinese Investment in Greece and Big Picture of Sino-Greek Relations reports published by the Institute of International Economics Relations in 2017, Chinese golden visa applicants spend an average of €550,000 to €600,000 on real estate, which is double the minimum investment required for residency.

According to Greek Guru, in Greece, Chinese nationals prefer buying newly built residential real estate located near beaches, shops, public transport stops and international schools.

2. Russia

According to Enterprise Greece, the country granted Russian nationals 395 golden visas (907, including those issued to family members) between 2013 and 2017. Notably, most investors only included one family member in their residence applications on average. Russian nationals account for 16% of all golden visa applicants.

According to Tranio statistics, Russian-speaking applicants for Greek golden visas are mainly interested in residential property in Thessaloniki and Athens – in particular, the suburbs located 30–40 minutes from central Athens (Faliro, Glyfada, Varkiza, Voula, Vouliagmeni) are also popular.

According to Tranio, the average budget of Russian-speaking property buyers who want a residence permit in Greece is €250,000. They also often consider Spain, Cyprus and Portugal, which have similar residence-for-investment programmes.

3. Turkey

According to Enterprise Greece, in 2017, Greek golden visas were granted to 222 Turkish nationals (547, including family members).

According to Turkish media outlet Hürriyet Daily News, almost none of the Turks holding Greek golden visas actually relocate to the country. Many of them want Greek residency “for future use” in case of instability in their home country. According to German broadcaster Deutsche Welle, traffic to Turkish-language versions of Greek property websites grew almost tenfold after the Turkish referendum on expanding presidential powers on April 16, 2017.

The Turks who buy property in Athens usually rent out the apartments or use them as holiday homes. According to Turkish online media outlet Daily Sabah, the most popular types of real estate among Turkish buyers are prime and resort properties, shops, hotels, land plots and even parking lots. Many investors have properties in high-end Athenian neighbourhoods: Kolonaki, Psychiko, Glyfada, Voula and Vouliagmeni.

According to Greek web portal Ekathermini, Turkish nationals are among the most dynamic groups of Greek property buyers today, along with the citizens of the United Kingdom, Germany, France and Italy. Most of them are university-educated, middle-class or affluent natives of Western Turkey, the Aegean coast and Istanbul.

4. Iraq

By late 2017, Iraqi nationals had obtained 266 golden visas under the Greek residency-for-investment programme, from which only 69 were issued to the main applicants. According to Enterprise Greece, Iraqis obtain residence permits for their whole families more often than other applicants. On average, each investor applies for residence with three family members. The number of main applicants from Iraq is lower than Egypt, Lebanon and Ukraine.

According to the 2018 Henley Passport Index, the Iraqi passport is the least attractive in the world, with visa-free entrance to only 30 countries. As such, Greek residency, which allows visa-free access to the Schengen Area, is popular among Iraqi nationals.

5. Lebanon

Lebanese nationals obtained 91 Greek golden visas (260 including family members) between 2013 and 2017, or about 5% of the total number of golden visas issued. Like the Iraqis, Lebanese investors also secure residency for an average of three family members each.

The population of Lebanon is approximately 6 million, of which 1.1 million are Syrian migrants and about 500,000 are Palestinian migrants, and about 1 million Lebanese nationals live abroad (according to some estimates, this figure is between 4 million and 13 million). The main reason why Lebanese nationals want foreign residency is the political and economic instability in their home country.

 

According to the Bank of Greece, the volume of transactions closed by foreign nationals in the Greek real estate market in 2017 exceeded the 2016 figure by 87%. In January 2018, this figure was 205% higher than the year before. The opportunity to travel across the Schengen Area is not the only driver of demand for the Greek golden visa programme. The Greek property market is starting to recover. According to the Bank of Greece, property prices fell by only 1% in 2017 from the year before, compared to an annual decline of 6.5% for the past eight years. The decline in property prices has already stopped quarter-on-quarter: between Q2 and Q4 2017, property prices remained stable in Athens and even grew in other cities. Tranio analysts expect property prices in Athens to grow by 30% in 2 to 3 years.

 

Author: Yulia Kozhevnikova, real estate writer and analyst, Tranio

Tranio.com is an international real estate platform with a network of 700 partners worldwide and a catalogue of more than 80,000 listings in 54 countries. The company publishes daily news, high-quality analysis on foreign realty, expert advice, and notes on laws and procedures related to buying and leasing properties abroad so that readers can make their property decisions with confidence.

Prabhu Balakrishnan
Prabhu Balakrishnan
Founder of Citizenship by Investment News. Chief Editor with over 15 years experience in PR and News publishing. He Loves writing about citizenship, residency and wealth migration. CIP Journal is a Leading publication founded in 2017 bringing latest news from CBI/RBI market.

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