Belgium · Visas & Residency

No retirement visa.
Real routes anyway.

Belgium never built a visa for retirees. What it has is a discretionary "other purposes" route for people with passive income, solid work-based permits, and — once you're in — one of Europe's fastest paths to citizenship. Here's the honest map, with 2026 numbers.

Figures verified 9 July 2026

The 2026 comparison

RouteWho it's forMoney requirement (2026)Leads to
Rentier / "other purposes" D visa
Full guide →
Retirees and anyone living on passive income (pensions, annuities, investments). Discretionary — no legal entitlement Regular, stable income at least equal to the single-person living wage — €1,340.47/month (from 1 Mar 2026); in practice, expect to show comfortably more. €242 contribution fee per adult Renewable A card → permanent residence at 5 yrs
Single permit
Employee
Non-EU nationals with a Belgian job offer; employer applies via the Region Salary per regional rules — benchmark: the guaranteed minimum wage, ≈ €2,112 gross/month (higher thresholds for highly-qualified roles) Same 5-year track to permanent residence
Professional card
Self-employed
People starting a business or freelancing in Belgium; the Region judges viability and economic interest No fixed investment — a credible business plan plus means of subsistence. €242 contribution fee Card renewable 1–5 years; same residency track
Family reunification Spouses/partners of Belgians or of legal residents Sponsor income of 110% of the guaranteed minimum wage — €2,323/month net (Law of 18 July 2025), +10% per extra dependant Same residency track
The rentier route is real but discretionary. It sits under Article 9 of the Law of 15 December 1980 — the catch-all for stays that don't fit a named category. The Immigration Office (IBZ) weighs each file individually: your income, your ties to Belgium, your insurance, your reasons. Meeting the income benchmark does not guarantee approval, and refusals are not rare. We say this because most sites don't.

After the visa: the residency timeline

Step 1 · Months 0–6

D visa + commune

Apply at the Belgian embassy or visa centre covering your state/province. After arrival: register at your commune within 8 working days; a police residence check follows.

Step 2 · First years

A card renewals

Your electronic A card is limited-duration and renewable — typically yearly at first. Keep proving the means that got you in.

Step 3 · Year 5

Permanent residence

After 5 years' legal residence: unlimited-duration status (B/K card, or the EU long-term resident L card with income conditions).

★ Step 4 · Year 5+

Citizenship

Belgian nationality by declaration after 5 years — language (A2 Dutch, French or German), social integration, and economic participation required. €1,030 registration fee (2026, indexed). Dual citizenship allowed.

Pay the €242 or nothing happens. The Immigration Office contribution fee (indexed each 1 January; €242 for Article 9 consular applications in 2026) must be paid by bank transfer before you apply, with a precisely formatted payment reference. Unpaid or underpaid files are declared inadmissible — they are not queued, and the fee is not refunded on refusal.
In this section

Guides

★ New

Belgium's long-stay options: the 2026 guide

The rentier route in detail — income benchmark, documents, fees, timelines, and an honest read on your odds.

Read the guide →
Coming soon

The single permit for a Belgian job

How employer sponsorship works, regional differences, and highly-qualified salary thresholds.

Coming soon

The professional card, region by region

What Flanders, Wallonia, and Brussels each want to see in a self-employment file.

Coming soon

Citizenship in 5 years: the checklist

Language proof, social integration, economic participation — and the €1,030 fee.

Coming soon

Scouting trips & the 90/180 rule

How Schengen counting works, the EES biometric border system, and ETIAS (expected late 2026, €20).

Coming soon

Commune registration survival guide

The 8-working-day rule, the police visit, and why your commune choice changes your paperwork.

Sources

  1. Immigration Office (IBZ) — national entries (visa D): dofi.ibz.be
  2. Immigration Office — contribution fee amounts, 1 Jan 2026: dofi.ibz.be
  3. Immigration Office — means of subsistence (Law of 18 July 2025 amounts): dofi.ibz.be
  4. Belgian Embassy in the United States — national visa (D visa): unitedstates.diplomatie.belgium.be
  5. Belgian Embassy in Canada — long-stay visa: canada.diplomatie.belgium.be
  6. FPS Justice — Belgian nationality by declaration: justice.belgium.be
  7. Living-wage (leefloon) amounts from 1 Mar 2026: VVSG / SPP Intégration Sociale
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