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Law 5275/2026 Explained, What Greece's New Immigration Law Means for Residence Permits, Digital Nomads and Golden Visas

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Greece’s immigration law framework underwent its most significant overhaul in over a decade when Law 5275/2026 came into force on 6 February 2026, replacing and consolidating large sections of the previous Immigration Code (Law 4251/2014). For anyone tracking immigration law Greece developments, whether as an expat planning a relocation, a digital nomad eyeing Crete or the Cyclades, a property investor exploring the Golden Visa, or an HR director hiring third-country nationals, the 2026 reforms change the rules on applications, eligibility and processing timelines in ways that demand immediate attention. This guide breaks down every major reform, provides practical checklists and highlights the pitfalls that catch applicants off guard.

TL;DR, What changed? Law 5275/2026 (effective 6 February 2026) restructures residence and work permit categories, shifts most D‑visa applications to pre-entry consular processing, relaunches the Golden Visa with updated investment thresholds, introduces digital filing and automatic renewal provisions, and strengthens employer sponsorship documentation requirements.

Key takeaways at a glance:

  • Residents & permit holders: New minimum validity periods (many permits now carry a two-year floor) and clearer automatic renewal rules reduce bureaucratic limbo.
  • Digital nomads: The D‑visa process now heavily favours pre-entry consular applications; proof-of-income requirements are tighter and better defined.
  • Property investors: The Golden Visa programme has been relaunched with revised qualifying investment thresholds and minimum holding periods, some previously eligible purchases may no longer qualify.
  • Employers: Streamlined digital procedures for sponsoring non-EU workers, but labour market testing and documentation obligations are reinforced.

Who should read this guide: Expats and third-country nationals planning to live or work in Greece; digital nomads considering the D‑visa; real estate investors evaluating the Golden Visa; HR teams and employers hiring non-EU staff; and immigration lawyers in Greece advising clients on the transition.

Timeline and Quick Summary of Law 5275/2026

Understanding how the reform moved from proposal to enforcement helps applicants gauge which rules apply to pending cases and which govern new filings. The table below traces the legislative timeline.

Date Event Why it matters
Late 2025 Draft immigration bill tabled in the Hellenic Parliament Signalled the government’s intent to modernise migration management, attract skilled workers and consolidate the patchwork of amendments to Law 4251/2014.
January 2026 Parliamentary debate and passage of Law 5275/2026 Civil society groups and international organisations weighed in on the bill’s detention and appeals provisions; the final text was published in the Government Gazette.
6 February 2026 Law 5275/2026 enters into force All new residence permit, D‑visa and investor-residency applications filed from this date are governed by the new rules. Transitional provisions apply to applications already in the pipeline.
Q2 2026 onwards Implementing ministerial decisions and digital portal updates expected Industry observers expect several secondary regulations to detail fees, form templates and digital filing workflows over the coming months.

The Ministry of Migration and Asylum publishes official guidance and updated forms through its dedicated residence permits portal. Applicants should check that portal regularly, as ministerial decisions issued after the law’s entry into force may refine specific procedural requirements.

What Law 5275/2026 Changes, Headline Reforms Under Immigration Law Greece

Law 5275/2026 is not a single-issue amendment. It is a comprehensive rewrite that touches nearly every aspect of the immigration framework. The headline reforms fall into six categories.

  • Restructured permit categories. The law consolidates and reclassifies residence permits into clearer tiers, temporary, employment-based, family reunification, investor and long-term, with defined minimum validity periods and renewal pathways for each.
  • D‑visa overhaul for digital nomads and remote workers. The national (D‑type) visa process is clarified: most categories now require pre-entry applications at a Greek consulate or through the digital portal, rather than post-arrival processing. Income thresholds and proof-of-employment standards are explicitly codified.
  • Golden Visa relaunch. Investor-residency pathways are relaunched with updated qualifying investment types, revised minimum property values and new holding-period requirements.
  • Automatic renewal provisions. Certain secure permit categories may now benefit from automatic renewal where the holder meets ongoing eligibility criteria, reducing gaps in legal status during processing.
  • Digitalisation targets. The law mandates expanded use of the digital migration platform for filing, tracking and receiving decisions, with stated goals for reducing processing times.
  • Detention and appeals framework. The legislation updates rules on detention of irregular migrants and introduces revised administrative appeal timelines, provisions that attracted significant commentary from international organisations.

Why the government says this was needed

According to official statements accompanying the bill, Greece needed to modernise a legal framework that had been amended piecemeal more than a dozen times since 2014. The stated objectives were to attract skilled workers and investors, speed up permit processing, align Greek procedures more closely with EU directives, and strengthen border management, all within a single, codified statute.

Residence Permits Under the New Rules, Categories and Process

For most third-country nationals, the practical heart of immigration law Greece is the residence permit system. Law 5275/2026 reorganises this system significantly. Below is a comparison of the three permit types that affect the largest applicant groups.

Permit type Key change under Law 5275/2026 Practical impact for applicant
Digital Nomad (D‑visa) Clarifies D‑visa processing; shifts most D‑visa categories to pre-entry applications; defines proof of remote income Most nomads must apply at a consulate or via the digital portal before arrival; stronger proof of sustained income is required
Golden Visa (investor) Relaunch with updated qualifying investments and holding periods Some lower-value purchases may no longer qualify; due diligence and tax planning are needed before purchase
Work permit (sponsored) Streamlined digital procedures and clearer renewals; ties to labour market tests Employers must follow new digital filing steps; faster processing is expected when documentation is complete

Application steps

The general application flow under the new law follows a more standardised path than the previous regime. While specific requirements vary by permit category, the core steps are consistent.

  1. Pre-entry D‑visa (where required). Apply at the nearest Greek consulate or via the digital migration portal. Provide biometrics and supporting documents. Wait for the visa to be affixed to your passport before travelling.
  2. Entry and registration. Arrive in Greece on the D‑visa and register with the local Aliens Bureau or Decentralised Administration office within the time frame specified on the visa.
  3. Residence permit application. Submit the full residence permit application, either online through the migration platform or in person, within the prescribed deadline after entry. Pay the applicable fee and provide certified copies of all supporting documents.
  4. Biometrics and interview (if applicable). Attend an appointment for fingerprinting and, for certain categories, a short interview.
  5. Decision and card issuance. Receive a decision (the law targets reduced processing windows) and collect the biometric residence permit card.

Documents checklist

While exact requirements depend on the permit category, the following documents are commonly required across most residence permits Greece applications under the new law:

  • Valid passport (minimum six months remaining validity at application date)
  • Completed application form (available on the migration.gov.gr portal)
  • Recent passport-size photographs meeting EU biometric standards
  • Proof of adequate health insurance covering the applicant in Greece
  • Evidence of sufficient financial resources (bank statements, employment contract or investment documentation)
  • Clean criminal record certificate from the country of origin (apostilled or legalised)
  • Proof of accommodation in Greece (rental agreement, property deed or hotel reservation for the initial period)
  • Tax identification number (AFM) from the Greek tax authority, or evidence that an AFM application is in progress
  • Category-specific documents (e.g., employment contract for work permits, investment proof for Golden Visa, remote-work contract for digital nomads)

Appeal and fast-track options

If an application is rejected, the applicant may file an administrative appeal (enstasi) within the deadline specified in the rejection notice. The likely practical effect of the new law’s appeals provisions is that administrative review timelines will be more clearly defined, reducing the ambiguity that previously left applicants in procedural limbo for months. If the administrative appeal is unsuccessful, applicants retain the right to challenge the decision before the Administrative Courts. Industry observers expect that the digitalisation of the filing system will also enable faster identification of incomplete applications, allowing applicants to correct deficiencies before a formal rejection is issued.

Digital Nomads and the D‑Visa, What Changed and How to Apply

Greece’s digital nomad visa, introduced in 2021, rapidly became one of the most popular remote-work permits in Europe. Law 5275/2026 does not eliminate the programme, but it refines it substantially. The most significant shift is procedural: the new framework clearly requires most digital nomad D‑visa applicants to complete the application at a Greek consulate or through the digital portal before entering the country, rather than initiating the process on arrival.

This change was widely anticipated. Under the previous regime, some applicants entered Greece on a short-stay Schengen visa and attempted to convert to a digital nomad permit after arrival, creating administrative bottlenecks. The 2026 rules aim to eliminate this grey area.

Eligibility checklist

To qualify for the digital nomad visa Greece pathway under Law 5275/2026, applicants generally need to demonstrate the following:

  • Third-country national status (EU/EEA citizens do not need a permit to live and work in Greece)
  • Employment by or contract with a company established outside Greece, or operation of a registered freelance business outside Greece
  • Minimum monthly income from remote work that meets the threshold defined by the law (applicants should verify the current figure on the migration.gov.gr portal, as it may be adjusted by ministerial decision)
  • Adequate health insurance valid in Greece for the duration of the stay
  • No criminal record that would constitute grounds for exclusion
  • Proof of accommodation in Greece

Typical documents

Beyond the general documents checklist outlined in the residence permits section above, digital nomad applicants should prepare:

  • A letter from the employer confirming the remote nature of the work and the applicant’s permission to perform duties from Greece
  • Employment contract or freelance service agreement specifying compensation
  • Three to six months of bank statements evidencing regular income at or above the threshold
  • Tax residency certificate from the current country of tax residence (recommended, not always mandatory)

Employer vs independent nomad distinctions

The law draws a clearer line between employed digital nomads (those working for a foreign employer) and independent freelancers. For employed nomads, the employer’s letter and contract are central evidence. Independent freelancers must provide stronger proof of ongoing client relationships and income stability, typically through invoices, contracts with multiple clients and bank statements. Early indications suggest that consulates are scrutinising freelance applications more closely under the new regime, making thorough documentation essential.

Common rejection reasons and fixes: The top grounds for D‑visa refusal remain missing proof of stable income, weak or ambiguous remote-work contracts, insufficient health insurance coverage and incomplete application forms. Applicants can mitigate these risks by assembling a comprehensive document package well in advance and, where possible, seeking a pre-filing review from an immigration lawyer.

Golden Visa 2026, Relaunch, Investment Thresholds and Process

The Golden Visa Greece programme has been one of Europe’s most attractive investor-residency schemes since its introduction. Law 5275/2026 effectively relaunches the programme with updated parameters, reflecting the government’s twin objectives of continuing to attract foreign investment while addressing concerns about housing affordability in high-demand areas.

Under the new framework, qualifying investments include real estate acquisitions (subject to updated minimum value thresholds that vary by region and property type), capital contributions to Greek businesses, and investments in government bonds or regulated financial instruments. The law also introduces clearer minimum holding periods, investors must maintain the qualifying investment for a defined duration to retain their residence rights.

Property investor checklist

  • Identify a property (or properties) that meets the minimum investment threshold applicable to the relevant region under Law 5275/2026
  • Engage a Greek notary and real estate lawyer to conduct title searches and due diligence
  • Ensure the purchase price is transferred via the banking system and documented by notarial deed (cash transactions are not accepted)
  • Obtain a Greek tax identification number (AFM) before completing the purchase
  • File the Golden Visa application through the migration platform or at the competent Decentralised Administration office, attaching the notarial deed, proof of payment and all supporting documents
  • Attend a biometrics appointment and await the permit decision

Tax and due diligence considerations

Holding a Golden Visa residence permit does not, by itself, make the investor a Greek tax resident. However, spending more than 183 days per year in Greece, or establishing a centre of vital interests there, can trigger Greek tax residency obligations, including worldwide income reporting. Investors should map their intended use of the property (personal residence vs rental) against both Greek tax law and any applicable double taxation agreement with their home country. Those who plan to rent the property should also be aware of Greece’s new legal framework for short-term rentals, which imposes registration and tax obligations on property owners.

Common investor pitfalls

  • Below-threshold purchases. Some investors who contracted before 6 February 2026 at previously qualifying values may find their investment falls below the new thresholds. Transitional provisions may apply, legal advice is essential.
  • Failure to maintain the investment. Selling or otherwise disposing of the qualifying asset before the minimum holding period expires can result in revocation of the permit.
  • Incomplete banking trail. Every euro of the investment must be traceable through formal banking channels. Informal transfers or payments outside the notarial deed are a red flag for authorities.
  • Ignoring family permits. Golden Visa holders may include certain family members (spouse, dependent children) in the application, but each family member must be listed and documented at the time of filing or through a subsequent application.

Work Permits and Employer Obligations, Hiring Third-Country Nationals

For employers, the 2026 reforms bring both relief and new responsibilities. The work permit Greece process is now more heavily digitised, with applications filed and tracked through the migration platform. At the same time, the law reinforces the labour market testing requirement: employers must demonstrate that no suitable EU/EEA candidate is available for the role before sponsoring a third-country national.

Step-by-step for employers

  1. Labour market test. Advertise the position through the Greek public employment service (DYPA) for the required period and document the results.
  2. Sponsorship application. File the work permit sponsorship request via the digital platform, attaching the labour market test results, the proposed employment contract and proof that the company meets its social security obligations.
  3. Employee’s D‑visa. Once sponsorship is provisionally approved, the employee applies for a D‑visa at the Greek consulate in their home country.
  4. Entry and permit issuance. The employee enters Greece, registers and completes the residence-for-work permit application.
  5. Ongoing compliance. The employer must notify the authorities of any material changes (termination, role change, salary adjustment) and ensure continuous social security registration.

Document checklist for sponsored employees

  • Signed employment contract specifying role, salary and duration
  • Employer’s registration documents (GEMI extract, tax clearance certificate)
  • Proof of social security registration for the position
  • Labour market test documentation from DYPA
  • Employee’s valid passport, criminal record certificate and health insurance evidence
  • Proof of accommodation arrangements for the employee in Greece

Penalties for non-compliance can include fines, suspension of the employer’s right to sponsor future permits, and, in serious cases, criminal liability. Industry observers expect enforcement to intensify as the digital platform makes it easier for authorities to cross-reference employer filings with social security and tax records.

Long-Term and Permanent Residency, Family Reunification and Appeals

Law 5275/2026 preserves the established route to permanent residency Greece: holders of temporary residence permits who have legally and continuously resided in the country for five years may apply for a long-term resident permit, provided they meet income, health insurance and integration criteria. The new law clarifies the definition of “continuous residence” and specifies the maximum permissible absences during the qualifying period.

For short stays, the standard Schengen rules apply: third-country nationals may remain in Greece (and the wider Schengen Area) for up to 90 days within any 180-day period without a residence permit. Exceeding this limit without a valid permit constitutes an immigration violation and can affect future applications.

Family reunification checklist

  • Valid residence permit for the sponsor (primary permit holder) with sufficient remaining validity
  • Proof of adequate and stable income to support the family unit
  • Proof of suitable accommodation (sufficient living space per family member)
  • Health insurance covering each family member
  • Marriage certificate, birth certificates and other civil status documents (apostilled and officially translated into Greek)
  • Criminal record certificates for adult family members

Appeals process summary

The 2026 law codifies a two-stage process for challenging unfavourable decisions. The first stage is an administrative appeal filed with the competent authority (usually the Decentralised Administration or the Ministry of Migration and Asylum) within the deadline stated in the decision notice. If the administrative appeal is dismissed, the applicant may bring the matter before the Administrative Court of First Instance. Legal representation is advisable at both stages, particularly given that court proceedings are conducted in Greek. The likely practical effect of the revised appeals framework is greater procedural clarity, though the actual speed of judicial review will depend on court caseloads.

Practical Applicant Checklists and Procedural Templates

The following condensed checklists are designed for quick reference. They summarise the core requirements for the three most common application types under the 2026 immigration law Greece framework.

Checklist 1, Digital Nomad D‑Visa

  • Valid passport (six months+ remaining)
  • Completed D‑visa application form
  • Remote-work contract or freelance agreement
  • Employer letter confirming permission to work from Greece (if employed)
  • Bank statements showing income above the minimum threshold
  • Health insurance valid in Greece
  • Criminal record certificate (apostilled)
  • Proof of accommodation

Checklist 2, Standard Work Permit (employer-sponsored)

  • Signed employment contract
  • Employer’s GEMI registration extract and tax clearance
  • DYPA labour market test results
  • Employee’s valid passport and criminal record certificate
  • Health insurance evidence
  • Proof of accommodation
  • Social security registration confirmation

Checklist 3, Golden Visa (property investor)

  • Notarial deed of property purchase at or above the qualifying threshold
  • Bank transfer receipts evidencing payment through formal channels
  • Greek AFM (tax identification number)
  • Valid passport and criminal record certificate
  • Health insurance
  • Family members’ documents (if applying for family permits simultaneously)

Where to submit

All applications should be initiated through the Ministry of Migration and Asylum’s digital platform or submitted in person at the competent Decentralised Administration office. D‑visa applications are filed at the nearest Greek consulate abroad. Official forms and portal access are available through the ministry’s residence permits page.

Fees and expected timelines

Application fees vary by permit category and are set by ministerial decision; they are payable at the time of filing. As of the law’s entry into force, precise fee schedules for each category are being published progressively. Processing timelines under the previous regime ranged from weeks to several months depending on the permit type and the caseload of the issuing authority. The stated digitalisation goals of Law 5275/2026 aim to reduce these windows, though early indications suggest that the full benefits of the digital platform will materialise as implementing regulations are finalised and consulates adapt their workflows.

Conclusion

Law 5275/2026 marks a defining shift in immigration law Greece. For digital nomads, the message is clear: prepare your D‑visa application before you book your flight. For investors, the Golden Visa remains viable but demands careful due diligence on thresholds and holding periods. For employers, digital filing streamlines the process but documentation standards are higher. And for anyone holding or applying for a residence permit, the new minimum validity and automatic renewal provisions should reduce the bureaucratic uncertainty that has long characterised the Greek system. The practical reality, however, is that many implementing details are still emerging.

Acting early, assembling complete documentation and seeking professional guidance from a qualified immigration lawyer in Greece are the surest ways to navigate the transition successfully.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Alkinoos Thomas Konis at Nexus Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Υπουργείο Μετανάστευσης και Ασύλου, Residence Permits
  2. EY Greece, Law 5275/2026 Alert
  3. PwC Greece, New Immigration Law
  4. Bernitsas Law, Overview of Law 5275/2026
  5. IOM, Migration Legal Guide (Greece)
  6. Human Rights Watch, Greek Immigration Bill Coverage
  7. Newland Chase, Greece Immigration Reform

FAQs

Q: What is Law 5275/2026 and when did it take effect?
A: Law 5275/2026 is Greece’s comprehensive immigration reform. It came into force on 6 February 2026 and restructures residence and work permit procedures, D‑visa rules and the Golden Visa programme.
A: It requires most digital nomad D‑visa applications to be filed before arrival at a Greek consulate or via the digital portal, and it tightens proof-of-income requirements.
A: Yes. The Golden Visa has been relaunched under Law 5275/2026 with updated qualifying investment thresholds, revised property values by region, and new minimum holding periods.
A: Yes. Law 5275/2026 streamlines digital filing for employer sponsorship but retains labour market testing and strengthens documentation requirements.
A: The law establishes minimum validity periods, many secure categories now carry a two-year floor, and introduces clearer automatic renewal pathways for eligible holders.
A: Common grounds include missing proof of stable income, weak remote-work contracts, insufficient health insurance coverage and incomplete application forms.
A: The Ministry of Migration and Asylum (migration.gov.gr) publishes official guidance. Rejections may be challenged through an administrative appeal, followed by judicial review before the Administrative Courts if necessary.
By Awatif Al Khouri

posted 2 hours ago

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Law 5275/2026 Explained, What Greece's New Immigration Law Means for Residence Permits, Digital Nomads and Golden Visas

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