Kenya → Italy: the Elective Residence Visa roadmap
Italy's Elective Residence Visa (visto per residenza elettiva), a national type-D visa, is the primary retirement pathway for non-EU nationals who can support themselves on stable passive income (pensions, annuities, rental income, dividends) without working in Italy. The core hurdle is proving roughly €31,000–€32,000 per year in passive income for a single applicant (€38,000 for a couple), plus secured Italian accommodation and private health insurance; the exact income bar varies by consulate and can be set higher at consular discretion. Most income and fee figures are well-corroborated across the official consular network and reputable sources; confidence is medium because the single-applicant income threshold is set by consular practice rather than one fixed published national number, so the precise minimum differs by consulate.
Moving from Kenya
- You apply for the Elective Residence Visa at the Italy consulate, embassy, or visa application centre that serves Kenya, confirm the office and the current appointment wait for your region.
- Qualifications and work experience earned in Kenya usually need a credential assessment or recognition before they count toward Italy's requirements.
- Budget for certified translation and apostille or legalisation of your Kenya documents (degree, police certificate, civil records).
- Check whether a Kenya passport needs a short-stay visa for any in-person biometrics or interview steps.
General guidance for any Kenya to Italy applicant; the eligibility and fees below are set by Italy.
At a glance
Who qualifies
- Non-EU national who can self-fund without working in Italy (working, including remote work for a foreign employer, is not allowed under this visa)
- Documented stable passive income of roughly €31,000–€32,000/yr for a single applicant, €38,000 for a couple, plus about €6,200 (or +20%) per dependent
- Income must be passive and from outside Italy: pension, annuity, rental income, dividends, bond interest, or trust/inheritance distributions; employment and self-employment income do not qualify
- Secured accommodation in Italy via a registered lease or property deed
- Private health insurance covering at least €30,000/yr valid across the EU/Schengen area
- Valid passport (typically 3+ months beyond intended stay) and a clean documentary financial history (e.g. 2 years of tax returns and bank statements)
Your step-by-step roadmap
Prepare and secure prerequisites
- Arrange Italian accommodation (registered lease or property purchase) in your name
- Buy private health insurance covering at least €30,000/yr across the EU
- Compile financial proof: pension/annuity statements, bank letters, 2 years of tax returns
Apply at the consulate
- Book an appointment at the Italian consulate for your jurisdiction (wait can be 4–12 weeks)
- Submit the type-D visa application, supporting documents, and a relocation cover letter
- Pay the €116 visa fee and attend the interview
Enter Italy and obtain the residence permit
- Enter Italy on the approved 1-year type-D visa
- Within 8 days, apply for the permesso di soggiorno (elective residence permit) at the post office/Questura
- Pay permit fees and complete biometrics to receive the electronic permit card
Renew and reach permanent residence
- Renew the residence permit annually, re-proving income, housing, and insurance
- After 5 years of continuous legal residence, apply for the EU long-term residence permit
Naturalisation
- Maintain legal residence and meet the B1 Italian language requirement
- After 10 years of legal residence, apply for Italian citizenship by naturalisation
Government fees
Timeline & path to citizenship
Timeline: End to end typically runs 120–180 days: a 4–12 week consular appointment wait, then ~30–90 days of visa processing, followed by 2–8 weeks after arrival to convert the visa into a residence permit.
Citizenship: A holder can apply for the EU long-term (permanent) residence permit after 5 years of continuous legal residence, and for Italian citizenship by naturalisation after 10 years of legal residence (counted from initial legal residence, not from obtaining PR); Italy permits dual citizenship.
This is general information to help you plan, not legal advice. For case-specific guidance, consult a licensed immigration professional.