Turkish Citizenship by Investment: Documents and Translation

How to get Turkish citizenship for $400,000: investment routes, full document list, sworn translation, costs, and common pitfalls for Ukrainians in 2026.

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$400,000 for an apartment in Antalya, 4% TAPU tax on top, 11,000 TL for the SPK appraisal, 25,000-30,000 TL for sworn translations with notarization - and that’s far from the full bill. One Ukrainian guy from Alanya posted on a forum: “I priced the apartment at $420,000. Then I added everything on top - came out to another $35,000. And I didn’t even know that the DAB is only issued if you convert your currency at a bank, not at an exchange office.” Turkish citizenship by investment is one of the fastest ways to get a second passport, but the sheer number of documents, translations, and pitfalls is staggering. Let’s break it down step by step - what you actually need, how much it costs, and where Ukrainians most often trip up.

What is the citizenship by investment program

Turkey launched its citizenship by investment program (vatandaslik yatirim programi) in 2017. Initially the minimum threshold for real estate was $1,000,000, then they dropped it to $250,000, and since June 2022 it’s been set at $400,000 - where it remains in 2026.

The program gives you full Turkish citizenship - not a residence permit, not permanent residency, but actual citizenship with a passport. Here’s what that means:

  • Visa-free access to 126+ countries (Japan, South Korea, Singapore, most of Latin America and Africa)
  • The right to live, work, and run a business in Turkey without restrictions
  • Access to free healthcare in public hospitals and public education
  • Full access to Turkish banking as a citizen
  • Eligibility for the E-2 investor visa to the USA (thanks to a bilateral treaty between Turkey and the U.S.)
  • Dual citizenship - Turkey recognizes it, so you don’t have to give up your Ukrainian passport

You can apply for the whole family at once: the investor plus spouse plus children under 18. Children from previous marriages are included too.

As of 2025-2026, Turkey remains one of the most popular investment citizenship programs globally. According to the Turkish Directorate of Migration Management, Ukrainian citizens consistently rank in the top 3 applicant nationalities, alongside Iranians.

Investment routes: 6 ways to get the passport

Real estate isn’t the only option. Here’s the full table of all available routes as of 2026:

Investment route Minimum amount Holding period Popularity
Real estate purchase $400,000 3 years ~95% of applicants
Bank deposit $500,000 3 years ~3%
Government bonds $500,000 3 years <1%
Venture capital fund / REIT $500,000 3 years <1%
Fixed capital (business) $500,000 - <1%
Job creation 50 employees - <1%

95% of applicants choose real estate - and it makes sense. The threshold is lower ($400,000 vs. $500,000), you get a real asset - an apartment or house you can live in or rent out. Plus Turkey’s real estate market has been growing steadily, and after 3 years (the minimum holding period) you can sell the property and recover your investment.

Bank deposit

If you don’t want to deal with property, you can deposit $500,000 into a fixed-term account at a Turkish bank for 3 years. The money comes back in full when the term ends. The downside - interest rates on dollar deposits in Turkish banks are low (2-4% annually), and your funds are locked for 3 years.

Note: the YUVAM program (special accounts for foreign investors) is no longer available as of 2025. A regular fixed-term deposit of $500,000 still works.

Other routes

Government bonds and venture capital funds are suited for people with financial markets experience. Creating 50 jobs or investing $500,000 in a company’s fixed capital - those are options for people who plan to run a serious business in Turkey, not just get a passport.

We’ll focus on real estate from here on - that’s the route the vast majority of Ukrainians pick.

Real estate requirements: 5 rules you can’t break

Not just any $400,000 apartment qualifies for the program. Here are the rules you need to know before you even start looking at properties.

Rule 1: Buy only from Turkish citizens or companies

Property for the citizenship program can ONLY be purchased from a Turkish citizen or a Turkish legal entity. If the seller is a foreigner (even with a 10-year ikamet), the deal doesn’t qualify. This rule was introduced to prevent “circular schemes” where foreigners resell the same apartment to each other for passport purposes.

Rule 2: SPK appraisal must be at least $400,000

Before applying for citizenship, you need an official property appraisal from a company licensed by SPK (Sermaye Piyasasi Kurulu - Turkey’s Capital Markets Board). The appraisal must show a value of at least $400,000. If it comes in even $1,000 short - your application gets rejected, no exceptions.

That’s why you shouldn’t look for a property at exactly $400,000 “cutting it close.” Go with a buffer - $420,000-450,000 - so you still clear the threshold even with a conservative appraisal. The appraisal is valid for 3 months only.

Rule 3: Payment only through a Turkish bank + DAB

All payments for the property must go exclusively through a Turkish bank. Cash payments, cryptocurrency, transfers through unlicensed exchange offices - all of these mean an automatic rejection. Plus you need a DAB (Doviz Alim Belgesi) - a foreign currency purchase certificate confirming that you exchanged your dollars through an official bank.

Rule 4: 3-year no-sale restriction

You can’t sell the property for 3 years after purchase. A special annotation (tapu serhi) gets placed on the TAPU stating the property can’t be sold. Sell it earlier - and even an already-issued citizenship can be revoked.

One more thing: if you sell the property back to the same person or company you bought it from after the 3 years, that’s also grounds for revocation. Turkish authorities actively monitor for such schemes.

Rule 5: Restrictions for Ukrainians

Ukrainians (along with Russians) face an additional restriction - a ban on purchasing real estate on the Black Sea coast. Trabzon, Samsun, Rize, Ordu, Giresun, Sinop - you can’t buy there. The restriction exists due to the reciprocity principle in Turkish law.

General restrictions for all foreigners: maximum 30 hectares of total land area across Turkey, no more than 10% foreign ownership in a single district, and no purchases in military or strategic zones.

Where Ukrainians buy most often: Antalya, Alanya, Mersin, Istanbul, Bursa, Izmir - these regions are fully open.

Step-by-step guide: from your first visit to the Turkish passport

Step 1: Get a tax number (Vergi Numarasi)

Free of charge, takes 10-15 minutes at any Vergi Dairesi (tax office). You only need your international passport. Without a tax number, you can’t open a bank account or sign any documents.

Step 2: Open a bank account

You’ll need: your international passport, Vergi Numarasi, an address (a hotel works), and a sworn translation of your passport with notarization. Banks popular with foreigners: Ziraat Bankasi (state-owned - fewer issues opening accounts), Is Bankasi, Garanti BBVA, Yapi Kredi.

Step 3: Transfer money and get the DAB

Wire $400,000+ to your Turkish account via international SWIFT transfer. Exchange the currency for lira at the bank and get your DAB. Important: the DAB is only issued when you exchange currency at a bank, not at an exchange office.

Step 4: Choose and buy property + get the TAPU

Pick a property, sign the purchase agreement, pay through the bank. Register the TAPU at the local Tapu Dairesi (cadastral office). You’ll need a sworn interpreter or a notarized translation of your passport for the procedure. For more details on the TAPU process, check our article on buying property in Turkey.

Step 5: Order the SPK appraisal

An independent appraisal from an SPK-licensed company. Cost: 11,000-15,000 TL depending on property type. The appraisal must confirm a value of at least $400,000. Valid for 3 months.

Step 6: Get the Uygunluk Belgesi (conformity certificate)

The Uygunluk Belgesi is a document from the General Directorate of Land Registry (Tapu ve Kadastro Genel Mudurlugu) confirming that your investment meets the program’s requirements. Processing time: 2-4 weeks.

Step 7: Apply for the 31/J residence permit

This is a special type of residence permit for investors who are applying for citizenship. Don’t confuse it with a regular ikamet - it’s an interim permit that stays active while your application is being reviewed. Processing time: 2-3 weeks.

Step 8: Submit your citizenship application (form VAT-4)

The application goes to the Il Nufus ve Vatandaslik Mudurlugu (Provincial Directorate of Civil Registration). At this stage, you need the full document package with sworn translations and notarization. You must appear in person for biometrics (fingerprints and photo).

Step 9: Security check

Turkish intelligence services conduct a background check on the applicant. This takes anywhere from a few weeks to several months. In 2025-2026, these checks have gotten noticeably stricter - for citizens of “sensitive” jurisdictions, the process can drag on.

Step 10: Get your Nufus Cuzdani and passport

After approval, you receive your Nufus Cuzdani (Turkish chip-enabled ID card) and apply for a passport. The passport is issued within 1-2 weeks.

Full document list and translation requirements

Every document must be properly prepared - otherwise your application gets sent back, and you lose time and money. Here are the full tables for each family member.

Documents for the main applicant

Document Apostille Sworn translation Notarization
International passport No Yes Yes
Birth certificate Yes Yes Yes
Criminal record certificate (no older than 6 months) Yes Yes Yes
Marriage certificate / marital status certificate Yes Yes Yes
2 biometric photos (white background) - - -
Medical report (saglik raporu) - - -
Power of attorney (vekaletname) - if using a lawyer - Yes Yes

Documents for the spouse

Document Apostille Sworn translation Notarization
International passport No Yes Yes
Birth certificate Yes Yes Yes
Criminal record certificate (mandatory since 2025) Yes Yes Yes
2 biometric photos - - -
Medical report - - -

Documents for children under 18

Document Apostille Sworn translation Notarization
International passport No Yes Yes
Birth certificate Yes Yes Yes
2 biometric photos - - -

Investment documents

These are already in Turkish, so no translation is needed:

  • TAPU (title deed)
  • SPK property appraisal
  • DAB (foreign currency purchase certificate)
  • Uygunluk Belgesi (conformity certificate)
  • Turkish bank statements

However, if you need to prove the source of funds with Ukrainian documents (employment certificates, Ukrainian bank statements, sale agreements) - those need to be translated and notarized too.

How to prepare your documents correctly

  1. Get your documents in Ukraine - birth certificates, criminal record certificate, marriage certificate
  2. Get the apostille - through a CNAP office or the Ministry of Justice. Cost: 850-1,700 UAH per document, timeline: 2-5 business days
  3. In Turkey, get a sworn translation - Turkish institutions require yeminli tercume (sworn translation) into Turkish
  4. Notarize at a noter - noter onayli tercume is mandatory for all citizenship documents

The order matters: the apostille goes on the original IN UKRAINE, and the translation plus notarization happen IN TURKEY. Don’t mix it up - apostille first, translation second. Turkey is a member of the Hague Convention, so the apostille is the standard way to legalize documents.

One more detail: the criminal record certificate must be issued no earlier than 6 months before your application date. If the process drags on, you’ll need to get a new one. You can request the certificate from abroad through the Ukrainian consulate in Turkey or online through the Diia portal.

How much does translation for citizenship cost in 2026

Translation for the citizenship program involves two separate payments: the sworn translation itself (yeminli tercume) and the notarization (noter onayli).

Sworn translation costs - 2026

Prices per document (up to 1,000 characters / 1 page), language pair Ukrainian-to-Turkish or Russian-to-Turkish:

Document Translation (TL)
Passport 400-600
Birth certificate 400-600
Marriage certificate 400-600
Criminal record certificate 500-700
Power of attorney 700-900

Notarization costs - 2026

Notary fees are standardized by the Union of Turkish Notaries and depend on the text volume:

Document type Notary fee per page (TL)
Small text volume (passport, certificate) 1,510
Medium text volume (contract, reference) 3,020
Large text volume (agreement, power of attorney) 4,530

Calculation for a family of 3

Investor + spouse + 1 child - a typical scenario. Let’s do the math:

Investor: - Passport: translation 500 + noter 1,510 = 2,010 TL - Birth certificate: 500 + 1,510 = 2,010 TL - Criminal record certificate: 600 + 1,510 = 2,110 TL - Marriage certificate: 500 + 1,510 = 2,010 TL - Power of attorney: 800 + 3,020 = 3,820 TL

Spouse: - Passport: 2,010 TL - Birth certificate: 2,010 TL - Criminal record certificate: 2,110 TL

Child: - Passport: 2,010 TL - Birth certificate: 2,010 TL

Total: approximately 22,000-28,000 TL (about $650-800 at 2026 exchange rates).

That’s translation and notary costs only. Add apostilles, the SPK appraisal, TAPU tax (4%), lawyer fees - and it becomes clear why total additional costs run 7-12% of the property value.

To save time on preparation, you can pre-translate your documents through ChatsControl, then hand the ready translation to a sworn translator in Turkey - they’ll verify the text, stamp it, and sign it. This speeds up the process and reduces the cost of sworn translation, since the bulk of the work is already done.

Common mistakes and reasons for rejection

According to data from legal firms, the rejection rate for applicants from “sensitive” jurisdictions runs at 10-15%. Here are the main reasons.

SPK appraisal comes in under $400,000

The most common mistake. You buy an apartment for $420,000, but the independent appraiser values it at $395,000. Application rejected, money for the apartment already paid. The fix: pick a property valued at $430,000-450,000+ to have a buffer even with a conservative appraisal.

Source of funds not verified

Since 2025, Turkish banks have seriously tightened AML checks. Money from third parties, through unlicensed exchange offices, cryptocurrency, or partial cash payments - all grounds for a DAB refusal and even freezing of funds.

What to do: prepare source-of-funds documents in advance - employment certificates, bank statements, sale agreements. These documents may also require translation.

Errors in documents

Different spelling of your name in the passport vs. the bank statement. A missing signature on the contract. A wrong date on a certificate. Turkish officials check every detail and send applications back over the smallest discrepancies.

Tip: before submitting, carefully review all documents and translations - make sure your name is spelled identically across every document.

Buying from a foreigner

The property must be purchased from a Turkish citizen or legal entity. Always check the seller’s TAPU before the deal.

Withdrawing the investment before 3 years

Selling the property, closing the deposit, or exiting the fund before the 3-year term expires - grounds for revoking an already-issued citizenship. Even if the passport is in your hands.

How long does the whole process take

A realistic timeline for a Ukrainian:

Stage Timeline
Preparing documents in Ukraine (apostilles, certificates) 2-4 weeks
Opening an account + transferring money + DAB 1-2 weeks
Finding and buying property + TAPU 2-6 weeks
SPK appraisal 1-2 weeks
Uygunluk Belgesi (conformity certificate) 2-4 weeks
31/J residence permit 2-3 weeks
Application + security check + decision 3-8 months
Total 5-12 months

Most Ukrainians receive their passport 6-10 months after purchasing the property. But there are cases where the process stretches to 12-15 months - especially if questions come up during the security check.

Pros and cons for Ukrainians

Pros

  • 126+ visa-free countries - a serious asset for business and travel
  • E-2 investor visa to the USA - as a Turkish citizen, you can apply for the E-2, which lets you live and work in the States
  • Speed - 6-12 months vs. 3-8 years of naturalization in most EU countries
  • Dual citizenship - no need to give up your Ukrainian passport
  • A real asset - an apartment you can use or rent out

Cons

  • $400,000 + 7-12% in additional costs - a serious budget
  • A Turkish passport does NOT give visa-free access to the Schengen area (you still need a visa)
  • Limited passport validity (10 years, needs renewal)
  • Geopolitical risks - Turkey is in a complicated region
  • After the 3-year holding period, the property’s market value may have changed

FAQ

How much does Turkish citizenship by investment cost?

Minimum $400,000 for real estate plus 7-12% in additional costs (taxes, appraisal, translations, notaries, lawyer). A realistic budget is $430,000-470,000 all-in. For the bank deposit or bonds route - minimum $500,000 plus administrative costs.

Can I include my family in the application?

Yes. The investor, spouse, and children under 18 (including from previous marriages) are all submitted together. Each family member needs their own document package with translations and notarization. Since 2025, spouses are also required to provide a criminal record certificate.

Do Ukrainian documents need an apostille?

Yes. Turkey is a member of the Hague Convention, so the apostille is the standard legalization method. It’s applied in Ukraine on originals (certificates, references), then in Turkey you get a sworn translation with notarization.

How long is the wait for the passport after buying property?

Between 3 and 12 months. The official timeline is 3-6 months; in practice in 2025-2026, it’s more like 6-10 months. The security check takes the most time, and you can’t influence it.

Can I sell the property after getting citizenship?

Only after the 3-year holding period from the date of purchase. Sell earlier - and your citizenship can be revoked. After 3 years, you’re free to sell, but don’t sell back to the same person you bought from - that raises red flags with Turkish authorities.

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