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<title>Kestrel Private — The Insights Briefing</title>
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<description>Verified private-client intelligence on residence and citizenship by investment, by Andrew J. Taylor.</description>
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<lastBuildDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2026 00:00:00 GMT</lastBuildDate>
<item>
<title>How to Vet a Cyprus Property Developer: A Private-Client Checklist</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/cyprus/cyprus-developer-due-diligence</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 13 Jul 2026 07:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Vetting a Cyprus developer is less about glossy brochures and more about title security, delivery record, financial strength and alignment with your residence planning. Buyers should insist on independent legal due diligence, verify that the land and building permits are in order, and test the developer’s governance, after-sales support and transparency on costs such as VAT and fees. For those using Cyprus real estate under the residential-property limb of Regulation 6(2) fast-track permanent residence, the developer must also understand the route’s specific documentation, timing and payment-evidence requirements.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Family Inclusion and Dependants in Residence Programmes: How Far Does Your Permit Really Travel?</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/residence-fundamentals/family-inclusion-and-dependants</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 06 Jul 2026 07:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Most residence-by-investment programmes allow a main applicant to include a spouse and minor children, but the treatment of adult children, parents and parents-in-law varies sharply by jurisdiction. Cyprus Regulation 6(2) is now relatively narrow: it generally covers a spouse, minor children and certain dependent student children aged 18–25, but not parents or parents-in-law. Greece is broader for family inclusion and, because it is a Schengen state, its residence permit carries short-stay Schengen travel rights. Mauritius offers property-linked residence through approved schemes, alongside other residence routes, but a Mauritian permit is not a travel document for other countries. Families should test the dependant rules, maintenance obligations, property-use restrictions and travel implications before committing to a property or residence strategy.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Why Greece Appeals to Global Investors: Access, Lifestyle and Residence Planning</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/greece/why-greece-appeals-to-global-investors</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 15 Jun 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Greece appeals to globally mobile investors because it combines full Schengen membership, a flexible Golden Visa with no minimum stay requirement, and an optional non-dom tax regime for suitable tax-resident profiles. Current real-estate thresholds, revised in 2024–2025, distinguish between the EUR 800,000 tier in the Region of Attica, the Regional Unit of Thessaloniki, Mykonos, Santorini and Greek islands with population over 3,100; the EUR 400,000 tier elsewhere; and a EUR 250,000 conversion or restoration route with technical conditions. For suitable families, Greece can operate as a European base for mobility, lifestyle use and longer-term residence planning, provided property-use restrictions, tax implications and transaction costs are reviewed before acquisition.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Why the Cheapest Qualifying Property Often Becomes the Most Expensive</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/qualifying-real-estate/why-cheap-property-can-be-expensive</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 08 Jun 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>In residence-by-investment, the property priced exactly at the qualifying threshold is often worth materially less than that threshold. A developer can re-price a €200,000 property to €300,000 so it qualifies — a “qualification premium” a non-resident buyer cannot easily detect, and which the market strips out at resale. Because VAT is charged on price, not value, 19% on the inflated figure becomes an effective ~28.5% on the property's true worth. The cheapest qualifying unit can therefore be the most expensive decision; the defence is an independent valuation and a trusted local-market view, not the lowest headline number.</description>
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<item>
<title>Why Cyprus Attracts Private Clients: Lifestyle, Structure and Qualifying Real Estate</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/cyprus/why-cyprus-attracts-private-clients</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Cyprus attracts private clients because it combines EU membership, a Mediterranean lifestyle and a pragmatic approach to residence planning, tax residency and qualifying real estate. The island offers a recognised fast-track permanent residence route under Regulation 6(2), including a residential real-estate option based on new-build property, a 60-day tax residency rule subject to conditions and no inheritance tax. It suits families who value optionality in Europe, but who are prepared to work within a rules-based framework that continues to evolve.</description>
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<item>
<title>Why Residence Programme Rules Change — and How to Plan Around Them</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/residence-fundamentals/why-programme-rules-change</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 25 May 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Residence and residence-by-investment rules change because governments respond to politics, EU pressure, security concerns, housing markets and tax policy shifts. For private clients, the key is to assume change is normal, not exceptional, and to structure applications, timelines and qualifying real estate choices so that a rule tweak does not undermine the core family objective. That usually means favouring recognised residence routes with clear legislation, building in time buffers, distinguishing current rights from possible future benefits, and avoiding strategies that depend on a single speculative assumption such as Schengen expansion or a tax rule remaining unchanged indefinitely.</description>
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<item>
<title>Mauritius vs Cyprus vs Greece: Three Residence Routes Compared for Private Clients</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/mauritius/mauritius-vs-cyprus-vs-greece</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 18 May 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Mauritius, Cyprus and Greece each offer recognised residence options that may be accessed through qualifying real estate, but they serve different strategic purposes. Cyprus offers a national permanent residence permit in an EU member state under the fast-track Regulation 6(2) route, with a residential real-estate pathway focused on new-build property bought directly from a developer; Cyprus is not yet in Schengen. Greece offers a national residence permit in an EU and Schengen state through its Golden Visa regime, with 2024–2025 threshold revisions now central to planning. Mauritius provides a non-EU, lifestyle and business base, with property-based residence through approved schemes as well as other routes such as investor occupation permits and retired non-citizen permits. The right choice depends on mobility priorities, family composition, tax profile, property preference, holding period and long-term jurisdiction strategy.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Why Affluent Families Seek Optionality in Residence and Citizenship</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/decision-making/why-affluent-families-seek-optionality</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 11 May 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Affluent families increasingly seek optionality: the ability to live, educate children, access services and hold assets across more than one jurisdiction — and, where a specific permit allows it, to obtain work or business rights. This is less about “moving country” and more about building a resilient framework of residence rights, tax-residency planning and family mobility over time. Recognised residence routes linked to qualifying real estate can be one component of that framework, provided the programme, jurisdiction and asset are selected with care. Residence rights are distinct from citizenship; any later naturalisation depends on separate legal, residence, language and integration requirements and is not assured.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Greece Golden Visa: Short-Let and Rental Rules for Qualifying Property</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/greece/greece-short-let-and-rental-rules</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 04 May 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Under Greece’s post-2024 Golden Visa rules, property used to qualify for the residence permit may not be let on a short-term basis, including through Airbnb-style platforms. Long-term leasing is permitted, subject to tenancy law, lease registration, income declaration, zoning, building approvals and any condominium restrictions. The Greek Golden Visa remains a 5-year renewable residence route with no minimum physical-stay requirement, and because Greece is a full Schengen member, a Greek residence permit carries visa-free Schengen travel from day one. Any rental strategy should therefore be built around compliant long-term use, conservative yield assumptions and careful legal and tax due diligence.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>What Counts as Qualifying Real Estate for Residence by Investment?</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/qualifying-real-estate/what-is-qualifying-real-estate</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 27 Apr 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Qualifying real estate is property that meets the specific legal, financial and documentary conditions of a recognised residence route. It is defined by programme rules — for example, minimum investment thresholds, permitted asset categories, new-build or resale treatment, payment evidence and source-of-funds requirements — rather than by marketing labels such as “investment property”. Not every attractive home or rental asset will qualify, and the wrong choice can leave a family with a good property but no residence permit. Qualifying real estate may support a residence or permanent residence application; citizenship, where available at all, is a separate process subject to future law, residence history and other conditions.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cyprus Tax Residence and the 60‑Day Rule: A Private‑Client Guide</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/cyprus/cyprus-tax-residence-60-day-rule</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 20 Apr 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Cyprus offers two main domestic tests for individual tax residence: the standard 183‑day presence rule and a 60‑day rule introduced in 2017, subject to qualifying conditions. The 60‑day rule is most relevant to internationally mobile individuals who can establish genuine Cyprus substance and avoid competing tax residence elsewhere. Cyprus also combines EU membership, no inheritance tax and recognised residence routes, including the fast‑track Regulation 6(2) permanent residence route and the separate regular Category F route. Tax residence, immigration residence and property acquisition remain separate workstreams and should be coordinated with licensed Cyprus tax and legal advisers.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>What Is Residence by Investment? A Private-Client Guide to Modern Mobility</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/residence-fundamentals/what-is-residence-by-investment</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 13 Apr 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Residence by investment is a recognised route that allows foreign nationals to apply for a residence permit in a country by making a qualifying investment, often in real estate, subject to due diligence and programme rules. It does not grant citizenship or tax residency automatically, but it can support broader residence planning, education access and mobility goals. Suitability depends on your family profile, home-country ties, risk tolerance and how you intend to use the residence over time.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>A UAE Expat Family Seeking EU Optionality: How Cyprus PR and Other Routes Fit Together</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/scenarios/uae-expat-family-eu-optionality</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 06 Apr 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>A UAE-based family seeking EU optionality will often combine a stable EU residence base such as Cyprus permanent residence with a separate Schengen solution for short-stay European mobility. Cyprus is an EU member state, but it is not yet in the Schengen Area, so a Cyprus residence permit does not currently confer Schengen travel rights. Under the fast-track Regulation 6(2) route, the residential real-estate option is generally based on a minimum EUR 300,000 plus VAT investment in new-build residential property purchased directly from a developer, with separate rules for other Regulation 6(2) investment categories. The right structure depends on family composition, intended use, tax position and whether the family needs Schengen mobility, EU residence, or both.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Mauritius: Tax, Residence and Lifestyle for International Families</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/mauritius/mauritius-tax-and-lifestyle</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 30 Mar 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Mauritius combines a recognised residence framework, relatively moderate personal tax and a relaxed Indian Ocean lifestyle, but it is not an EU or Schengen gateway and it will not suit every family. Foreigners can obtain residence through qualifying real estate from USD 375,000 in approved schemes, or through other routes such as investor and retiree permits, with tax residence generally triggered from 183 days’ presence in a tax year or 270 days over three years. The jurisdiction levies no capital gains, inheritance or wealth tax, while foreign-source income may be taxed primarily when remitted, subject to detailed rules for specific income categories and ongoing reforms. Programme suitability should be confirmed with Mauritian tax and legal advisers before any commitment.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>When Not to Proceed: Saying No to the Wrong Residence or Citizenship Programme</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/decision-making/when-not-to-proceed</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 23 Mar 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Not every residence or citizenship-by-investment programme is suitable, even for well-qualified families. The right decision often involves saying no to options that do not align with your mobility goals, tax profile, family dynamics, asset criteria or risk tolerance. This piece sets out the main red flags and misalignments that should prompt a pause—or a polite refusal—before you commit capital to any recognised residence route or qualifying real estate.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Greece Golden Visa: Schengen Mobility From Day One</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/greece/greece-schengen-mobility-from-day-one</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 16 Mar 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>A Greek residence permit issued under the Greece Golden Visa programme provides visa-free short-stay travel across the Schengen Area from day one of holding the card, because Greece is a full Schengen member. In practical terms, this generally means up to 90 days in any 180-day period in other Schengen states, not residence or work rights there. The trade-off is that you must first complete a qualifying investment and navigate an application process measured in months, with current thresholds and rules confirmed at the point of application.</description>
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<item>
<title>Title Deeds, Encumbrances and Why They Matter in Cross-Border Property Deals</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/qualifying-real-estate/title-deeds-and-encumbrances</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 09 Mar 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Title deeds and encumbrances determine whether a property is truly yours, what rights you acquire, and which risks you inherit. A clean, properly registered title with manageable encumbrances is essential if you are buying qualifying real estate linked to a residence route. Because land law, registration systems, lender practices and residence-programme rules differ by jurisdiction, international buyers should treat title review and encumbrance due diligence as a core part of the acquisition process, alongside tax and immigration planning. This article is primarily concerned with residence routes; where citizenship routes exist, they must be assessed separately. Cyprus’s former citizenship-by-investment programme is closed.</description>
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<item>
<title>Cyprus Residence and Schengen: What Your Permit Really Gives You</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/cyprus/cyprus-schengen-status-explained</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 02 Mar 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>A Cyprus residence permit, including the fast-track Immigration Permit under Regulation 6(2), does not currently give non-EU nationals visa-free access to the Schengen Area. Cyprus is a full EU member state but is not yet part of Schengen; accession requires an EU Council decision and has no confirmed date. Until Cyprus formally joins Schengen and implementing rules are in force, Cyprus residence holders must rely on their passports, separate Schengen visas, or residence permits issued by Schengen member states for Schengen travel. Cyprus should therefore be assessed as an EU residence base with its own tax, estate-planning and real-estate characteristics, not as a substitute for a Schengen-country residence permit.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>What a Residence Permit Actually Gives You: Rights, Limits and Misconceptions</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/residence-fundamentals/what-a-residence-permit-gives-you</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 23 Feb 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>A residence permit is fundamentally a right to live in a particular country under defined conditions. It is not a passport, and it does not automatically determine wider travel, tax or political rights. The precise benefits depend on the jurisdiction and the category of permit: a Greek residence permit, for example, is issued by a Schengen member state and generally supports short-stay movement within Schengen, while a Cyprus permit does not currently do so because Cyprus is not yet in Schengen. Investors should separate marketing language from the legal reality of each recognised residence route and align residence planning with family mobility, tax and succession objectives.</description>
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<item>
<title>A South African Family’s EU Plan B: How to Structure Residence, Schengen Access and Qualifying Real Estate</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/scenarios/south-african-family-eu-plan-b</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 16 Feb 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>A South African family seeking an EU Plan B typically needs three things: a recognised residence route, a clear mobility plan for the Schengen Area, and tax-residency planning that does not create unintended consequences. Cyprus is a full EU member and offers a fast-track permanent residence route under Regulation 6(2), usually through a EUR 300,000 plus VAT new-build residential property bought directly from a developer, together with prescribed secured-income evidence. That is distinct from the regular Category F route, which is slower, more flexible on property and has a lower income benchmark. Cyprus is not yet in Schengen, so a Cyprus residence permit does not currently confer Schengen short-stay travel. Families that need immediate Schengen mobility may continue using Schengen visas on South African passports or consider a separate residence permit in a Schengen state such as Greece, where the Golden Visa thresholds were revised in 2024–2025.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Residence in Mauritius Through Property: How the USD 375,000 Route Works</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/mauritius/mauritius-residence-through-property</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 09 Feb 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Mauritius offers a recognised residence route for non-citizens who acquire qualifying real estate of at least USD 375,000 in an approved scheme such as PDS, IRS, RES or Smart City. This typically grants a residence permit to the buyer and eligible dependants for as long as the property is held, with applications filed via the Economic Development Board. Many practitioners plan around a three-to-six-month process from a complete file, although timing remains subject to due diligence and documentation. A Mauritian residence permit is not a travel document for the EU or Schengen Area, so the value is lifestyle, family optionality and tax-resident positioning rather than European mobility.</description>
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<item>
<title>A Private-Client Checklist for Buying Qualifying Real Estate for Residence</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/decision-making/questions-before-buying-qualifying-property</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 02 Feb 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Before buying qualifying real estate linked to a residence route, you should interrogate three dimensions: the residence programme itself, the specific property, and your wider family and tax position. A structured checklist helps you separate marketing from underlying risk, clarify programme suitability, and avoid locking into assets that do not support your long-term plans. Cyprus is used as the principal worked example, with short contrasts for Greece and Mauritius. Rules, thresholds and tax treatment change, so all assumptions must be checked with local legal and tax advisers before committing capital.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Greece Golden Visa: Understanding the New Real-Estate Thresholds</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/greece/greece-qualifying-real-estate-thresholds</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 26 Jan 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Greece’s Golden Visa real-estate framework now operates through three main tiers. The EUR 250,000 route is reserved for specific conversion or restoration projects. The EUR 400,000 tier applies to a single qualifying residential property of at least 120 m² in areas outside the higher-threshold zones. The EUR 800,000 tier applies to a single qualifying residential property of at least 120 m² in the Region of Attica, the Regional Unit of Thessaloniki, Mykonos, Santorini and any Greek island with more than 3,100 inhabitants. Each route can lead to a 5-year renewable residence permit for the family, with no minimum physical-stay requirement while the qualifying investment is maintained. The right tier depends on location, property profile, permitted use, tax context and execution risk.</description>
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<item>
<title>Minimum Thresholds, VAT and the True Transaction Cost of Residence-Linked Property</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/qualifying-real-estate/thresholds-vat-and-transaction-costs</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 19 Jan 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>When you buy qualifying real estate for a residence-by-investment route, the programme’s minimum threshold is only the starting point. Buyers also need to budget for VAT, transfer taxes or exemptions, legal and government fees, and any reduced-rate VAT rules for primary homes, which can materially change the all-in cost. Using Cyprus as a worked example, this guide explains how minimum investment thresholds interact with VAT and other charges so you can compare jurisdictions on a like-for-like basis and avoid under-budgeting.</description>
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<item>
<title>Cyprus Qualifying Property for Regulation 6(2) PR: What Counts and What to Avoid</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/cyprus/cyprus-qualifying-property</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 12 Jan 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Cyprus’ fast-track permanent residence route is the Immigration Permit under Regulation 6(2) of the Aliens and Immigration Regulations. Under the residential house/apartment category, the qualifying investment is EUR 300,000 plus VAT in new-build residential property bought directly from a developer, with the qualifying funds remitted from abroad before filing. This rule is specific to the fast-track Regulation 6(2) residential category; it should not be confused with the regular Category F route, which has no strict property-purchase requirement, permits resale property, requires lower secured income of around EUR 30,000 and is typically slower. Regulation 6(2) can also include non-residential property categories, including certain commercial assets, which require separate analysis. Applicants must also satisfy income, family, health-insurance, clean-record and post-approval compliance requirements. Cyprus is an EU member but not yet in Schengen, so a Cyprus residence permit does not confer Schengen short-stay travel rights until accession.</description>
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<item>
<title>Residence vs Citizenship by Investment: How to Choose the Right Route</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/residence-fundamentals/residence-vs-citizenship-by-investment</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 05 Jan 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Residence by investment and citizenship by investment serve different purposes in a private-client mobility plan. A residence permit gives you the legal right to live in a jurisdiction, often linked to qualifying real estate or another qualifying route. Citizenship provides a passport, political membership and stronger long-term security, usually with more demanding eligibility, scrutiny and timelines. Direct citizenship-by-investment routes, where still available, are generally outside the EU and should be assessed carefully. EU citizenship is normally pursued, if at all, through lawful residence and later naturalisation under national rules, subject to eligibility, presence, language or integration requirements and government discretion.</description>
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<item>
<title>Designing a Mediterranean Base for Retirement: How to Think About Jurisdictions, Residence and Qualifying Real Estate</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/scenarios/retiring-couple-mediterranean-base</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 29 Dec 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>A retiring couple seeking a Mediterranean base should start with residence planning, programme suitability and jurisdiction selection, rather than simply buying a holiday home. Key considerations include how often you will actually live there, healthcare access, tax residency rules, family optionality and the type of real estate that may support a recognised residence route. Cyprus, for example, is an EU member with a fast-track permanent residence route under Regulation 6(2), currently linked in its residential-property option to a EUR 300,000 plus VAT first-sale/new property investment bought from a developer, as well as a separate regular Category F route for financially independent persons. Cyprus also offers a 60-day tax residency rule, subject to important conditions, and no inheritance tax, but it is not yet in Schengen and a Cyprus permit does not currently confer Schengen short-stay travel. A calm, comparative review of Cyprus, Greece, Portugal, Spain and Mauritius — with local legal and tax input — is usually the right way to design a resilient Mediterranean or Mediterranean-style retirement base.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Mauritius Qualifying Real Estate: Understanding the Approved Schemes</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/mauritius/mauritius-qualifying-real-estate</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 22 Dec 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Mauritius grants a residence permit to non-citizens who acquire at least USD 375,000 of qualifying real estate in an approved scheme such as PDS, IRS, RES or a designated Smart City project, with the permit generally available to the buyer and dependants for as long as the property is held. These property schemes are regulated through the Economic Development Board (EDB) and sit alongside other Mauritian residence routes, including the Occupation Permit and Retired Non-Citizen permit. Buyers should distinguish carefully between a lifestyle property purchase, a qualifying residence-linked acquisition, and Mauritian tax residence, and should confirm current thresholds, taxes and programme rules locally before committing.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Property Route vs Financial Investments: Choosing Your Path to Residence</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/decision-making/property-route-vs-fund-route</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 15 Dec 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>For many private clients, qualifying real estate is a tangible and familiar basis for a residence application, but it is not always the most flexible or capital-efficient route. Property-led programmes suit families who value a usable home, clear asset criteria and a long-term anchor in a jurisdiction. Fund, bond and business routes can offer liquidity, diversification or commercial alignment, but often involve more complexity, narrower availability and different risk. The right choice depends on your residence planning objectives, holding period, tax position, family profile and how you intend to use the jurisdiction. Approval in any route remains subject to eligibility, due diligence and the competent authority’s decision.</description>
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<item>
<title>Greece Property Due Diligence: How Private Clients Should Protect a Purchase</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/greece/greece-property-due-diligence</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 08 Dec 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Proper due diligence on Greek property goes well beyond checking the view and the rental projections. International buyers should verify title, planning and zoning, building legality, transaction costs, tax exposure, Golden Visa eligibility and current use restrictions before committing. For Golden Visa-linked properties, rental assumptions need particular care: current rules restrict short-term rentals and certain prohibited uses, with potential permit and financial consequences. Using independent Greek legal, tax and migration advisers, and stress-testing both the asset and the residence route, is central to protecting capital and family optionality in Greece.</description>
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<item>
<title>Exit Strategy for Qualifying Real Estate: How to Think Beyond the Purchase</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/qualifying-real-estate/qualifying-property-exit-strategy</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/qualifying-real-estate/qualifying-property-exit-strategy</guid>
<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 01 Dec 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>For internationally minded investors using qualifying real estate to support residence, and in some jurisdictions a possible longer-term naturalisation pathway subject to separate conditions, the exit strategy is as important as the initial acquisition. You need clarity on when you can sell without jeopardising residence status, who your likely buyer will be, and how programme rules, tax and market depth affect your eventual sale. This piece sets out a framework to evaluate exit risk across jurisdictions and projects, so residence planning and capital strategy remain aligned over time.</description>
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<item>
<title>The Cyprus Property Buying Process, Step by Step</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/cyprus/cyprus-property-buying-process</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 24 Nov 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Buying property in Cyprus follows a clear but unfamiliar sequence for many international buyers: independent legal due diligence, reservation, a binding sale agreement, acquisition-permission checks for non-EU/third-country buyers, and eventual transfer of title at the Land Registry. Along the way you will need to budget for VAT, legal fees and government charges, and decide whether your purchase should also support a recognised residence route such as the fast-track Immigration Permit under Regulation 6(2). For the residential real-estate route under Regulation 6(2), the qualifying profile is specific: a minimum EUR 300,000 plus VAT investment in new-build residential property bought directly from a developer, paid from foreign-remitted funds before filing. Other Cyprus residence routes, such as Category F, are separate and have different criteria. Rules, tax treatment and programme requirements change, so every transaction should be structured with current Cyprus legal and tax advice.</description>
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<item>
<title>Residence by Investment: Processing Timelines and Physical-Presence Rules Compared</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/residence-fundamentals/processing-timelines-and-physical-presence</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/residence-fundamentals/processing-timelines-and-physical-presence</guid>
<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 17 Nov 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Processing timelines and physical-presence rules vary materially across residence-by-investment and residence-through-qualifying-real-estate routes. Cyprus Regulation 6(2) fast-track permanent residence is commonly planned around an indicative two-to-three-month examination target from a complete file and a light-touch visit requirement of at least once every two years, while Greece’s Golden Visa is a five-year renewable Schengen residence permit with no minimum stay requirement and typical end-to-end processing of around four to nine months. Mauritius property-based residence is often planned around three to six months and is valid while the qualifying property is held, with other residence routes available for investors and retirees. Immigration residence, travel rights and tax residence are separate questions, so families should plan around current rules, not headline timelines, and should confirm the position with licensed local legal and tax advisers before committing capital.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Residence Planning When Schengen Access Is the Priority</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/scenarios/investor-prioritising-schengen-access</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 10 Nov 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>For an investor whose first priority is Schengen mobility, the starting point is to distinguish between residence permits issued by Schengen states and national residence permits issued by EU states that are not yet in Schengen. A residence permit from a Schengen state such as Greece generally allows short-stay travel in other Schengen states for up to 90 days in any 180-day period, subject to Schengen rules and national entry conditions. A Cyprus residence permit does not currently provide that benefit because Cyprus is an EU member state but not yet part of the Schengen Area. Many families therefore separate their objectives: a Schengen-state residence permit for mobility, and a complementary base such as Cyprus for lifestyle, tax or business reasons. Programme rules, tax treatment and family eligibility should be confirmed with local legal and tax advisers before capital is committed.</description>
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<item>
<title>The Mauritius Property Purchase Process: A Private-Client Guide for First-Time Buyers</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/mauritius/mauritius-property-purchase-process</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 03 Nov 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Buying property in Mauritius as a foreigner is a structured, lawyer-led process that typically runs from initial reservation through due diligence, contract signing, registration and, where relevant, a linked residence-permit application. Foreign buyers may purchase through recognised frameworks, including approved schemes such as PDS, IRS, RES and Smart City, and certain other EDB-recognised categories, including qualifying Ground+2 apartments. A qualifying acquisition of at least USD 375,000 may support an application to the Economic Development Board for a residence permit, subject to approval, due diligence and current programme rules. Transaction costs, tax treatment and residence implications should be modelled before commitment, with local legal and tax confirmation.</description>
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<item>
<title>Family Mobility and International Education Planning: How Residence Strategy Shapes Your Children’s Options</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/decision-making/family-mobility-and-education-planning</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 27 Oct 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>For internationally minded families, residence planning and international education are now inseparable decisions. The jurisdictions you select, the residence routes you use, and the qualifying real estate you acquire can materially affect your children’s school access, tuition status, and long-term mobility. This piece sets out a practical framework for parents to evaluate programme suitability, compare jurisdictions and structure decisions around schooling milestones, always subject to local legal and tax advice and evolving programme rules.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Greece Golden Visa: 12 Costly Mistakes to Avoid When Buying Property</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/greece/greece-mistakes-to-avoid</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 20 Oct 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>The most common Greece Golden Visa mistakes centre on buying the wrong type of property under the revised 2024–2025 tiered thresholds, underestimating transaction costs, confusing residence with tax residence, and neglecting long-term family planning. Greece now has EUR 400,000 and EUR 800,000 tiers for standard and higher-threshold residential areas, with a separate EUR 250,000 route for specific commercial-to-residential conversion or listed-building restoration projects. A valid Greek residence permit also supports short-stay Schengen travel, generally up to 90 days in any 180-day period, because Greece is a full Schengen member. Investors should distinguish the Golden Visa from Greece’s non-dom tax regime, which has its own eligibility rules and investment condition. Careful due diligence on programme suitability, property selection, permitted use, tax position and professional advice is essential, as rules and figures change and outcomes are never guaranteed.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>A Due‑Diligence Checklist for Qualifying Property in Residence by Investment</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/qualifying-real-estate/property-due-diligence-checklist</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 13 Oct 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>A robust due‑diligence checklist for qualifying real estate should cover four layers: the programme rules, the property itself, the counterparty and contracts, and the wider jurisdiction. For residence by investment, this means confirming that the asset meets the programme’s legal criteria, that title and planning are clean, that the developer or seller is credible, and that the jurisdiction’s tax, mobility and regulatory profile align with your family’s objectives. Property purchase alone should not be treated as conferring citizenship: any later naturalisation route is separate, conditional and jurisdiction-specific. The process is closer to private equity than to retail property buying and should be run with independent legal, tax and technical advisers in each country.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cyprus Permanent Residence Through Property: A Private-Client Guide</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/cyprus/cyprus-permanent-residence-explained</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 06 Oct 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Cyprus permanent residence for property-led investors is most commonly pursued through the fast-track Immigration Permit under Regulation 6(2) of the Aliens and Immigration Regulations. For the residential real-estate limb of that route, applicants invest at least EUR 300,000 plus VAT in a new house or apartment purchased directly from a developer, with resale residential property excluded. Applicants must also evidence secured annual income, currently commonly cited at about EUR 50,000 for the main applicant, plus EUR 15,000 for a spouse and EUR 10,000 per child, with foreign-source income expected for the residential-property route. The permit can cover a spouse and eligible dependent children, is typically examined in about two to three months from a complete file, and carries ongoing maintenance obligations beyond simply visiting Cyprus once every two years. Cyprus is an EU member state but is not yet in Schengen, so Cyprus PR does not currently give Schengen short-stay travel rights.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Permanent vs Temporary Residence: What Actually Differs for International Families</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/residence-fundamentals/permanent-vs-temporary-residence</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/residence-fundamentals/permanent-vs-temporary-residence</guid>
<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 29 Sep 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Permanent residence is typically an open-ended immigration status that allows a person to live indefinitely in a country, subject to maintenance conditions. Temporary residence is granted for a fixed period and must be renewed. In practice, the real differences lie in security of status, renewal risk, family coverage, travel rights, work permissions, tax interaction and how easily status can lapse. For internationally mobile families, the choice between permanent and temporary residence should be driven by objectives, residence planning and programme suitability, not by labels alone.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cyprus or Greece? A Private-Client Scenario for a Family at the Final Decision Stage</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/scenarios/family-choosing-cyprus-or-greece</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 22 Sep 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>For a family choosing between Cyprus and Greece, the decision usually turns on three axes: mobility, tax and estate planning, and the character of the qualifying real estate you will actually own and use. Cyprus offers EU membership, a recognised fast-track permanent residence route under Regulation 6(2), a separate regular Category F route, a 60-day tax-residency rule and no inheritance tax, but it is not yet in Schengen, so a Cyprus residence permit does not currently confer Schengen short-stay travel. Greece is already in Schengen and offers a 5-year renewable property-linked residence permit, with 2026 thresholds that vary materially by location and asset type. The right answer is rarely “better or worse”; it is which jurisdiction’s rules, timelines and property market align more closely with your family’s mobility, tax, succession and lifestyle objectives.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Mauritius Residence by Investment: 12 Costly Mistakes to Avoid</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/mauritius/mauritius-mistakes-to-avoid</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 15 Sep 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Mauritius offers recognised residence routes through qualifying real estate, investor and retiree permits, but many international buyers misunderstand what the permits actually provide, how tax residency works, and which properties genuinely qualify. Common mistakes include assuming Mauritian residence brings EU or Schengen mobility, buying sub-threshold property that does not confer residence, and confusing property-based residence with the separate 20-year Permanent Residence Permit. A measured, private-client approach—anchored in due diligence, clear objectives and local professional advice—helps families select the right structure, property and residence route for their circumstances.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cyprus vs Greece: Which Residence Route Fits Your Family?</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/decision-making/cyprus-vs-greece-residence</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 08 Sep 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>For internationally mobile families, Cyprus and Greece offer very different residence profiles. Cyprus provides an EU residence permit outside Schengen for now, with a fast-track permanent residence route under Regulation 6(2) that is often used through a qualifying new-build residential purchase, as well as the slower and more flexible Category F route. Greece offers a Schengen-state residence permit, with 90/180-day Schengen mobility, but its Golden Visa thresholds were revised in 2024–2025 and now vary by region and asset type. The right choice depends on whether your priority is Schengen mobility today, long-term residence planning in a single EU jurisdiction, family coverage, tax coordination or the type of property you are comfortable holding.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>The Greece Golden Visa, Explained for Private Clients</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/greece/greece-golden-visa-explained</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 01 Sep 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>The Greece Golden Visa is a recognised residence route that grants a 5-year renewable residence permit, with short-stay Schengen mobility once issued and while valid, generally up to 90 days in any 180-day period and not residence or work rights in other Schengen states, in return for qualifying real estate investment. Current post-2024/2025 tiers include a EUR 400,000 minimum for a single residential property of at least 120 m² in standard areas, EUR 800,000 for a single residential property of at least 120 m² in the Region of Attica, the Regional Unit of Thessaloniki, Mykonos, Santorini, and islands with more than 3,100 inhabitants, and a EUR 250,000 option for specific commercial-to-residential conversion or listed-building restoration projects. There is no minimum physical-stay requirement for maintaining the permit, but programme rules, property-use restrictions and tax interactions should be confirmed locally before capital is committed.</description>
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<item>
<title>The Real Risks of Buying Off‑Plan for Residence and Citizenship Planning</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/qualifying-real-estate/off-plan-property-risks</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 25 Aug 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Buying off‑plan can be an effective way to secure qualifying real estate for a residence or citizenship route, but it introduces risks that do not exist with completed property: developer default, construction delays, specification changes, title issues and programme rule changes during the build. International families should treat off‑plan as a capital allocation decision wrapped in legal and immigration risk, not a shortcut to higher returns. Robust due diligence on the developer, funding structure, legal protections and programme timelines is essential before committing, particularly where a residence permit depends on a new‑build residential real‑estate option under a fast‑track route, as in Cyprus Regulation 6(2).</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Cyprus Permanent Residence: 10 Costly Mistakes to Avoid</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/cyprus/cyprus-mistakes-to-avoid</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 18 Aug 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Many Cyprus permanent residence mistakes stem from misunderstanding the fast-track Regulation 6(2) rules, over-relying on marketing claims, or choosing the wrong qualifying investment. Cyprus is an EU member but not yet in Schengen, so a Cyprus residence permit does not confer Schengen short-stay travel rights until accession. Under the fast-track residential house/apartment route, the investment is typically at least EUR 300,000 plus VAT in a first-sale/new residential unit bought directly from a developer; resale residential property does not qualify for that limb. Other Regulation 6(2) investment categories, including certain non-residential real estate, have separate rules and should be checked with Cyprus counsel. Applicants must also evidence secured annual income, currently around EUR 50,000 for the main applicant, plus EUR 15,000 for a spouse and EUR 10,000 for each dependent child, subject to current Civil Registry and Migration Department guidance. Rules, VAT treatment, family eligibility, maintenance obligations and ancillary costs change, so serious investors should confirm all details against official Cyprus sources and with local legal and tax professionals before committing.</description>
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<item>
<title>How Schengen Access Actually Works: What Your Residence Really Buys You</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/residence-fundamentals/how-schengen-access-actually-works</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 11 Aug 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>A residence permit from a Schengen member state generally allows short-stay travel across the rest of the Schengen Area for up to 90 days in any 180-day period, without a separate Schengen visa, provided the permit and passport are valid and normal entry conditions are met. It does not grant residence or work rights in other Schengen states. A residence permit from a non-Schengen EU member, such as Cyprus, does not currently confer Schengen short-stay access; your Schengen position remains based on your passport and any visa you hold. Rules, programme conditions and implementation timelines change, so residence planning should be checked against current law in each jurisdiction.</description>
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<item>
<title>Residence Planning for Entrepreneurs With Young Children: How to Think About Jurisdictions, Schooling and Qualifying Real Estate</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/scenarios/entrepreneur-with-young-children</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 04 Aug 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>For an entrepreneur with young children, residence planning is less about moving tomorrow and more about building structured optionality: a recognised residence route in a stable jurisdiction, access to quality education and healthcare in that jurisdiction, and a clear link to qualifying real estate that can double as a family base. In practice, that may mean obtaining a permanent or long-term residence permit in an EU or comparable jurisdiction, anchored by a carefully selected property, while the main operating business remains elsewhere. A Cyprus permit, for example, supports residence and schooling in Cyprus; it does not create residence, schooling or university fee-status rights elsewhere in the EU. Programme suitability depends on your family’s ages, schooling plans, tax position and exit strategy, and the rules and thresholds in each jurisdiction change over time, so every plan needs fresh local confirmation before filing.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Why African Families Choose Mauritius for Residence and Qualifying Real Estate</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/mauritius/mauritius-for-african-families</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/mauritius/mauritius-for-african-families</guid>
<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 28 Jul 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Mauritius appeals to many African families because it combines regional proximity, political and economic stability, an established professional-services sector and structured residence routes. A qualifying real estate acquisition of at least USD 375,000 can support residence for the buyer and dependants, including through approved schemes such as PDS, IRS, RES and Smart City, and in some cases through a Ground+2 apartment at or above the qualifying residence threshold, subject to EDB approval and current rules. Lower-priced Ground+2 apartments may be available to foreign buyers from MUR 6,000,000 but do not, by themselves, confer residence. Mauritius also offers other routes, including the Occupation Permit for investors and the Retired Non-Citizen permit. It is outside the EU and Schengen Area, so Mauritian residence is primarily about lifestyle, family planning, tax structuring and a regional base rather than European travel rights.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Creating a Plan B Through Residence: How to Think About a Second Base</title>
<link>https://kestrelprivate.com/insights/decision-making/creating-a-plan-b-through-residence</link>
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<dc:creator>Andrew J. Taylor</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jul 2025 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<description>Creating a Plan B through residence means securing a legally recognised right to live in a second jurisdiction, often anchored by qualifying real estate, so your family has options if circumstances change at home. It is less about moving tomorrow and more about residence planning, jurisdiction selection and programme suitability over a long horizon. The right approach depends on your family profile, mobility needs, tax position, and comfort with the legal, lifestyle and market risks of each route.</description>
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