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Short description: A complete guide to Lithuania’s Type D family reunification visa: eligibility, documents, process, costs, rights, limits, renewal, and next steps.
Last Verified On: 2026-04-04
Visa Snapshot
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Country | Lithuania |
| Visa name | National Long-Stay Visa (Type D) – Family Reunification |
| Visa short name | D-Family |
| Category | National long-stay visa |
| Main purpose | Joining or accompanying certain family members for a stay longer than 90 days |
| Typical applicant | Spouse, child, parent in limited cases, or other qualifying family member of a person lawfully residing in Lithuania |
| Validity | Usually issued for a period allowing long stay up to 1 year, depending on legal ground and consular decision |
| Stay duration | More than 90 days; often used for stays up to 12 months or pending a residence permit route |
| Entries allowed | Can be single or multiple entry depending on issuance; check visa sticker/decision |
| Extension possible? | Limited. A national visa is not an open-ended status; many applicants should move to a temporary residence permit route if eligible |
| Work allowed? | Limited/depends. Work rights are not automatic just because the visa is family-based; the underlying legal basis matters |
| Study allowed? | Limited/depends. Short or incidental study may be possible; full-time study usually needs the correct underlying status if it becomes the main purpose |
| Family allowed? | This is itself a family-based route |
| PR path? | Possible indirectly. Time in Lithuania may matter later, but long-term residence usually depends on holding the proper residence permit and meeting residence rules |
| Citizenship path? | Indirect. Citizenship is not granted by this visa; later naturalization depends on long-term lawful residence and other legal requirements |
Lithuania’s national long-stay visa, commonly called a Type D visa, is a national visa for people who need to stay in Lithuania longer than 90 days.
For family cases, this route is used by people who want to join, accompany, or stay with a qualifying family member in Lithuania when they meet the legal grounds for a long-stay national visa rather than, or before, obtaining a residence permit.
In plain English:
- It is not a Schengen short-stay visa.
- It is not the same as a Lithuanian temporary residence permit.
- It is a visa sticker placed in the passport, issued under Lithuanian national rules.
- It can be used for longer stays in Lithuania, often up to one year, depending on the legal basis.
- In some family situations, it serves as a practical bridge before or instead of applying for a temporary residence permit.
Why it exists
It exists to allow non-Lithuanian nationals to enter and remain in Lithuania lawfully for a longer period where there is a recognized legal reason—here, family unity or family reunification.
How it fits into Lithuania’s immigration system
Lithuania broadly distinguishes between:
- Schengen visas (Type C) for short stays, generally up to 90 days in any 180-day period
- National visas (Type D) for longer stays
- Temporary residence permits
- Permanent residence permits
For families, the right route depends on:
- who the family member in Lithuania is,
- whether that person is a Lithuanian citizen, EU citizen, or third-country national,
- how long the applicant plans to stay,
- and whether Lithuanian law expects the person to apply directly for a temporary residence permit instead of relying on a national visa.
Official and alternate naming
You may see references such as:
- National visa
- Long-stay visa
- Type D visa
- National Long-Stay Visa (Type D)
- In Lithuanian administrative usage: nacionalinė viza (D)
“Family reunification” is usually the ground or purpose for the visa, not necessarily a separate visa label printed on the sticker.
Warning: Many applicants confuse the Lithuanian Type D national visa with the temporary residence permit for family reunification. They are related but different legal instruments.
2. Who should apply for this visa?
This visa is best for people whose main reason for staying in Lithuania is to live with or join qualifying family members and who meet the legal basis for a national visa.
Good fit for this visa
Spouses and partners
Usually suitable where the relationship is legally recognized and the sponsor in Lithuania has a status that supports family reunification.
Children and dependents
Minor children are a common applicant group, especially when joining a parent legally residing in Lithuania.
Family members needing a long stay before or instead of a permit
In some cases, a Type D visa may be used where the person needs to enter Lithuania for a long stay while arranging local residence formalities.
Sometimes suitable, but fact-sensitive
Students
Only if the person is applying as a family member, not because study is the main purpose.
Employees
Only if the person’s main basis is family, not employment.
Founders, entrepreneurs, or investors
Only if they are entering as a family member of a qualifying resident, not for business as the main purpose.
Retirees
Potentially, if they are reuniting with qualifying family and meet maintenance/support rules.
Usually not the right visa for these people
| Applicant type | Should they use D-Family? | Better route |
|---|---|---|
| Tourists | No | Schengen short-stay visa or visa-free entry if eligible |
| Business visitors | No | Schengen business visa / short-stay lawful business entry |
| Job seekers | Usually no | Correct work/residence route if available |
| Employees moving for work | Usually no | Work-based national visa or residence permit route |
| Full-time students | Usually no | Student residence permit or study-based Type D if applicable |
| Digital nomads | Usually no | Lithuania does not label this as a family route |
| Transit passengers | No | Transit/short-stay rules |
| Medical travelers | Usually no | Medical treatment/short-stay or other appropriate route |
| Journalists | No | Correct professional or assignment-based route |
| Religious workers | Usually no | Purpose-specific route if available |
| Diplomats/official travelers | No | Diplomatic/official visa rules |
Common Mistake: Applying under family grounds when the real main purpose is work or study. That mismatch can lead to refusal.
3. What is this visa used for?
Permitted purposes
This visa is used primarily for:
- Family reunification
- Joining a spouse
- Joining a parent or child, where legally recognized
- Accompanying a family member in some lawful residence scenarios
- Long-term stay in Lithuania where family grounds are the legal basis
Activities that may be possible but are not the main purpose
Depending on the holder’s legal position and the exact visa basis:
- local daily life in Lithuania
- attending family events
- short non-degree courses
- incidental tourism within lawful stay limits
- travel within the Schengen area under the conditions attached to a valid national visa
Prohibited or risky uses
Using this visa mainly for the following may be improper unless separately authorized:
- taking employment without the legal right to work
- self-employment where not permitted
- studying full-time if study becomes the main immigration purpose and the person lacks the proper status
- paid performance
- journalistic work
- volunteering if it falls under regulated activity
- business setup as the main purpose
- medical migration as the main purpose
- transit as the main purpose
Grey areas and misunderstandings
Remote work
Lithuanian law and consular practice can be strict where visa purpose and actual activity differ. A person on a family-based visa may still create tax, labor, or status issues if doing remote work, especially if: – the work is active, – it is performed regularly from Lithuania, – and it has legal consequences under tax or labor rules.
Marriage plans
If someone is traveling to Lithuania primarily to marry and then remain, that is not always treated the same as family reunification. Some cases need a different entry route first, then local residence steps.
Pro Tip: Always align your application documents with your real main purpose. Family-based means the family relationship must be the legal core of the case.
4. Official visa classification and naming
Official classification
- Visa type: National visa
- Code: D
- Common English name: National Long-Stay Visa (Type D)
- Common purpose label: Family reunification / family member
Related Lithuanian immigration categories people confuse it with
| Category | What it is | Key difference |
|---|---|---|
| Schengen visa (Type C) | Short-stay visa | Usually only up to 90 days in 180 days |
| National visa (Type D) | Long-stay visa | For longer lawful stay in Lithuania |
| Temporary residence permit | Residence authorization/card | Usually better for longer-term living and settlement |
| EU family member residence card | For qualifying family members of EU citizens | Different legal framework |
| Family reunification residence permit | Long-term family residence route | Often more suitable than a Type D for durable stay |
Old vs current naming
Lithuanian authorities still use the standard category name national visa (D). Family-based issuance is usually described by its ground, not by a separate branded family subclass.
If a consulate or migration page uses slightly different English wording, rely on the legal category and the official application instructions.
5. Eligibility criteria
Eligibility depends heavily on the status of the family member in Lithuania and the exact legal basis used.
Core eligibility factors
1) You must be a person who needs a visa
If your nationality requires a visa for this type of stay, you must apply. Visa-exempt nationals may still need the correct residence authorization for a long stay; visa exemption for short stays does not usually remove the need for lawful long-term status.
2) You must have a valid passport
Typically: – passport must be valid beyond the intended stay, – contain sufficient blank pages, – be in good physical condition.
Exact passport validity rules should be checked with the official application page and the consular post handling the case.
3) You must have a qualifying family relationship
This usually means documented proof such as: – marriage certificate, – birth certificate, – adoption documents, – legal guardianship or custody documents, – and, where relevant, proof of dependency.
4) The sponsor/family member in Lithuania must have qualifying status
This is critical. The sponsor may be: – a Lithuanian citizen, – an EU citizen exercising rights in Lithuania, – or a third-country national lawfully residing in Lithuania.
The legal route and supporting documents differ depending on which category applies.
5) You must show the purpose is genuine
Authorities generally want proof that: – the family relationship is real, – the family member is legally in Lithuania, – and the long stay is genuinely for family reunion.
6) You may need proof of sufficient means
Applicants may need to show: – their own funds, – sponsor support, – or both.
The exact amount can change and may depend on Lithuanian official minimum benchmarks.
7) You may need accommodation proof
Examples: – lease, – ownership documents, – host declaration, – registered address evidence.
8) Medical insurance
For a national visa, valid medical insurance is typically required. The scope, territorial coverage, and minimum coverage amount should be checked on the latest official page.
9) Clean legal/security background
Applicants may be refused where they pose: – security risks, – public policy risks, – public health concerns, – or have serious immigration violations.
10) Biometrics and personal appearance
Applicants are commonly required to: – file an application, – appear in person, – provide biometrics if required.
Factors that may apply in some cases but not all
| Factor | Usually required? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Language test | No | Not generally a Type D visa requirement for family |
| Education level | No | Not a standard family criterion |
| Work experience | No | Not a standard family criterion |
| Job offer | No | Only relevant if another legal basis is involved |
| Points test | No | Lithuania does not use a points system for this visa |
| Invitation | Sometimes | Depends on the consular/legal setup and sponsor documents |
| Criminal record certificate | Sometimes | May be requested depending on case type and later residence processes |
| Proof of dependency | Often for non-spouse/non-minor cases | Important in parent/adult child cases |
| Residence outside Lithuania at filing | Varies | Some applicants can apply through foreign posts; location rules vary by post and lawful residence in third country |
Embassy-specific and nationality-specific variation
This is an area where rules can differ in practice: – some embassies require translated or legalized civil documents in a stricter format, – some only accept applications from residents of their consular district, – some require appointments months in advance.
Warning: If you apply from a country where you are not a national, the consulate may ask for proof that you are lawfully resident there.
6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers
You may be ineligible or at high refusal risk if:
- the family relationship is not legally recognized or not properly documented
- the sponsor does not have qualifying status in Lithuania
- the application is filed under the wrong category
- documents are incomplete, inconsistent, or unverifiable
- financial support is not convincingly shown
- medical insurance is missing or inadequate
- there are previous overstays, deportations, or visa abuses
- the applicant is considered a public policy or security risk
- the applicant cannot explain the purpose clearly
- civil documents are not legalized/apostilled/translated when required
Common refusal patterns
Relationship proof is weak
Examples: – no marriage registration where required, – only informal evidence for a relationship category that needs a formal legal document, – contradictory family records.
The sponsor’s status is unclear
Examples: – expired permit, – no proof of lawful residence, – unclear address, – no evidence the sponsor can support the applicant.
Wrong visa class
This happens where: – the applicant really intends to work, – or to study, – or to move permanently, but applies only for a family-based Type D without the correct legal foundation.
Document quality problems
Examples: – poor scans, – missing translations, – old certificates, – unofficial translations where sworn/legalized translations are required.
Interview inconsistencies
If interviewed, applicants may face refusal if: – they cannot explain the relationship timeline, – they do not know where they will live, – sponsor details do not match.
7. Benefits of this visa
Potential benefits include:
- lawful long stay in Lithuania beyond short-stay limits
- ability to live with qualifying family members
- possible multiple-entry travel if issued as such
- easier family unity than relying on short-stay visas
- a practical route before or alongside residence permit planning
- potential Schengen travel benefits during validity, subject to legal conditions
Family-related advantages
- allows families to reunite more quickly than waiting abroad in some cases
- useful for spouses and minor children
- may support later local registration and residence processes
Long-term immigration advantage
The visa itself is not permanent status, but it may: – facilitate lawful entry, – allow family life to begin in Lithuania, – support later application steps where residence permits are the more durable route.
8. Limitations and restrictions
This visa has important limits.
Key restrictions
- It is still a visa, not a permanent immigration status.
- It does not automatically grant unrestricted work rights.
- It may not be the best long-term status for people planning to settle for years.
- It can be tied closely to the family basis used in the application.
- Loss of the qualifying relationship or sponsor status can affect future stay rights.
- You must maintain valid insurance and lawful residence conditions.
- You may need to register your address and comply with local administrative rules.
Dependence on sponsor/family basis
If the sponsor: – leaves Lithuania, – loses legal status, – or the relationship ends, the applicant’s future immigration position may change significantly.
Reporting and compliance
You may need to: – carry valid passport and visa, – register your residence/address where required, – apply for a residence permit in time if transitioning, – avoid unauthorized work.
9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules
Validity
Lithuanian national visas are generally issued for long stays and can be valid for up to 12 months, depending on the legal basis and consular decision.
Stay duration
A Type D visa allows a person to stay in Lithuania for a period beyond the short-stay Schengen limit, according to the visa’s validity and conditions.
Entries
A national visa may be: – single-entry, or – multiple-entry
Check the visa sticker carefully.
When the clock starts
The key dates are: – valid from – valid until – number of entries – duration of stay if separately indicated
Overstay consequences
Overstaying can lead to: – fines, – cancellation problems, – future refusals, – removal, – Schengen-wide immigration consequences.
Renewal timing
Because this is a visa rather than a full residence status, many people should start planning next-step applications well before expiry.
Pro Tip: If your real long-term plan is to live in Lithuania with family, do not wait until the last weeks of visa validity to check whether you need a temporary residence permit.
10. Complete document checklist
This section combines standard national visa requirements with family-specific evidence. Exact requirements can vary by embassy and legal basis.
A. Core documents
| Document | What it is | Why needed | Common mistakes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Completed visa application form | Official Type D application | Starts the case | Wrong category selected, missing signatures |
| Appointment confirmation | Booking proof | Required by post/service point | Arriving at wrong location |
| Visa fee proof | Receipt if applicable | Shows fee payment | Paying wrong amount |
B. Identity/travel documents
- Valid passport
- Copies of passport bio page
- Copies of prior visas/residence permits if relevant
- Passport-style photo(s)
Common mistakes – damaged passport – passport expiring too soon – inconsistent name spellings across documents
C. Financial documents
- recent bank statements
- sponsor support documents
- salary slips or income proof of sponsor
- undertaking of support where accepted
Why needed: to show maintenance and avoid public-burden concerns.
D. Employment/business documents
Usually not central for a family visa, but may still be useful: – sponsor’s employment contract – employer letter – business registration of sponsor if self-employed
E. Education documents
Usually not required unless needed to explain family circumstances or dependent child status.
F. Relationship/family documents
This is the heart of the application.
- marriage certificate
- birth certificate
- adoption order
- guardianship/custody order
- proof of dependency where relevant
- divorce decree or prior spouse death certificate where relevant
- consent letter for child travel if one parent is absent
Common mistakes – submitting informal religious certificates only where civil registration is required – missing legalization/apostille – no translation into the required language
G. Accommodation/travel documents
- lease agreement
- ownership proof
- host declaration
- address evidence in Lithuania
- travel booking if requested
H. Sponsor/invitation documents
- copy of sponsor’s passport or ID
- sponsor’s residence permit or Lithuanian legal status proof
- invitation/statement explaining reunification
- proof of relationship to applicant
- proof of sponsor’s address and means
I. Health/insurance documents
- valid travel/health insurance meeting official requirements
- policy certificate showing coverage area and dates
J. Country-specific extras
Depending on nationality or filing post: – lawful residence proof in the country of application – local police certificate – legalized civil registry extracts – military record if required by local post practice
K. Minor/dependent-specific documents
- full birth certificate
- parental consent
- custody judgment
- school letter if relevant
- copy of both parents’ IDs/passports
L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs
This often matters a lot.
You may need: – official translation – legalization or apostille – notarized copy
It depends on: – the document’s country of issue, – whether Lithuania has special recognition arrangements, – and consular instructions.
Warning: Civil status documents are among the most commonly rejected documents when legalization and translation rules are ignored.
M. Photo specifications
Use the official Lithuanian visa photo requirements. Usually this includes: – recent photo, – plain background, – correct size and face visibility.
Do not guess; use the official specification page or consulate instructions.
11. Financial requirements
Financial requirements for Lithuanian national visas can change and are sometimes tied to official state-supported benchmarks.
What you may need to show
- enough money for the planned stay in Lithuania
- or sponsor support covering accommodation and living costs
- or both
Who can sponsor
Usually: – the family member in Lithuania, – sometimes the applicant themselves if independently funded.
Acceptable proof
- recent bank statements
- sponsor salary slips
- employment contract
- pension statements
- official support undertaking if accepted
- proof of regular lawful income
What is unclear or variable
The exact minimum amount for this family-based Type D visa is not always clearly published in one simple family-specific figure across all official pages. It may depend on: – the legal ground, – whether accommodation is already covered, – consular instructions, – and broader migration benchmarks.
So the safest approach is:
- check the latest official Type D visa page,
- check the specific embassy/consulate page,
- and, if needed, ask the post which maintenance standard they apply.
Proof strength tips
Officially, funds must be credible. Practically, stronger evidence includes: – stable monthly income, – consistent account history, – explanation for large recent deposits, – sponsor documents matching the support claim.
12. Fees and total cost
Fees change. Always confirm on the official page before paying.
Typical cost categories
| Cost item | Notes |
|---|---|
| Visa application fee | Official national visa fee; check latest official fee page |
| Biometrics fee | Often included, but post-specific handling may vary |
| Translation costs | Depends on language and document volume |
| Apostille/legalization | Country-specific |
| Notary fees | If copies/consents require notarization |
| Insurance | Depends on age, nationality, coverage, and duration |
| Courier/return passport | If offered by post/provider |
| Travel to embassy/consulate | Often overlooked |
| Police certificate | If required |
| Optional legal assistance | Private and optional, not an official fee |
Fee caution
Warning: Some embassies or outsourced appointment systems may involve local handling arrangements. Use only the official channels listed by Lithuanian authorities.
Because fee schedules change, this guide does not state a hard number unless clearly and consistently published. Check the latest official consular fee page.
13. Step-by-step application process
1. Confirm the correct route
Decide whether you truly need: – a Type D family-based national visa, or – a temporary residence permit for family reunification.
2. Gather documents
Collect: – identity documents, – relationship documents, – sponsor status proof, – accommodation proof, – finance proof, – insurance.
3. Complete the official application
Lithuania uses the MIGRIS migration system for many migration processes. Some visa-related steps may also be connected to official online registration or embassy booking processes.
4. Book your appointment
This may be at: – a Lithuanian embassy or consulate, – another authorized diplomatic post, – or a designated external service point if officially used.
5. Pay fees
Pay exactly as instructed by the official post.
6. Submit the application
Usually in person. Bring originals and copies.
7. Provide biometrics if required
Fingerprints and photo may be taken depending on the applicant’s circumstances and prior records.
8. Respond to additional requests
The post may ask for: – better copies, – legalized documents, – more relationship evidence, – sponsor clarifications.
9. Wait for decision
Processing times vary by post and case complexity.
10. Receive the visa
If approved, the visa is affixed to the passport.
11. Travel to Lithuania
Carry supporting documents, not just the visa.
12. Post-arrival steps
Depending on your longer plan: – register address, – ensure insurance remains valid, – check whether you must apply for a residence permit.
14. Processing time
Official processing times can vary. Some posts handle straightforward visa cases faster than family-complex cases.
What affects timing
- appointment availability
- document completeness
- legalization/translation issues
- security checks
- nationality
- sponsor verification
- peak travel seasons
- whether the case should really be a residence permit case
Practical expectation
For a properly prepared case: – appointment wait time may be the first bottleneck, – then consular processing, – then passport return/collection.
If official maximum time is stated on the consular page, follow that. If not, expect variation by location.
Pro Tip: For family cases, document preparation often takes longer than formal processing.
15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks
Biometrics
Usually required in person for visa processing unless exempt under applicable rules.
Interview
Not always required, but consular staff may ask questions about: – your relationship, – your sponsor’s status, – where you will live, – how you will be supported.
Medical
A general medical exam is not always a standard Type D requirement, but valid medical insurance usually is. For later residence permit stages, health-related checks may be more structured.
Police clearance
Not always required for every visa case, but may be requested depending on: – nationality, – post practice, – legal ground, – or later residence steps.
16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality
Official public approval-rate data specifically for Lithuania’s family-based Type D visa is not clearly published in a consolidated, applicant-facing format.
So it is better to avoid making percentage claims.
Practical refusal patterns
Based on official logic and common immigration practice, refusals often involve: – weak or inconsistent family evidence – sponsor status problems – poor translations/legalization – insufficient maintenance proof – wrong visa route – inability to show the stay purpose is genuine and lawful
17. How to strengthen the application legally
Focus on relationship evidence
Include a clean set of: – civil certificates, – proof of ongoing relationship where helpful, – sponsor identity/status documents, – family timeline explanation.
Make the sponsor’s status easy to understand
Include: – residence permit copy or Lithuanian ID/passport, – proof of address, – employment/income proof if relevant.
Explain unusual facts
If there are: – late-registered marriages, – different surnames, – recent large deposits, – prior refusals, add a short written explanation with evidence.
Use a document index
A one-page index helps officers review faster.
Translate properly
Use official/swearn translation where required. Poor translation is a major avoidable problem.
Keep the narrative consistent
Names, dates, addresses, and timelines should match across: – application form, – cover letter, – sponsor letter, – certificates.
18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies
Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies
Apply after your civil documents are fully ready
Do not rush to file before: – apostille/legalization is complete, – translations are done, – all names and dates match.
Organize a “family core” packet
Put these first: 1. application form 2. passport copy 3. sponsor ID/status 4. marriage/birth certificate 5. accommodation proof 6. finances 7. insurance
Explain large deposits honestly
If a bank account suddenly increased: – attach source proof, – salary transfer history, – property sale agreement, – gift declaration if lawful and documented.
Use a short sponsor letter
A good sponsor letter should clearly say: – who the sponsor is, – their status in Lithuania, – relationship to applicant, – where the applicant will live, – how support will be provided if needed.
Prepare for appointment delays
In some regions, the biggest delay is not adjudication but getting the appointment.
Be honest about old refusals
If previously refused by Lithuania or another Schengen country: – disclose it if asked, – explain what has changed, – attach the old refusal letter and corrective evidence where helpful.
Contact the embassy only when necessary
Good reasons: – appointment access problem, – unclear legalization requirement, – urgent family emergency with evidence.
Poor reasons: – asking for daily updates, – asking questions already answered on the official page.
19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance
A cover letter is not always mandatory, but it is often helpful.
When it helps most
- mixed-nationality families
- unusual timelines
- prior refusals
- dependency claims
- custody situations
- application from a third country
Suggested structure
- Applicant details
- Visa requested
- Sponsor details
- Family relationship
- Purpose of stay
- Where you will live
- How expenses will be covered
- List of attached supporting documents
- Clarification of unusual facts
- Polite closing
What not to say
- anything suggesting hidden work without authorization
- contradictory plans
- vague claims with no evidence
- emotional statements without legal facts
20. Sponsor / inviter guidance
Who can sponsor
Usually the qualifying family member in Lithuania: – Lithuanian citizen, – legally resident foreigner, – possibly EU citizen in Lithuania under the relevant framework.
What sponsors should provide
- passport/ID copy
- residence permit copy if applicable
- proof of address in Lithuania
- income/support documents
- relationship proof
- support or invitation letter if required
Sponsor mistakes
- sending unreadable scans
- forgetting address proof
- not signing declarations
- giving a support promise with no income evidence
- using an address where the applicant cannot realistically reside
21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children
Are dependents allowed?
Yes, this is fundamentally a family route.
Who qualifies?
This depends on the legal category, but commonly: – spouse – minor child – in some cases, other dependent family members
Partner definition
This is a sensitive area. A legally married spouse is usually easier to document than an unmarried partner. If Lithuania recognizes a given partner category for the specific route, proof will be stricter.
If the official materials do not clearly confirm unmarried partner eligibility for your exact basis, do not assume it.
Children
Common requirements: – birth certificate – proof of parent’s status in Lithuania – custody/consent if one parent is not relocating – adoption documents if applicable
Minors
Minor applicants typically need: – separate application – parental signatures/consent – identity documents of both parents – custody evidence if parents are separated
22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules
Work rights
This is one of the most important caution areas.
A family-based Type D visa does not automatically mean unrestricted work rights. Whether the holder can work depends on: – the exact legal basis of the visa, – Lithuanian labor and migration rules, – whether separate work authorization is required, – and whether the person should instead hold a residence permit that includes labor market access.
Study rights
Incidental or short learning activity may be possible, but if the main purpose becomes full-time study, a study-based route may be more appropriate.
Business activity
Passive activities may be less problematic than active local economic activity, but: – self-employment, – invoicing from Lithuania, – regular remote work, – or running a local business can trigger immigration, tax, and labor issues.
Warning: Do not assume “family visa = free right to work.” Verify your exact rights with Migration Department guidance before starting any paid activity.
Volunteering and internships
These can be regulated. If structured, long-term, or equivalent to work, separate permission may be needed.
23. Travel rules and border entry issues
A visa does not guarantee admission at the border.
Carry these on arrival
- passport with visa
- copy of sponsor’s ID/permit
- accommodation details
- insurance proof
- relationship proof
- return/onward or long-stay explanation if asked
Border questions may include
- Why are you coming to Lithuania?
- Who are you staying with?
- How long will you stay?
- Do you have enough money?
- What does your family member do in Lithuania?
Re-entry
If your visa is multiple-entry and valid, re-entry may be possible. If it is single-entry, leaving could end your ability to return on that visa.
New passport issue
If your visa is in an old passport and the passport expires, handling depends on border and document rules. Check with Lithuanian authorities before travel.
24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion
Can it be extended?
Sometimes only in limited legal circumstances. A Type D visa is generally not meant to function as indefinite renewable status.
Better long-term solution
For real long-term family life in Lithuania, many applicants should assess: – temporary residence permit for family reunification
Switching inside Lithuania
Whether you can switch depends on: – your current legal status, – the specific immigration route, – the timing, – and whether Lithuanian law permits in-country filing.
Risks
- waiting too long before expiry
- assuming visa-free status can “reset” long stay
- working before the correct status is obtained
25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway
Does this visa itself lead to PR?
Not directly.
Indirect pathway
It can be part of a broader lawful residence history, but long-term residence and citizenship usually depend more on: – holding the correct residence permit, – continuous lawful residence, – physical presence, – language and integration requirements, – and compliance with Lithuanian law.
Practical reality
If your goal is: – permanent residence – or citizenship you should usually move from a visa-based stay to the correct residence permit category as early as appropriate.
26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations
Tax residence risk
If you live in Lithuania for a significant period, you may become tax resident depending on: – days spent, – center of vital interests, – treaty rules.
Compliance obligations
You may need to: – maintain valid insurance, – register residence/address, – respect visa validity, – avoid unauthorized work, – keep documents current.
Social security
If you work lawfully in Lithuania, separate social insurance rules may apply.
Warning: Immigration permission and tax compliance are different issues. Being allowed to stay does not answer whether your income is taxable in Lithuania.
27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions
Visa-free nationals
Some nationals can enter the Schengen area without a short-stay visa, but that does not usually replace the need for proper authorization for a long stay in Lithuania.
Applying from a third country
Many posts require applicants to be: – nationals of the country where they apply, or – lawful residents there.
EU/EEA family law overlap
Family members of EU citizens in Lithuania may fall under different legal frameworks than family members of third-country nationals.
This can change: – documents, – legal tests, – and the proper end-status.
28. Special cases and edge cases
Minors with separated parents
Expect close review of: – custody, – parental consent, – court orders, – travel authorization.
Adopted children
Provide full adoption records and, where required, legalization and translation.
Same-sex spouses/partners
Whether the case works depends on how the relationship is recognized under the applicable legal framework and civil documentation available. If the official materials do not clearly state treatment for your exact case, verify directly with Lithuanian authorities before applying.
Stateless persons and refugees
These cases can involve special document issues and should be verified directly with the Migration Department or consular post.
Prior overstays or deportation
Disclose truthfully. These can affect admissibility and may require legal explanation.
Applying with an expired passport but valid old visa
Do not assume travel is allowed without checking official border guidance.
Name or gender marker mismatch
Provide linking documents: – marriage certificate, – court name change order, – corrected civil records, – medical/legal identity documents where relevant and officially recognized.
29. Common myths and mistakes
Myth vs Fact
| Myth | Fact |
|---|---|
| A Lithuanian family visa always gives full work rights. | Not always. Work rights depend on the legal basis and other Lithuanian rules. |
| If my spouse is in Lithuania, I can just come on a tourist visa and stay. | Usually unsafe and often incorrect for long-term plans. |
| Visa-free entry means I do not need any long-stay authorization. | False for long-term family residence. |
| A marriage certificate alone is always enough. | Often not. You may also need sponsor status, accommodation, finances, and legalization/translation. |
| I can hide my plan to live long-term and sort it out later. | Misrepresentation can cause refusal or future problems. |
| Old refusals should be omitted. | If asked, disclose them honestly. |
30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication
What happens after refusal?
You should receive a refusal decision or letter stating the legal grounds.
Can you appeal?
Appeal or review rights depend on: – the type of decision, – the issuing authority, – Lithuanian administrative law, – and the deadline stated in the decision.
Key points
- deadlines are strict
- fees are usually not refunded
- reapplication is often possible if you fix the actual problem
- legal advice may be useful for complex family or admissibility cases
Best reapplication strategy
Do not simply resubmit the same file. Instead: – identify the exact refusal reason, – add targeted new evidence, – address contradictions directly.
31. Arrival in Lithuania: what happens next?
At immigration control
Expect a short border check. Officers may ask for: – sponsor contact, – address, – insurance, – purpose of stay.
In the first days after arrival
Check whether you need to: – register your address, – maintain insurance, – contact the Migration Department, – begin temporary residence permit procedures if applicable.
In the first 30–90 days
For families planning to remain long-term, this is the key period to confirm: – residence permit options, – local registration obligations, – work/study rights.
32. Real-world timeline examples
Example 1: Spouse joining a resident in Lithuania
- Weeks 1–4: collect marriage certificate, apostille, translations, sponsor documents
- Weeks 3–6: appointment booking
- Week 6: submit application
- Weeks 6–10+: processing
- Week 10+: visa issuance and travel
- After arrival: evaluate residence permit steps
Example 2: Minor child joining parent
- Weeks 1–5: birth certificate, custody consent, school records if helpful
- Weeks 4–7: appointment
- Week 7: submission
- Weeks 7–12+: review may be slower if custody is complex
- After arrival: address registration and schooling arrangements
Example 3: Spouse with prior Schengen refusal
- Weeks 1–3: refusal analysis and cover explanation
- Weeks 2–6: corrected file preparation
- Week 6: submission
- Extra review time possible due to prior refusal history
33. Ideal document pack structure
Suggested naming convention
- 01_Application_Form.pdf
- 02_Passport_Bio_Page.pdf
- 03_Sponsor_Permit.pdf
- 04_Marriage_Certificate_Apostilled_Translated.pdf
- 05_Accommodation_Proof.pdf
- 06_Financial_Documents.pdf
- 07_Insurance.pdf
- 08_Cover_Letter.pdf
Best order
- index
- application form
- passport
- sponsor status
- family relationship documents
- accommodation
- finance
- insurance
- explanatory documents
- translations/legalization pages
Scan quality tips
- use color scans
- keep all edges visible
- combine multi-page documents correctly
- do not crop seals/stamps
34. Exact checklists
Pre-application checklist
- Confirm family route is correct
- Confirm sponsor qualifies
- Passport valid
- Civil documents collected
- Apostille/legalization checked
- Translations done
- Insurance arranged
- Finances documented
- Appointment booked
Submission-day checklist
- Passport original
- Printed application if required
- Photos
- Originals and copies
- Fee payment proof
- Sponsor packet
- Cover letter
- Appointment confirmation
Biometrics/interview-day checklist
- Arrive early
- Know sponsor details
- Know address in Lithuania
- Bring originals
- Carry refusal explanations if relevant
Arrival checklist
- Passport with visa
- Sponsor contact details
- Address information
- Insurance proof
- Key civil documents in hand luggage
Extension/renewal checklist
- Check if extension is legally possible
- Review residence permit route
- Start before expiry
- Update address and insurance
- Keep sponsor documents current
Refusal recovery checklist
- Read refusal line by line
- Identify evidence gap
- Obtain stronger proof
- Fix translation/legalization issues
- Reapply or appeal within deadline as appropriate
35. FAQs
1. Is the Lithuania D-Family visa the same as a residence permit?
No. It is a national long-stay visa, not a residence permit card.
2. Can I use this visa to live in Lithuania permanently?
Not by itself. Long-term settlement usually requires a residence permit route.
3. Can I work in Lithuania on a family Type D visa?
Not automatically. Check the exact legal basis of your visa and Lithuanian labor/migration rules.
4. Can my child apply with me?
Yes, if the child qualifies as a family member and has separate supporting documents.
5. Do both parents need to consent for a minor?
Usually yes, unless one parent has sole custody or there is a court order.
6. Is a marriage certificate enough?
Usually no. You also need sponsor status proof, finances, insurance, and often accommodation evidence.
7. Do documents need apostille or legalization?
Often yes for foreign civil documents, depending on the issuing country and recognition rules.
8. Do translations need to be sworn or certified?
Often yes, depending on the consular requirements and document type.
9. Can I apply from a country where I am only visiting?
Maybe not. Many posts require legal residence in the country of application.
10. How long is the visa valid?
Often up to 12 months, but the exact period depends on the case and visa issued.
11. Is it multiple-entry?
It can be, but check the actual visa sticker.
12. Can I travel to other Schengen countries with it?
Potentially yes within the legal rules attached to a valid Lithuanian national visa, but Lithuania remains the main destination.
13. What if my sponsor’s residence permit is about to expire?
That can weaken the application or affect future stay planning.
14. Can unmarried partners apply?
Possibly only in certain legal frameworks. Do not assume yes without official confirmation.
15. Can parents join adult children?
Only in limited cases and usually with stricter dependency proof.
16. Is health insurance mandatory?
Usually yes for a national visa.
17. What bank statements are best?
Recent official statements showing stable balances and clear ownership.
18. What if I had a Schengen refusal before?
Disclose it if asked and explain what changed.
19. Can I enter Lithuania first as a tourist and then switch?
Sometimes local rules may allow certain in-country filings, but this is risky if the original entry purpose was misaligned. Verify first.
20. Can I study while on this visa?
Possibly in a limited way, but full-time study as the main purpose may require a different route.
21. Can I do remote work for a foreign employer?
Do not assume yes. Immigration, tax, and labor issues can still arise.
22. What if my passport expires soon?
Renew before applying if possible.
23. How early should I apply?
Early enough to secure an appointment and fix document issues, but not so early that key documents expire.
24. Will the embassy keep my passport?
Usually during processing, though local practice can vary.
25. If refused, can I get a refund?
Usually no.
26. Can same-sex spouses apply?
This depends on the legal recognition route applicable to the case. Verify with official authorities.
27. Does time on this visa count toward citizenship?
Not by itself in a simple automatic way. Later citizenship depends on broader lawful residence rules.
28. What if my names differ across documents?
Provide official linking evidence and, if needed, a written explanation.
29. Can my sponsor be self-employed?
Yes, potentially, but income proof must be clear and credible.
30. What if I need urgent travel for a family emergency?
Contact the consular post with evidence. Expedite options are not guaranteed.
36. Official sources and verification
Below are official sources relevant to Lithuania national visas, migration procedures, and family residence matters. Because pages can move, verify the latest navigation if a URL changes.
- Migration Department under the Ministry of the Interior of the Republic of Lithuania: https://www.migracija.lt/
- External service portal of the Migration Department (MIGRIS): https://www.migracija.lt/en/migris
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Lithuania: https://keliauk.urm.lt/en
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs visa information portal: https://www.urm.lt/
- European Commission / official EU immigration portal page for Lithuania family reunification: https://immigration-portal.ec.europa.eu/lithuania-family-member_en
- European Commission / official EU immigration portal page for Lithuania long-stay visa and residence information: https://immigration-portal.ec.europa.eu/
- Legal Acts Register of the Republic of Lithuania: https://www.e-tar.lt/
- State Border Guard Service under the Ministry of the Interior: https://vsat.lrv.lt/en/
What to verify on the official pages
- current Type D visa fee
- application location for your country
- insurance minimums
- exact document checklist
- whether your family case should use a residence permit instead
- legalization/apostille requirements
- appointment system currently used by your consular post
37. Final verdict
The Lithuania D-Family visa is best for people whose real and documented main purpose is to join qualifying family members in Lithuania for a long stay.
Biggest benefits
- supports family unity
- allows lawful stay beyond short-stay limits
- can serve as a practical route into Lithuania before longer-term residence steps
Biggest risks
- using the wrong immigration route
- assuming automatic work rights
- weak family or sponsor documentation
- poor legalization/translation of civil documents
Top preparation advice
- Confirm whether you need a Type D visa or a temporary residence permit for family reunification.
- Build a strong relationship + sponsor status + finance + accommodation + insurance file.
- Do not guess on work rights.
- Do not ignore apostille/legalization rules.
- Apply with a clean, indexed, logically ordered pack.
When to consider another visa
Choose another route if your true main purpose is: – employment, – study, – business, – short tourism, – or immediate long-term settlement by residence permit rather than visa.
Information gaps or items to verify before applying
Some points can vary by nationality, embassy, local practice, or recent policy updates. Verify these directly with official Lithuanian authorities before filing:
- the exact current fee for a national Type D visa
- whether your specific family case is better handled as a temporary residence permit rather than a Type D visa
- whether your nationality must apply at a specific embassy/consulate
- whether your application post accepts filings from third-country residents
- the exact minimum maintenance funds currently accepted for your case
- the current insurance coverage minimum
- whether unmarried partners qualify under your exact legal basis
- whether parents, adult children, or other dependants qualify in your case
- whether your civil documents need apostille, legalization, notarization, or certified translation
- whether the visa, if approved, will be single-entry or multiple-entry
- whether your exact family-based status gives work rights
- local rules on address registration after arrival
- whether a police certificate is required for your nationality or case type
- whether there are any current security screening delays
- whether same-sex spouse/partner cases are processed under the same framework in your exact circumstance
- whether you can apply inside Lithuania for a follow-on residence permit after arrival
- any recent changes in MIGRIS, appointment booking, or document upload procedures