Every Vanuatu citizenship applicant undergoes a mandatory background check conducted by the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) and the Citizenship Commission. This process — known as due diligence — determines whether an applicant meets Vanuatu's integrity standards for citizenship. Understanding what is checked, and how to prepare, is the most important factor in achieving a smooth, fast approval.
The Vanuatu FIU operates under the Financial Intelligence Unit Act 2000 (as amended). For citizenship purposes, the FIU reviews each applicant's file for financial crime, sanctions exposure, criminal history, and reputational risk. The Commission also engages one or more third-party international due diligence firms with access to databases and intelligence sources the Commission's own staff cannot directly access.
Due diligence intensified significantly following:
The $5,500 due diligence fee paid at submission funds this process. It is non-refundable because the checks begin immediately upon payment.
1. Criminal Record Checks
All countries of citizenship and residence (past 10 years). The Commission requires police certificates from each relevant jurisdiction. Third-party firms cross-reference against international criminal databases independently.
2. Interpol and Law Enforcement Databases
Full name search against Interpol's Red Notice and Diffusion lists, and equivalent notices from Europol, UNODC, and bilateral law enforcement systems. A Red Notice is an automatic disqualifier.
3. International Sanctions Screening
Cross-reference against UN Security Council consolidated sanctions list, OFAC (US Treasury), EU consolidated sanctions register, UK OFSI, and FATF watchlists. Inclusion on any list results in automatic rejection.
4. Source of Funds Verification
The FIU assesses whether the funds used for the contribution have a credible, documented origin. Acceptable sources: business income, salary, investment returns, property sale, inheritance, gifts from verifiable sources. Required documentation: 6–12 months of bank statements, supporting evidence of income sources, and signed source-of-funds declaration. Large or recent fund movements require explanation.
5. Business and Corporate Background
For applicants who are business owners, directors, or significant shareholders: the FIU reviews corporate structures, beneficial ownership, and any history of company insolvencies, enforcement actions, or regulatory investigations in any jurisdiction.
6. Adverse Media Screening
Systematic search of global media for adverse coverage: fraud allegations, corruption, financial misconduct, regulatory enforcement. Adverse media does not automatically fail an application, but unexplained adverse coverage triggers requests for detailed response.
7. Visa Refusals and Immigration History
Prior visa refusals, deportations, or immigration violations in key jurisdictions (especially USA, UK, EU, Australia, NZ, Canada) are reviewed. A single visa refusal rarely fails an application, but patterns of refusals or misrepresentation in prior visa applications are serious flags.
8. Political Exposure Screening
Politically Exposed Persons (PEPs) — current or former government officials, senior executives of state-owned entities, their immediate family — undergo enhanced due diligence. This is not a disqualifier but extends the review timeline and requires additional documentation of the source of political-era wealth.
Due diligence review runs concurrently with the Commission's administrative review. For applicants from standard jurisdictions with clean backgrounds, the total review period is 45–60 business days. Applicants from FATF-designated high-risk countries, those with complex business structures, or those with any adverse history should expect 75–90+ days.
The Commission may issue a Request for Additional Information (RAI) if the initial review identifies any matter requiring explanation. Applicants typically have 30 days to respond. Unresponsive applications are closed; fees are forfeited.
The most effective preparation is a pre-application eligibility audit by your legal representative before filing. This identifies any issues that could surface during FIU review so they can be addressed proactively.
Key preparation steps:
→ Eligibility requirements: Who Can Apply for Vanuatu Citizenship?
→ Application process: How to Get Vanuatu Citizenship
→ Rejection reasons: Why Vanuatu Citizenship Applications Are Rejected
The FIU does not formally notify your home government that you are applying. However, data-sharing agreements between Vanuatu and certain FATF member states mean that large fund transfers and citizenship applications of certain nationalities may generate automatic flags. In practice, this is not a common concern for most applicants.
45–60 business days for clean files from standard jurisdictions. 75–90+ days for high-risk nationalities, PEPs, or complex cases. Total elapsed time from submission to approval notification: 60–90 calendar days in most cases.
No. The Commission's due diligence reports are confidential and not disclosed to applicants. If your application is rejected, the Commission provides a generic rejection reason but not the full report. You may request additional explanation through formal legal channels.
Not automatically. A fully discharged bankruptcy, especially one that is several years old, is generally not disqualifying if the source-of-funds documentation shows legitimate current wealth. Recent or undischarged bankruptcy, or bankruptcy involving fraud, creates significantly more difficulty.
General information only, not legal advice. Visa and programme rules change; confirm current details before deciding. Last verified 2026-07-08.
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