Nigeria → Qatar: the Qatar Entrepreneur Residency (10-Year Entrepreneur Visa, incubator-endorsed "Start from Qatar" / Mustaqel route) roadmap
For founders, the most relevant official route is Qatar's incubator-endorsed entrepreneur residency, expanded into a new 10-year Entrepreneur Visa announced at Web Summit Qatar 2026 and rolled out alongside an Executives track. The core trigger is an endorsement from a recognised Qatari incubator/accelerator (Qatar Science & Technology Park, Qatar Development Bank, Qatar Business Incubation Center or Qatar FinTech Hub) plus a registered Qatari company. Important limitation: figures below come from government summaries and reputable 2026 reporting (the new 10-year scheme is still in rollout with no published rulebook), so several numbers are provisional, and there is effectively no realistic path to permanent residency or citizenship for ordinary expat founders, hence low confidence.
Moving from Nigeria
- You apply for the Qatar Entrepreneur Residency (10-Year Entrepreneur Visa, incubator-endorsed "Start from Qatar" / Mustaqel route) at the Qatar consulate, embassy, or visa application centre that serves Nigeria, confirm the office and the current appointment wait for your region.
- Qualifications and work experience earned in Nigeria usually need a credential assessment or recognition before they count toward Qatar's requirements.
- Budget for certified translation and apostille or legalisation of your Nigeria documents (degree, police certificate, civil records).
- Check whether a Nigeria passport needs a short-stay visa for any in-person biometrics or interview steps.
General guidance for any Nigeria to Qatar applicant; the eligibility and fees below are set by Qatar.
At a glance
Who qualifies
- Building an innovation-driven or high-impact startup aligned with Qatar's private-sector and economic-diversification priorities
- Secure an official endorsement from a recognised incubator/accelerator such as Qatar Science & Technology Park (QSTP), Qatar Development Bank, Qatar Business Incubation Center or Qatar FinTech Hub
- Register a company in Qatar and hold a meaningful ownership stake (reported minimum ~20%) with active involvement in the venture
- Meet the investment threshold of roughly QAR 200,000-250,000 (~USD 55,000-69,000) and submit a detailed business plan (market, revenue model, growth strategy)
- Show personal financial stability: bank balance of at least QAR 36,500 (~USD 10,000) maintained over the prior 3 months
- Age 21 or over, clean criminal record, pass an in-country medical exam and hold valid Qatari health insurance
Your step-by-step roadmap
Incubator endorsement and company setup
- Apply to a recognised incubator/accelerator (e.g. QSTP) with a business plan and secure the endorsement certificate
- Register the company with the Ministry of Commerce and Industry and obtain a commercial registration / establishment card
- Open a corporate bank account and deposit the required capital
Residence permit application
- Submit the entrepreneur/investor residence application online via Hukoomi, Jusoor or 'Start from Qatar' with endorsement, business and bank documents
- Pay the government visa and processing fees
Medical, biometrics and issuance
- Complete the in-country medical examination and security clearance
- Provide biometrics and receive the Qatari ID (QID) and residence permit, then sponsor family members
Maintenance and renewal
- Keep the business active and the endorsement/investment valid, and maintain physical presence (about 90 days/year for investor-type permits)
- Renew the permit on its cycle (new scheme up to 10 years, renewable; older partner permits every 2-5 years)
Government fees
Timeline & path to citizenship
Timeline: Once the incubator endorsement and company registration are in place, the residence permit itself typically takes about 4 to 8 weeks (including medical and security checks), though the incubator endorsement and company setup beforehand can add several weeks to months.
Citizenship: There is no genuine path to permanent residency or citizenship through this route: the residency is renewable but tied to the business, a separate permanent-residency scheme (Law No. 10 of 2018) is capped at about 100 approvals a year and effectively needs ~QAR 3.65M (~USD 1M) investment, and naturalisation requires 25 years' residence, is granted only by the Emir's decree (about 50 a year), bars dual nationality, and is virtually never given to ordinary expat founders.
This is general information to help you plan, not legal advice. For case-specific guidance, consult a licensed immigration professional.