An official website of the Government of the Republic of Vanuatu Find an AgentContactEN

Transparency & accountability

Public trust is earned, not assumed. This is how Vanuatu citizenship is grounded in law, how every contribution serves the nation, and how the Commission holds the programme to account.

Rooted in law

A Constitutional foundation

Citizenship in Vanuatu is established by the national Constitution (Chapter 3) and the Citizenship Act [Cap 112], in force since 1980 and amended over the decades that followed. The Commission administers every pathway — by birth, descent, naturalisation, marriage and investment — strictly within this framework, and within it alone.

The full body of law, including downloadable copies of the Act, its amendments and the governing regulations, is published on our About page.

See the full legislative framework
What your contribution builds

Every contribution serves the nation

The Development Support Program was established in 2017 to raise revenue for national infrastructure and economic development. Contributions are paid to the Republic and support the national budget — funding the services and priorities of a small island state.

≈7%

of GDP — programme revenue in 2024, down from a peak of about 14% in 2020.

≈18%

of Government revenue in the first half of 2024 — a material share of the national budget.

2017

the Development Support Program was established, dedicated to funding national development.

Figures: International Monetary Fund, 2024 Article IV Consultation. Programme revenues vary year to year; the Government manages the programme for long-term fiscal sustainability, and the Commission is committed to publishing programme statistics on a regular basis.
Checks & balances

Decisions made by law, not by discretion

No single person grants citizenship. Each application passes through defined institutions, each with a role set by the Citizenship Act [Cap 112].

The Commission

The Constitutional authority that considers, approves, defers or rejects every application — and may revoke a citizenship granted contrary to the Act or Constitution. Chaired by Hon. Charlie Amalmiye'rr Maniel.

The Secretariat

Administers applications and serves the public, led by the Secretary General. It receives files only from licensed agents and prepares them for screening.

Internal Screening Committee

Reviews each completed file against every legal requirement before it is allowed to reach the Commission for a decision.

Financial Intelligence Unit

An independent unit within the State Law Office that conducts intelligence and background checks on every applicant, under Order No. 33 of 2019.

Open reporting

What we commit to publish

Legitimacy depends on openness. Beyond the figures already in the public record through the IMF, the Commission is working toward regular, published reporting on the programme — so that citizens, partners and applicants can see how it is run.

The indicators below are the reporting standard the Office is building toward. Current published figures will be linked here as each reporting cycle is completed.

Travel & mobility

An honest word on travel

A Vanuatu passport is a travel document of the Republic. Visa-free or visa-on-arrival entry to any country is granted at the discretion of that country, and arrangements change over time. The Commission does not guarantee access to any particular destination, and prospective applicants should verify the current entry requirements for the countries that matter to them.

For clarity: as of 2025, travel to the European Union / Schengen Area requires a visa for Vanuatu citizens. We would rather state this plainly than let anyone apply on a false expectation. Citizenship of Vanuatu is best understood for what it durably offers — a secure legal status in a peaceful Pacific nation, fiscal simplicity, and a home for your family — rather than any single travel privilege.

A programme built to be trusted

Read how every application is examined, or speak with a licensed authorised agent.