Best Site for Second Passport

Summary

The best site for a second passport depends on whether you want citizenship by investment (CBI), by descent, or by naturalization. For CBI, Henley & Partners is the established law firm with deep relationships across Caribbean and European programs. CS Global Partners is the Caribbean-focused specialist. Best Citizenships is the free research portal — useful before paying any advisor. Nomad Capitalist takes a multi-jurisdiction planning approach. For most readers, descent (Italian, Irish, German, Polish, Hungarian) or long residency is far cheaper than CBI, which now starts above $200k after the EU pressure of 2023-2025.

Top 5 at a glance

Best Site for Second Passport — ranked comparison
#SiteBest forPrice
1 Henley & Partners Established CBI and residency-by-investment advisory across all major programs Advisory fees on top of government investment (typically $30k-100k+ on top of $200k-$1M+ government cost)
2 CS Global Partners Caribbean-focused CBI specialist with strong Dominica and St Kitts experience Advisory fees on top of government investment
3 Best Citizenships Free research portal to compare CBI and golden-visa programs before contacting any advisor Free to read, optional paid consultation
4 Nomad Capitalist Holistic 'flag theory' planning combining passport, residency, banking, and tax High consulting retainer (five figures starting)
5 Migronis Mid-tier accredited agent often cited for transparent pricing on Caribbean and Vanuatu programs Advisory fees on top of government investment

Detailed rankings

#1

Henley & Partners

Established CBI and residency-by-investment advisory across all major programs

The default when you have decided to pursue CBI and want institutional reliability. Worth comparing the agent fee against a smaller specialist like CS Global for Caribbean-only files.

Pros

  • Publishes the Henley Passport Index, the most-cited visa-free travel ranking
  • Direct accredited-agent relationships with Caribbean and Maltese authorities
  • Long track record since 1997
  • Branch offices across major financial centers
  • Strong due-diligence handling — applicants who pass DD here usually pass government DD

Cons

  • Premium pricing on advisory fees
  • Self-interested in keeping CBI demand high — content marketing leans pro-CBI
  • Sales orientation can push applicants toward more-expensive programs than needed
  • Not the cheapest agent for a given program

Price: Advisory fees on top of government investment (typically $30k-100k+ on top of $200k-$1M+ government cost)

Sources: www.henleyglobal.com, www.henleyglobal.com

Visit Henley & Partners →

#2

CS Global Partners

Caribbean-focused CBI specialist with strong Dominica and St Kitts experience

The right pick when you have already narrowed your choice to a Caribbean program and want a specialist instead of a generalist.

Pros

  • Caribbean specialist — focused expertise on Dominica, St Kitts, Grenada, Antigua, St Lucia
  • Often more responsive to mid-size files than the very largest firms
  • Published reporting on Caribbean CBI programs
  • Government-accredited agent status

Cons

  • Narrower geographic focus than Henley
  • Less brand recognition outside the CBI industry
  • Same general critique applies — agent fees on top of investment

Price: Advisory fees on top of government investment

Sources: csglobalpartners.com

Visit CS Global Partners →

#3

Best Citizenships

Free research portal to compare CBI and golden-visa programs before contacting any advisor

The right first stop before paying anyone. Use it to narrow your shortlist of programs, then engage Henley or CS Global once you have a concrete target.

Pros

  • Comprehensive free content on every active CBI and residency program
  • Side-by-side price comparison tables
  • Updates relatively quickly when programs change (e.g. recent Caribbean price increases)
  • Useful as a sanity-check before paying advisor fees

Cons

  • Information quality varies article to article
  • Some pages read as lead-generation for paid services
  • Smaller operation — verify everything against the government source

Price: Free to read, optional paid consultation

Sources: best-citizenships.com

Visit Best Citizenships →

#4

Nomad Capitalist

Holistic 'flag theory' planning combining passport, residency, banking, and tax

The right pick when your situation is genuinely multi-jurisdictional and you want planning beyond a single passport application.

Pros

  • Extensive free YouTube and blog content — useful for self-education
  • Multi-jurisdiction planning rather than pure passport sale
  • Strong critique of cookie-cutter advice from CBI-only firms
  • Founder-led with clear editorial voice

Cons

  • Expensive — designed for clients with substantial wealth
  • Strong marketing tone in some content
  • Less specialized in any one program than dedicated CBI firms
  • Best for the 'six flags' lifestyle, not for someone just wanting a backup passport

Price: High consulting retainer (five figures starting)

Sources: nomadcapitalist.com

Visit Nomad Capitalist →

#5

Migronis

Mid-tier accredited agent often cited for transparent pricing on Caribbean and Vanuatu programs

The right pick when you want a less-expensive accredited agent than the top two and have done your own program research first.

Pros

  • Publishes pricing breakdowns more transparently than the largest firms
  • Government-accredited for multiple Caribbean programs
  • Russian-language and CIS market presence — useful for that founder base
  • Reasonable response time for inquiries

Cons

  • Smaller than Henley or CS Global
  • Vanuatu program lost visa-free EU access in 2023 — still actively marketed by some agents
  • Less institutional weight if DD problems arise

Price: Advisory fees on top of government investment

Sources: migronis.com

Visit Migronis →

How we chose

  • Honesty about who CBI is actually for — high net worth, not typical readers.
  • Coverage of free alternatives — descent and long residency are far more common paths.
  • Recognition of recent program changes — EU pressure has raised minimums and tightened DD.
  • Reputation in visa-free travel rankings (Henley Passport Index, Arton Capital).
  • Transparency on advisor fees on top of government investment.
  • Warning about scams — second-passport space attracts predatory operators.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a second passport actually cost in 2026?

Caribbean CBI minimums rose under EU pressure: Dominica around $200,000, St Lucia $240,000, Grenada $235,000, St Kitts $250,000, Antigua $230,000 single-applicant. These are government contribution figures only — add accredited-agent fees, government processing fees, and due-diligence fees (typically $50,000-$100,000 in total extras). Malta's exceptional-services route requires significantly more, plus genuine residency. Always confirm current prices directly with the government program before contracting.

Did Vanuatu lose visa-free EU access?

Yes. The EU suspended Vanuatu's visa-free Schengen access in 2023 over due-diligence concerns in the Vanuatu CBI program. Any current marketing that claims 'Vanuatu = EU visa-free' is outdated. The passport remains valid, but the EU travel utility is reduced.

Is citizenship by descent cheaper than CBI?

Far cheaper if you qualify. Italian (jure sanguinis), Irish (grandparent), Polish, Hungarian, and German descent paths typically cost under $5,000 in legal fees with no investment. The catch is documentation — you need verifiable ancestry records. Italy tightened jus sanguinis in early 2025 to limit it closer to the parent/grandparent generation in many cases — confirm current rules before starting.

Can I get a second passport by living somewhere?

Yes — naturalization through long residency works in most countries but typically requires 5-10 years of physical presence plus language and integration tests. Portugal (D7), Spain (after CBI repeal), Greece, and Italy are the most-discussed paths in Europe. Cheaper than CBI but requires actually moving and staying.

Are there scams in this market?

Yes, extensively. Red flags: 'guaranteed' approval, prices that look 50% below the official government figure, unaccredited agents claiming inside connections, 'fast track' programs that promise 30-day passports, and any program that does not appear on the issuing country's official government website. Always verify the agent's accreditation directly with the government CBI unit before paying anything.