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| Route | Who it's for | Money 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 |
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.
Your electronic A card is limited-duration and renewable — typically yearly at first. Keep proving the means that got you in.
After 5 years' legal residence: unlimited-duration status (B/K card, or the EU long-term resident L card with income conditions).
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.
The rentier route in detail — income benchmark, documents, fees, timelines, and an honest read on your odds.
Read the guide →How employer sponsorship works, regional differences, and highly-qualified salary thresholds.
What Flanders, Wallonia, and Brussels each want to see in a self-employment file.
Language proof, social integration, economic participation — and the €1,030 fee.
How Schengen counting works, the EES biometric border system, and ETIAS (expected late 2026, €20).
The 8-working-day rule, the police visit, and why your commune choice changes your paperwork.
Discretionary routes live or die on how the file is argued. We'll introduce you to an English-speaking immigration lawyer we've independently vetted — licensed, and experienced with American and Canadian cases in Belgium.