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

Türkiye's E-2 Visa: Is the American Market Worth 3x the Price of Vanuatu?

  • Writer: Adam Juchniewicz
    Adam Juchniewicz
  • Mar 28
  • 5 min read

Bitcoiners love a good value play. You'll spend three days comparing Lightning node implementations to save 14 sats . . . but when it comes to second citizenship, you'll scroll past the $130,000 option and fixate on the $400,000 one because someone on X said "E-2 visa."


Let's slow down.


Vanuatu vs. Turkiye
Vanuatu offers a price point 3X lower than that of Turkiye. But Turkiye offers E-2 visa access. IS the price difference worth it?

Türkiye's citizenship-by-investment program is one of the most talked-about in the space right now — and for a specific reason: it's the cheapest route to a US E-2 treaty investor visa. For Bitcoiners who can't get US work authorization any other way, that's a real unlock.


But it's also three times the cost of Vanuatu.


So the question isn't "is the E-2 good?" The question is: is the American market worth $270,000 more than a faster passport with zero tax and no strings?


That depends entirely on what you're building, where you're going, and what you actually need a second passport to do.


What you're comparing


Let's kill the ambiguity before it breeds bad decisions.


Vanuatu — the speed play:


  • $130,000 non-refundable donation (single applicant)

  • Passport in 30–60 days

  • No residency requirement, no language test, no interview

  • Visa-free access to ~95 countries (Hong Kong, Singapore, Russia, Malaysia)

  • Zero income tax, zero capital gains, zero inheritance tax

  • No E-2 treaty with the US

  • EU Schengen access revoked (effective 2022, formalized December 2024)


Türkiye — the US access play:


  • $400,000 minimum real estate investment (held 3 years)

  • Processing: 3–8 months

  • No residency requirement, no language test

  • Visa-free access to ~120 countries (Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong)

  • E-2 treaty with the United States

  • C-2 Schengen visa available (5-year, multi-entry)

  • CBI holders must wait 3 years of Turkish domicile before E-2 eligibility


Read that last bullet again.


The E-2: what it actually is (and isn't)


The E-2 is a non-immigrant visa. It lets citizens of treaty countries live and work in the US by investing in and operating a US-based business. It's renewable, it includes spouses and children, and spouses can get work authorization.

What it is not:


  • Not a green card. It doesn't lead directly to permanent residence.

  • Not passive. You must actively direct or manage the business.

  • Not cheap to maintain. You need a "substantial" US investment — most successful applications involve $100,000+ in a real enterprise.

  • Not automatic. Turkish citizenship gives you eligibility. You still apply, interview, and prove the investment is real.


The E-2 is a powerful tool for someone who wants to run a US business from a position of legal clarity. It is a terrible tool for someone who just wants "access to America" in the abstract.


This is where the tourist-vs-citizen line matters most.


The 3-year domicile problem


Here's the part most CBI marketers leave out of the pitch deck.

If you obtained Turkish citizenship through investment — not by birth or naturalization the traditional way — the US consulate applies additional scrutiny. Current guidance requires CBI-origin Turkish citizens to demonstrate at least 3 years of domicile in Türkiye before the E-2 application.

What that means in practice:


  • You don't just buy property and get a passport and fly to Istanbul for an E-2 interview

  • You need to show you've actually lived there — tax filings, utility bills, lease agreements, a real presence

  • Your E-2 timeline isn't 3–8 months; it's 3+ years before the clock even starts


For someone planning to relocate to Türkiye anyway? That's fine. For someone who just wanted a shortcut to the US market? That's a $400,000 surprise with a 3-year holding pattern.


Where Vanuatu wins (and it's not close)


Vanuatu doesn't get you into the US. Full stop. You'll need a B-1/B-2 visitor visa like anyone else.


But here's what Vanuatu does give you — and why Bitcoiners keep choosing it:


  • Speed. Passport in hand in 30–60 days. No other program comes close.

  • Zero tax jurisdiction. No income tax. No capital gains. No inheritance tax. For a Bitcoiner sitting on unrealized gains, that's not a "nice to have" — it's structural.

  • Clean Plan B. If you need to move fast — political instability, banking crisis, personal safety — Vanuatu doesn't ask you to wait 3 years to use it.

  • Asia-Pacific access. Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines. If your business runs east, not west, Vanuatu covers the map.


  • Cost efficiency. $130,000 vs. $400,000. That $270,000 delta buys a lot of runway.


The Schengen loss hurts. No question. But be honest: how many Bitcoiners were choosing Vanuatu for weekend trips to Paris? The people who chose Vanuatu chose it for speed, tax structure, and a credible Plan B. Those three things haven't changed.


Where Türkiye wins (and it's not trivial)


Türkiye isn't just the E-2. It's a real country with a real economy and a passport that opens doors Vanuatu can't.


  • US market access. If you want to legally operate a business in the United States — hire employees, sign leases, build revenue on American soil — the E-2 is one of the few clean paths. That matters.

  • Schengen visa access. Turkish citizens can get a 5-year, multi-entry C-2 Schengen visa. That's not "visa-free," but it's consistent and reliable.

  • Broader visa-free travel. ~120 countries vs. ~95. Japan alone can be worth it depending on your business footprint.

  • Real estate as an asset. Your $400,000 isn't a donation — it's property. Turkish real estate has appreciated 15–25% annually in recent years. After 3 years, you can sell.

  • Geopolitical positioning. Türkiye sits at the crossroads of Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. That's not marketing copy — it's geography.


If your actual plan is to build and operate a US-based business, relocate your family to Türkiye for 3+ years, and then apply for the E-2 with clean documentation and a real enterprise, Türkiye is a serious play.


If your plan is vaguer than that, you're paying a $270,000 premium for optionality you haven't defined.


The real question: what are you building?


CBI is not a product. It's infrastructure. And infrastructure only works when it matches the architecture.


Choose Vanuatu if:


  • You need a passport fast and can't afford a multi-year timeline

  • Your business runs in Asia-Pacific, not the US

  • Tax optimization on crypto gains is your primary driver

  • You want a clean Plan B without residency obligations

  • Budget discipline matters and you'd rather deploy $270,000 elsewhere


Choose Türkiye if:


  • You have a concrete plan to operate a US-based business

  • You're willing to establish real domicile in Türkiye for 3+ years

  • You want an appreciating real estate asset, not a sunk donation

  • You need broader global mobility (Japan, Schengen visa, Latin America)

  • The E-2 is a defined step in a larger strategy, not a vague aspiration


Consider both if:


  • You want speed now (Vanuatu) and US access later (Türkiye)

  • You're building a multi-passport stack and can afford to sequence

  • Your 5-year plan includes both Asia-Pacific operations and a US market entry


The Bitcitizen take


The E-2 is real. It's powerful. And for the right person, it justifies every dollar of the Türkiye premium.


But "the right person" isn't someone who saw a thread on X and got excited. It's someone with a business plan, a relocation timeline, a domicile strategy, and the patience to wait 3+ years before the US door opens.


Vanuatu won't get you into America. But it will get you a passport in 60 days, a zero-tax jurisdiction, and a credible exit option — for less than a third of the price.

The expensive option isn't always the better option. The better option is the one that matches what you're actually building.


Bitcoin taught you this: don't pay for features you won't use.


Ready to Figure Out Which Program Fits?


Bitcitizen helps Bitcoiners choose — and prepare for — the right CBI program based on what they're actually building. Explore our 21 CBI service for program details, or book a consultation to talk through your specific situation.

 
 
 

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