Colombian Citizenship in 2026: The Roadmap From Visa to Residency to Naturalization

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Want Colombian citizenship? Follow the visa-to-residency roadmap, understand timelines, avoid delays, and plan your naturalization with Nexo Legal.

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Getting Colombian citizenship in 2026 is possible, but it does not happen overnight.

For most foreigners, the real path starts long before the citizenship application. It usually begins with a Migrant Visa (M), continues with a Resident Visa (R), and only after meeting the required residency period, moves toward naturalization.

That is why the most important question is not only: “How do I become a Colombian citizen?”

The better question is: What immigration path should I follow today so I can qualify for Colombian citizenship later?

In this guide, we explain the roadmap step by step: which M visas can lead to residency, how long each category usually takes, when you can apply for the R visa, and what happens after that if your final goal is Colombian citizenship.

Why Colombian citizenship requires a long-term strategy

Many foreigners think Colombian citizenship depends only on how many years they have lived in the country.

But that is not exactly how it works.

In Colombia, your immigration category matters. Your visa history matters. Your continuity matters. And, in most cases, your time for citizenship is counted only after you obtain a Resident Visa, not simply from the day you arrived in Colombia.

The Colombian Ministry of Foreign Affairs explains that naturalization requires the foreigner to be domiciled in Colombia, hold a valid Resident Visa as principal holder or beneficiary, and complete the required continuous domicile period counted from the date the Resident Visa was issued.

This is why planning from your first visa is so important.

Choosing the wrong visa, letting your visa expire, spending too much time outside Colombia, or assuming that “years in the country” automatically count can delay your path by several years.

The basic roadmap: from M visa to R visa to citizenship

For many foreigners, the roadmap looks like this:

  1. Apply for a qualifying Migrant Visa (M)
  2. Maintain that visa for the required period
  3. Apply for the Resident Visa (R) by accumulated time
  4. Hold the Resident Visa for the required naturalization period
  5. Apply for Colombian citizenship by naturalization
  6. Complete the exam and government review
  7. Attend the oath ceremony if approved
  8. Request the Colombian citizenship ID

This roadmap is also reflected in the base citizenship article you shared: most applicants do not go directly from arrival to citizenship; they first move through a Migrant Visa, then Resident Visa, then citizenship application.

The key is understanding how long each stage takes.

Step 1: Start with the right Migrant Visa

The Migrant Visa, also known as the M visa, is usually the first serious immigration step for foreigners who want to live in Colombia long term.

Not every M visa works the same way.

Some categories allow you to apply for a Resident Visa after 2 years, others after 3 years, and many after 5 years.

That means your first visa decision can change your entire citizenship timeline.

If your goal is only to stay in Colombia for a short period, the easiest visa may be enough. But if your goal is Colombian residency and eventual citizenship, your visa should be chosen strategically.

M visa categories that can lead to the Resident Visa

Under the Colombian visa rules for the R visa by accumulated time, foreigners may apply for permanent residency after holding certain Migrant Visa categories for the minimum required period.

Here is the practical breakdown.

M visa categories that may lead to residency after 2 years

Some categories have a shorter path to the Resident Visa.

These include:

In these cases, the minimum accumulated time as the holder of the qualifying M visa is generally 2 years.

This can be one of the fastest routes toward the Resident Visa, but only if the applicant truly qualifies and maintains valid immigration status throughout the period.

M visa categories that may lead to residency after 3 years

The main category in this group is:

This means that a foreigner married to a Colombian citizen may generally apply for the Resident Visa after 3 years as the holder of the corresponding M visa.

This is important because marriage does not automatically grant Colombian citizenship.

Marriage may help reduce timelines later, but the person still needs the right visa, valid immigration continuity, the Resident Visa, and a complete naturalization process.

The Colombian marriage visa is a Migrant-type visa and may allow the foreign spouse to live and work in Colombia while building time toward residency, as long as the marriage remains valid.

M visa categories that may lead to residency after 5 years

Many foreigners fall into the 5-year category.

This may include:

For these categories, the usual minimum accumulated time before applying for the Resident Visa is 5 years.

For example, the M Visa for Real Estate Investment can be valid for up to 3 years and may create a path to permanent residency after 5 continuous years, if the investment and immigration requirements are maintained.

The same logic applies to many long-term visa holders: the M visa is not the final destination. It is the bridge toward residency.

Step 2: Apply for the Resident Visa by accumulated time

Once you complete the required time under your qualifying M visa category, the next major step is applying for the Resident Visa (R) by accumulated time.

This is a critical turning point.

The Resident Visa is what places you closer to Colombian citizenship. It is also the visa that normally starts the clock for the naturalization residency period.

In other words: your M visa time may help you reach the R visa, but your R visa time is usually what matters most for citizenship eligibility.

How long is the Colombian Resident Visa valid?

The Colombian Resident Visa is generally valid for 5 years.

Before it expires, the holder must request the visa transfer or renewal through the official digital platform of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

This visa allows the foreigner to live in Colombia with a more stable status, but it still requires compliance.

You should keep your immigration documents valid, avoid long absences that may affect your status, and maintain a clean immigration history.

Step 3: Understand when the citizenship clock starts

This is one of the most important parts of the entire roadmap.

For most foreigners, the citizenship clock does not start when they first arrive in Colombia.

It does not automatically start when they get their first M visa.

It generally starts from the date the Resident Visa is issued.

The Colombian Ministry of Foreign Affairs states that foreigners must remain in Colombia for five continuous years counted from the date of issuance of the Resident Visa, either as principal holder or beneficiary.

This means that someone who lived in Colombia for five years with an M visa may still need additional time with the R visa before applying for citizenship.

That is the mistake many applicants make.

They believe they are ready for citizenship because they have lived in Colombia for many years, but legally, they may only be ready to apply for residency.

Step 4: Meet the naturalization residency period

Once you have the Resident Visa, the next question is: how long do you need to wait before applying for citizenship?

General rule: 5 years with a Resident Visa

For most foreigners, the standard requirement is 5 continuous years counted from the date the Resident Visa was issued.

This applies to many applicants who obtained residency through work, investment, retirement, business ownership, professional activity, or other long-term migration paths.

Reduced rule: 2 years in specific cases

The required period may be reduced to 2 years if the applicant:

  • Is married to a Colombian citizen
  • Has a Colombian child
  • Is a Spanish national

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirms that the five-year period may be reduced to two years in these specific cases.

However, this does not mean citizenship is automatic.

You still need to hold the Resident Visa, complete the required time, prepare the application, submit documents, pass the exam if required, and wait for the final decision.

Example timelines for Colombian citizenship in 2026

To make this easier, let’s look at practical examples.

Example 1: Foreigner married to a Colombian citizen

A foreigner marries a Colombian citizen and applies for an M visa as spouse.

The usual roadmap may look like this:

  • 3 years with the M spouse visa
  • Apply for the Resident Visa
  • 2 years with the Resident Visa
  • Apply for Colombian citizenship

Estimated minimum roadmap: around 5 years, assuming no gaps, no denials, and correct documentation.

Example 2: Foreigner with a Colombian child

A foreigner qualifies for an M visa as parent of a Colombian child.

The path may look like this:

  • 2 years with the qualifying M visa
  • Apply for the Resident Visa
  • 2 years with the Resident Visa
  • Apply for Colombian citizenship

Estimated minimum roadmap: around 4 years, depending on the case and compliance.

Example 3: Retiree in Colombia

A foreign retiree applies for an M retirement visa.

The path may look like this:

  • 5 years with the M retirement visa
  • Apply for the Resident Visa
  • 5 years with the Resident Visa
  • Apply for Colombian citizenship

Estimated minimum roadmap: around 10 years.

Retirees may use the M retirement visa as a path toward the Resident Visa after accumulating 5 years, and then citizenship may become possible after meeting the next residency stage.

Example 4: Real estate investor

A foreigner buys qualifying property and applies for an M investor visa.

The path may look like this:

  • 5 years with the M investor visa
  • Apply for the Resident Visa
  • 5 years with the Resident Visa
  • Apply for Colombian citizenship

Estimated minimum roadmap: around 10 years.

This is why investors should not view the visa only as a real estate procedure. It should be part of a long-term immigration strategy.

Step 5: Prepare the citizenship application

Once you complete the required time with the Resident Visa, you may be ready to apply for Colombian citizenship by naturalization.

Naturalization is the process through which a foreigner becomes a Colombian citizen by adoption.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs describes naturalization as a sovereign and discretionary decision by the Colombian Government to grant Colombian nationality by adoption through a Carta de Naturaleza.

That word matters: discretionary.

Even if you meet the basic requirements, the government still reviews your case. Payment of the process or submission of documents does not automatically mean approval.

Documents you may need for Colombian citizenship

The exact documents depend on your case, but most applicants should be ready to provide:

  • Copy of the Resident Visa
  • Valid cédula de extranjería
  • Passport biographical page
  • Birth certificate
  • Recent photograph
  • Proof of occupation, profession, or economic activity
  • RUT, labor certificate, or Chamber of Commerce certificate, depending on the case
  • Marriage certificate, permanent partnership document, or Colombian child’s birth certificate, if applicable
  • Apostilled or legalized foreign documents
  • Official Spanish translations when documents are not in Spanish

The Ministry also states that foreign documents must be apostilled or legalized, and documents in a language other than Spanish must include official translation.

This is one of the stages where legal review is especially useful.

A small inconsistency in names, dates, translations, or document validity can delay the case.

Step 6: Take the Colombian citizenship exam

Most applicants must prove knowledge of:

  • Colombian Constitution
  • Colombian history
  • Colombian geography
  • Colombian culture
  • Spanish language, if Spanish is not their native language

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs states that applicants must prove this knowledge through an exam, unless they qualify for an exemption.

Applicants may be exempt if they completed certain studies in Colombia or meet the age exemption established by the authority.

This exam should not be treated as a last-minute formality. If citizenship is your goal, preparation should begin before the application stage.

Step 7: Wait for government review and final decision

After the application is submitted, Colombian authorities review the file.

This review may include:

  • Immigration history
  • Background checks
  • Document validation
  • Tax or economic information
  • Compliance with visa requirements
  • Confirmation of domicile in Colombia

The Ministry also notes that Migración Colombia may conduct a visit to the foreigner’s place of domicile, so it is important to keep contact information updated during the process.

There is no universal timeline that applies to every case.

Some applications move faster than others. Others may take longer because of missing documents, additional requests, background checks, or administrative review.

Step 8: Naturalization approval and Colombian ID

If your application is approved, the process moves toward the naturalization oath ceremony.

After that, you can request your Colombian citizenship ID, known as the cédula de ciudadanía.

At that point, you are no longer just a visa holder or resident. You become a Colombian citizen by adoption.

Common mistakes that can delay your path

Choosing the wrong first visa

The easiest visa today is not always the best visa for your long-term goal.

If you want Colombian citizenship, your first visa should be selected based on whether it can lead to residency and how long that path takes.

Thinking M visa time equals citizenship time

M visa time may help you reach the Resident Visa.

But for citizenship, the key period usually starts with the Resident Visa.

Confusing these two stages can lead to applying too early.

Letting your visa expire

Any gap in your immigration status can affect your long-term strategy.

If you want residency and citizenship, renewals must be planned before expiration dates.

Spending too much time outside Colombia

Long absences may affect visa continuity, residency expectations, or future applications.

If Colombia is your long-term plan, your travel schedule should support that goal.

Submitting weak documentation

Citizenship is not the stage to improvise.

Documents must be current, consistent, translated when needed, and legally valid.

Assuming citizenship is automatic

Citizenship is not automatic because you:

  • Married a Colombian citizen
  • Had a Colombian child
  • Bought property
  • Held an M visa
  • Lived in Colombia for several years
  • Obtained residency

All of these may help, but none of them replaces the legal naturalization process.

Can your family apply with you?

In some cases, minor children may be included in a naturalization process if they meet the legal conditions.

However, adult family members generally need to qualify individually.

A spouse, adult child, or dependent does not automatically become Colombian just because you become Colombian.

Each person’s visa history, residence status, documents, and eligibility must be reviewed separately.

Does Colombia allow dual citizenship?

Yes. Colombia allows dual nationality.

However, your country of origin may have its own rules.

Before applying for Colombian citizenship, you should confirm whether your current country allows dual citizenship, restricts it, or requires any formal notice.

This is especially important for applicants from countries with nationality limitations.

Final thoughts: citizenship starts with the right visa strategy

Colombian citizenship in 2026 is not just a final application.

It is a roadmap.

For most foreigners, the real journey looks like this:

Migrant Visa → Resident Visa → Naturalization → Colombian citizenship

Each stage has its own timeline, requirements, and risks.

That is why the smartest move is to plan from the beginning. Your visa strategy today can determine whether you qualify for residency in 2, 3, or 5 years — and whether your citizenship path takes 4, 5, 10 years, or longer.

At Nexo Legal, we help foreigners structure their immigration path from the first visa to permanent residency and, when eligible, Colombian citizenship.

If becoming a Colombian citizen is your long-term goal, do not wait until the final step to get organized. Start with the right roadmap now.

Get started with a free case assessment ​

What will happen after you fill out this form? ​

After submitting the form, your case undergoes a comprehensive review by our team of specialist to assess its viability. Providing clear and concise information about your objectives accelerates this process.

Subsequently, a specialist will be assigned to your case, reaching out to you within a day to clear up details about your case and outline the next steps to help you achieve your goals.

Get started with a free case assessment ​

What will happen after you fill out this form? ​

After submitting the form, your case undergoes a comprehensive review by our team of specialist to assess its viability. Providing clear and concise information about your objectives accelerates this process.

Subsequently, a specialist will be assigned to your case, reaching out to you within a day to clear up details about your case and outline the next steps to help you achieve your goals.

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