top of page
Bitcitizen: Made for Bitcoiners who operate in the real world.

Best CBI Programs for Bitcoiners: Vanuatu vs. São Tomé & Príncipe

  • Writer: Adam Juchniewicz
    Adam Juchniewicz
  • Feb 18
  • 4 min read

Updated: Feb 28

Bitcoiners love clean systems: verify, don’t trust . . . and don’t build your family’s mobility plan on vibes and a Telegram voice note.


This post is a straight comparison of two citizenship-by-investment options that get discussed a lot for Bitcoiners: Vanuatu and São Tomé & Príncipe. What they’re good for, where the landmines are, and which one actually fits a Bitcoiner’s goals.


Vanuatu and STP passports
Two passports. Two paths. Same goal: more optionality for Bitcoiners 🇻🇺 vs 🇸🇹

Compare Vanuatu and São Tomé & Príncipe the right way—cost, timeline, and tradeoffs—without the influencer fog.


First: what a CBI passport is actually for


A second passport is not a personality upgrade. It’s not a tax wand. It’s not invisibility. It’s jurisdictional redundancy—an extra access key when the world (or your home country’s policies) gets unpredictable.


If you’re doing this for:


  • mobility resilience

  • a backup plan for residency options

  • family optionality

  • risk diversification


. . . you’re thinking like a Bitcoiner.


If you’re doing it to “disappear,” dodge obligations, or avoid documentation: you’re not buying sovereignty—you’re buying future problems.


The headline reality check: EU travel matters, and Vanuatu took a hit


Historically, Vanuatu was famous because it was fast and relatively accessible. But its travel value into Europe changed dramatically.


The EU formally ended Vanuatu’s visa exemption in December 2024, after earlier suspensions tied to concerns around investor citizenship schemes.  The European Commission publicly laid out why it was pushing to permanently reintroduce visa requirements ahead of the final deadline in 2024.


Tell it like it is: if your #1 goal is “easy Europe,” Vanuatu is no longer the cheat code people still pretend it is.


Vanuatu: the established sprinter with a Europe-sized asterisk


What it’s good at


1) A real track record + a real infrastructure


Vanuatu’s investor-citizenship ecosystem is established enough that you can find clear program structure and documentation from official channels like the Vanuatu Citizenship Office https://vancitizenship.gov.vu.


You’re not dealing with a program that was invented last Tuesday.


2) Speed (by CBI standards)


Vanuatu is still commonly marketed as one of the faster routes—often measured in weeks-to-months through licensed agents (exact timing depends on file quality and due diligence).


3) Straightforward “donation-style” options


Vanuatu’s program ecosystem includes things like the Development Support Program (DSP) (and related pathways), with formal regulations published.


What to watch out for


1) Europe is not a feature anymore


This is the big one, and it’s not negotiable. The EU decision to end visa exemption is the kind of geopolitical “haircut” that changes how banks, counterparties, and even friends evaluate the passport.


2) Program volatility risk


CBI programs can pause, reopen, change pricing, or tighten rules. Vanuatu’s CIIP, for example, has had suspension/reopening headlines in the past couple of years.

If you’re a Bitcoiner, you already know what this means: don’t assume “today’s rules” will be “tomorrow’s rules.”


São Tomé & Príncipe: the new entrant with a promising price tag—and “new program” risk


What it’s good at


1) Cost positioning


São Tomé & Príncipe is being marketed as one of the lowest entry points in the CBI world—at $90,000 donation levels for a single applicant (with small increments for family members).


2) A fresh government framework (but still early)


Multiple sources describe it as a newer program launched/regulated around 2025, including references to governing law/decrees.


New can be good (clean slate), but new also means less market “history” on how it behaves under pressure.


3) It’s already showing signs of enforcement


One encouraging datapoint: reporting that São Tomé & Príncipe’s Citizenship Investment Unit (CIU) took enforcement action against an agent for underpricing—meaning they’re at least trying to keep program discipline.


What to watch out for


1) Brand-new passport = unknown bank acceptance curve


Even if the law is real and passports are being issued, global banking and compliance departments are conservative creatures. New passports can create extra questions—especially if you’re trying to open accounts or build relationships quickly.


2) Travel benefits are real but limited


Depending on the source, São Tomé & Príncipe is often described as having roughly 60–70+ visa-free/visa-on-arrival destinations—but not the big “Tier 1” markets people secretly want (EU/UK/US) without visas.


Head-to-head for Bitcoiners


If your priority is speed and “done-and-dusted”


  • Vanuatu often wins on operational maturity and processing reputation.

  • But that win comes with the EU travel asterisk you can’t ignore.


If your priority is lowest entry cost


  • São Tomé & Príncipe is being positioned aggressively on price.

  • But you’re taking on new program risk (track record still forming).


If your priority is reputational stability


Honestly? Neither is “old money safe.” These are more like portable backups than prestige documents.


Bitcoin-friendly takeaway: treat them like redundancy, not like a primary identity.


The Bitcoin-specific part nobody explains: payments, paper trails, and staying clean


A lot of Bitcoiners ask: “Can I pay in BTC?”


Sometimes agents will accept crypto for professional fees, but government contributions are often processed via banking rails, and due diligence will still want source-of-funds documentation. None of this is “no questions asked,” nor should it be.


The play here is boring:


  • document where funds came from

  • keep clean records

  • avoid weird workarounds that look like laundering (even if you’re not laundering)

You’re not trying to “get away with it.” You’re trying to pass scrutiny without stress.


So which is “best”?


Here’s the blunt Bitcitizen answer:


  • Choose Vanuatu if you value speed + a mature pipeline and you’re not pretending it buys you Europe.

  • Choose São Tomé & Príncipe if you want lowest-cost entry and you’re comfortable being early to a newer framework—knowing acceptance will mature over time, not instantly.


And if what you actually need is “don’t get wrecked by a single-country life”… a second passport is only one piece. Your real resilience stack is: legal structure + contracts + policies + good records + optionality.


That’s the boring stuff that keeps you cool when the heat shows up.


If you want a sanity-checked recommendation based on your goals (mobility, family, timeline, risk tolerance, payment preferences), 21 CBI can help Bitcoiners pick the right option without the influencer nonsense.


Need Help Choosing the Right CBI Program?

Bitcitizen's 21 CBI service helps Bitcoiners compare programs and prepare clean files. Learn how due diligence works, or book a free consultation


 
 
 

Comments


bottom of page