Saturday, June 7

Immigration to the former Netherlands Antilles (now split into Curaçao, Sint Maarten, Bonaire, Saba, and Sint Eustatius) follows rules based on their status within the Kingdom of the Netherlands, but immigration policies vary slightly by island depending on whether the island is an autonomous country or part of the Netherlands proper.


OVERVIEW OF IMMIGRATION STRUCTURE

IslandStatusImmigration Authority
CuraçaoAutonomous countryImmigration Curaçao (Toelatingsorganisatie)
Sint MaartenAutonomous countryImmigration & Border Protection Services
BonaireMunicipality of the NetherlandsIND Caribbean Netherlands (Rijksdienst Caribisch Nederland)
SabaMunicipality of the NetherlandsIND Caribbean Netherlands
Sint EustatiusMunicipality of the NetherlandsIND Caribbean Netherlands

IMMIGRATION TYPES

1. Short-Stay Visas (Tourism, Business)

  • Stay up to 90 days (total) within a 180-day period.
  • Required for some nationalities (e.g., Nigeria, India).
  • Apply at a Dutch embassy or consulate.
  • Valid across all Dutch Caribbean islands.

2. Long-Stay Visas / Residence Permits

To live, work, study, or reunite with family.

Requirements usually include:

  • Valid passport
  • Reason for stay (work, study, family, retirement, investment)
  • Proof of income or financial support
  • Clean criminal record
  • Medical insurance

TYPES OF RESIDENCY

Permit TypePurposeCommon On
Work PermitFor employment with a local employerCuraçao, Sint Maarten, BES islands
Student PermitFor those attending school or universityBonaire, Curaçao, Sint Maarten
Family ReunificationJoin a spouse or family memberAll islands
Retirement VisaFor financially independent retireesBonaire, Curaçao (popular)
Investor PermitFor people investing in local property/businessCuraçao, Sint Maarten

IMMIGRATION AUTHORITIES & LINKS

Curaçao

Sint Maarten

Bonaire, Saba, Sint Eustatius (BES Islands)


MOVING FROM OTHER COUNTRIES (E.g., Nigeria, Ghana, Philippines)

  • Requires MVV (Long-Term Entry Visa) for long stays.
  • Must apply through Dutch Embassy in your home country.
  • Proof of:
    • Accommodation on the island
    • Sponsor/employer (if working)
    • Financial means

SUMMARY

StepNotes
Apply for visa/residenceAt Dutch Embassy or local immigration office
Provide documentsID, reason for stay, finances, clean record
Await decisionProcessing takes weeks to months
Register on arrivalWith local civil registry (if staying long-term)

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