Bulgaria · Citizenship by investment

Bulgarian Citizenship by Investment (Articles 12a and 14a)

Closed Last verified July 2026

ABOLISHED. The National Assembly voted unanimously on 24 March 2022 (218-0-0) to repeal Articles 12a and 14a of the Bulgarian Citizenship Act. Promulgated in State Gazette No. 26/2022 and in force from 5 April 2022. The Act also terminated pending proceedings under those articles. Roughly 100+ passports had been issued since inception in 2013, mainly to Russian, Chinese and Middle Eastern applicants.

This programme is closed. We keep the page up because agents still advertise it and clients still ask. Nothing below is available to new applicants.

Bulgaria was one of only three EU states selling passports and it closed the scheme voluntarily and unanimously. Correcting a common misconception: there was no infringement procedure against Bulgaria. The Commission's action ran against Malta. Bulgaria acted pre-emptively in the wake of the European Parliament's 9 March 2022 resolution (595-12) demanding CBI schemes be phased out, Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and an incoming anti-corruption government's pledge. Its own Ministry of Justice cited insufficient actual investment.

Qualifying routes

€512k
Standard investor naturalisation (Article 12a)

REPEALED. Roughly BGN 1m held 5 years, following permanent residence.

€1.02M
Fast-track naturalisation (Article 14a)

REPEALED. Doubled investment for citizenship in about one year.

The facts

Minimum investment
€1M
Total landed cost
n/a — the programme does not exist
Physical presence
None was required — which was precisely the objection
Permanent residency
n/a
Citizenship
n/a — repealed
Language test
None was required under the repealed articles
Dual citizenship
Permitted
What can go wrong
  • Closed since April 2022. Anyone marketing Bulgarian citizenship by investment in 2026 is selling something that does not exist.
  • Bulgaria revoked citizenship from 17 people after abolition and tasked the state security agency DANS with re-investigating all prior grantees. Passports obtained under the old scheme are not beyond review.
  • There is a contested legacy argument under transitional provision paragraph 14(1) — introduced by the 2021 amendments — that holders of Article 25 permanent residence granted before those amendments may still apply without the language test or renunciation. The Citizenship Council of the Ministry of Justice takes the position that the 2022 amendments killed this too; practitioners dispute it. This is a live legal-interpretation dispute requiring litigation, not a marketable route. Any advisor presenting it as a functioning pathway is overselling.
Sources (4)

Before you commit capital to this

Tell us your citizenship, your tax exposure and where your family wants to be in ten years. If this route is wrong for you, we will say so.

Request a review