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🇵🇾 Paraguay

Paraguay Temporary Residency

Paraguay's flexible-means residency for clients who don't want to deploy capital into a Paraguayan business or property. Convertible to permanent residency after the qualifying renewal cycle, then feeds the same three-year clock to a Paraguayan passport.

Financial req
Sufficient means
Processing
3 to 6 months
Naturalization
3 years
Presence required
Once / 2 years
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The basics of the Temporary Residency

What it is

Paraguay's Temporary Residency program grants two-year renewable residency for non-Paraguayan citizens with stable foreign-source income, using a flexible 'sufficient means' standard rather than a fixed threshold. The visa converts to permanent residency at year two on application, after which the standard three-year clock to citizenship begins. End-to-end timeline from initial residency to passport is approximately five to six years. The cleanest route for clients who want the Paraguayan timeline and tax position without deploying capital into a Paraguayan business or property.

Who it’s for

  • US retirees and remote workers with stable income but no interest in deploying capital
  • Founders running US-incorporated businesses remotely from Asunción
  • Couples wanting to test Paraguay before committing to the Permanent Residency capital outlay
  • Patient planners on a five-to-six-year horizon to a Paraguayan passport
  • Families building a low-friction Plan-B in a territorial-tax jurisdiction

Why it’s beneficial

The Temporary Residency is Paraguay's lowest-friction entry point for clients who don't want to operate a Paraguayan business or buy Paraguayan property. The flexible 'sufficient means' standard accommodates most US retirees and remote workers. After conversion at year two, the same three-year clock to citizenship applies as the Permanent Residency route — a five-to-six-year end-to-end timeline that remains among the fastest globally.

Key benefits

The outcomes the Temporary Residency actually delivers, beyond the headline numbers. The six that matter most to our clients.

  1. Flexible 'sufficient means' standard

    No fixed threshold. The Dirección General de Migraciones evaluates each application on overall financial means and stability rather than a single dollar number. Fits clients whose income profile doesn't fit fixed-threshold programs.

  2. Five-to-six-year path to citizenship

    Two years on the Temporary Residency, converting to Permanent at year two, then a further three years on the Permanent before the citizenship petition. End-to-end timeline of five to six years remains among the fastest globally.

  3. Territorial tax system

    Paraguay taxes only Paraguay-source income. Your US income, dividends, rental, and pension income are generally not taxed by Paraguay. The Paraguayan side stays clean.

  4. Family on one application

    Spouse or registered partner, dependent children, and dependent parents qualify on the principal application. Each family member receives proportionate residency rights and the same naturalization timeline.

  5. Cost of living that rewards the dollar

    Asunción runs 50-60% below most US coastal cities and roughly half the cost of Buenos Aires, Montevideo, or Santiago. A premium apartment in Villa Morra or Carmelitas runs $700-1,200/month.

  6. Convert without losing the clock

    At year two, conversion to Permanent Residency is procedural and preserves time accumulated. The three-year Permanent clock then runs from the conversion date through the citizenship petition.

Financial requirements

The financial threshold to qualify, with the documentation we walk every client through.

Sufficient means demonstration

Flexible standard

Demonstrate sufficient stable foreign-source income to support yourself and family during the two-year temporary residency term. The Dirección General de Migraciones evaluates each application on overall financial means rather than a fixed threshold; in practice, $1,500-2,500/month in documented foreign-source income or equivalent savings typically suffices. Family thresholds scale proportionately.

Choosing the right route is half the work. We model the comparison against your portfolio in the Consult.

How the process works

  1. Contact us

    Reach out and tell us about your situation. From there, you'll either book a 60-minute Freedom Consult (if you're weighing options across countries) or get started on this route directly (if you already know it's the right fit).

  2. Engagement and document gathering

    We coordinate the document pack: FBI background check (apostilled), birth and marriage certificates, twelve months of bank statements, US tax returns, proof of stable foreign-source income, and the Paraguayan-counsel power of attorney.

  3. Application submission

    Our Paraguayan counsel files the Temporary Residency application with the Dirección General de Migraciones. Filing requires a single trip to Paraguay for the in-person biometric appointment.

  4. Biometric appointment and Cédula

    Travel to Paraguay for biometrics and Cédula de Identidad issuance. The visit is typically four to seven days. The Cédula arrives within 30 to 60 business days.

  5. Two years of temporary residency

    Maintain stable foreign-source income. Enter Paraguay at least once every two years to keep the residency active. Most clients accumulate meaningful Paraguayan presence during the two-year window to support the conversion application.

  6. Conversion to permanent at year two

    At year two, apply for permanent residency. Conversion is procedural and preserves accumulated time. The three-year Permanent clock then begins from the conversion date.

  7. Citizenship petition at year five

    After five total years of legal residency (two temporary + three permanent), file the naturalization petition. A basic Spanish-language test and Paraguayan-civics exam are part of the application.

Processing

Temporary residency

Permanent residency

Citizenship

3-6 months

Years 1-2

Years 2-5

Year 5+

Temporary Residency versus the alternatives

How this program stacks against the closest credible options for the same visitor. We don’t earn more if you choose one over another.

DimensionParaguay Temporary ResidencyParaguay Permanent ResidencyLearn moreArgentina RentistaLearn more
Minimum financial barSufficient means demonstration$70K business or $60K property down$1,500/mo passive income
Processing3-6 months3-6 months4-6 months
Status typeTemporary → permanent year 2Permanent on grantTemporary → permanent year 2
Time to citizenship5 years (post-conversion)3 years3-4 years end-to-end
Presence requiredOnce / 2 yearsOnce / 3 years183+ days / year
Tax systemTerritorialTerritorialWorldwide for residents
Family inclusionSpouse, children, parentsSpouse, children, parentsSpouse, children, parents

The Temporary Residency fits clients who want Paraguayan optionality without capital deployment. The Permanent Residency fits clients with $70K-200K to commit and a faster path to citizenship. Argentina's Rentista has the shortest clock but requires substantial Argentine presence. We don't earn more if you pick one over another.

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Why clients work with us

Three reasons families pick Freedom Files over the do-it-yourself path or a single-jurisdiction agent.

First-hand experience

We know the Dirección General de Migraciones from active engagements across both Paraguayan residency routes. The Temporary Residency looks straightforward until the 'sufficient means' interpretation surfaces during the review.

Honest recommendations

About a third of Temporary Residency inquiries end with our recommendation against engagement. We tell you when the Permanent Residency speed advantage or another LatAm jurisdiction fits cleaner.

Pro counsel from the start

Every engagement runs with US-licensed counsel from the first call. The territorial-tax interaction with US worldwide filing and the conversion-cycle planning are mapped before residency triggers.

Should I take the Temporary or Permanent Residency route?

The Permanent Residency route is the cleanest path for clients who can deploy $70K into a Paraguayan SUACE business or $200K into property. It grants permanent status on day one and shortens the cumulative timeline to citizenship to three years. The Temporary Residency is the better fit for clients without the capital outlay who can demonstrate stable foreign-source income; it converts to permanent after the qualifying two-year cycle, then feeds the same three-year citizenship clock. We map the right approach during the Consult.

What counts as 'sufficient means'?

The Dirección General de Migraciones evaluates each application on overall financial means rather than a fixed threshold. In practice, $1,500-2,500/month in documented foreign-source income or equivalent savings typically suffices for a single applicant. Family thresholds scale proportionately. The standard is more accommodating than fixed-threshold programs but requires properly-documented income stability over twelve months.

Do I have to learn Spanish?

Daily life in Asunción's expat districts runs comfortably in English at most professional and service contexts. Outside those zones, Spanish is essential. The naturalization application requires a Spanish-language assessment, not Guaraní (though Guaraní is widely spoken in daily life).

What is Paraguay's tax position?

Paraguay runs a territorial tax system: only Paraguay-source income is taxable to Paraguayan residents. Foreign-source income, including most US-sourced earnings, is generally not taxed by Paraguay. US worldwide-income filing continues for US citizens regardless.

What is the total cost?

Plan on $1-2K in government and administrative fees (visa, Cédula, family-member fees), $3-5K in Paraguayan legal fees through our partner counsel, and $500-1,000 in translation and apostille costs. Total cash outlay for a clean single-applicant engagement typically lands in the $5-8K range — among the lowest entry costs for any structured residency program globally.

Can my family come with me?

Yes. Spouse or registered partner, dependent children, and dependent parents qualify on the principal application. Each family member receives proportionate residency rights and the same naturalization timeline.

Will I have to give up my US citizenship?

No. Paraguay has allowed dual citizenship since 2011. The United States and Paraguay both permit holding both passports indefinitely.

Ready to talk?

Two paths in. If the Temporary Residency is clearly the right program for your family and you’re ready to engage, contact our team directly. If you’re weighing this against other programs and want an honest read on the right move, the Freedom Consult is the sixty-minute conversation that ends the loop.

Contact our team →

We take a small number of new families each quarter.

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