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Short Description: A complete guide to Sri Lanka’s Residence Visa – My Dream Home Program for retirees, covering eligibility, deposits, process, family, renewal, risks, and official sources.

Last Verified On: April 7, 2026

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country Sri Lanka
Visa name Residence Visa – My Dream Home Program
Visa short name My Dream Home
Category Retirement / long-stay residence visa
Main purpose Long-term residence in Sri Lanka for foreign nationals of retirement age with required funds
Typical applicant Retirees seeking to live in Sri Lanka without working
Validity Commonly issued as a residence visa, usually renewable; exact grant length should be confirmed with Sri Lanka Immigration at the time of application
Stay duration Long-term stay while visa remains valid and conditions are met
Entries allowed Typically tied to residence status; confirm current re-entry conditions with Sri Lanka Immigration
Extension possible? Yes, generally renewable if conditions continue to be met
Work allowed? No, not for employment in Sri Lanka under this retirement route
Study allowed? Limited; casual or recreational study may be possible, but this is not a student route
Family allowed? Yes, spouse and certain dependents may be included or obtain linked residence status, subject to proof and extra financial requirements
PR path? No clear official permanent residence pathway is publicly stated for this program
Citizenship path? Indirect at best; Sri Lankan citizenship is governed by separate nationality laws and this visa is not advertised as a citizenship track

Sri Lanka’s Residence Visa – My Dream Home Program is a retirement residence route for qualifying foreign nationals who want to live in Sri Lanka long term after retirement.

In plain English, it is not a tourist visa and not a work visa. It is a residence visa category administered by the Department of Immigration and Emigration, Sri Lanka, intended for older foreign nationals with sufficient independent means.

What this visa is

This program is designed for retirees who can support themselves financially in Sri Lanka and meet the program’s deposit and remittance conditions.

Why it exists

The policy appears aimed at: – attracting financially self-sufficient retirees, – encouraging inward remittances and foreign currency deposits, – supporting long-term lawful residence without opening the local labor market to retired foreign nationals.

Who it is meant for

The core target group is: – foreign nationals of retirement age, – people with stable funds from abroad, – retirees who want to reside in Sri Lanka for lifestyle reasons.

How it fits into Sri Lanka’s immigration system

Sri Lanka uses different immigration routes for: – tourism/business visits, – employment, – investment, – student residence, – religious residence, – dependent residence, – and other residence categories.

The My Dream Home Program sits within the residence visa framework rather than short-stay visitor permission.

Is it a visa, permit, or residence status?

Officially, this is generally referred to as a Residence Visa under the My Dream Home Programme. In practice, applicants should treat it as a long-stay residence authorization rather than a normal short-stay entry visa.

Alternate naming

Official/public naming commonly includes: – Residence Visa – My Dream Home ProgrammeMy Dream Home Programme – sometimes spelled Program or Programme depending on source formatting

I did not find a publicly stated subclass code in the official sources reviewed. If your embassy or a Sri Lanka mission uses an internal code, verify directly with them.

2. Who should apply for this visa?

Best-fit applicants

Retirees

This is the ideal applicant group. If you are retired, over the qualifying age threshold, and have the required funds, this is the most relevant Sri Lanka long-stay route.

Spouses/partners of retirees

A spouse may be able to accompany the main applicant, subject to additional deposit/remittance requirements and proof of relationship.

Children/dependents

Dependent children may be possible in some cases, but this is one of the areas where public guidance is thinner and should be confirmed case by case with Sri Lanka Immigration.

Who should generally not use this visa

Tourists

If you only want a short visit, use Sri Lanka’s visitor/tourist entry route, not a retirement residence visa.

Business visitors

If your purpose is meetings, conferences, or short business visits, use the proper visitor/business entry route.

Job seekers and employees

Do not use this route if you intend to work in Sri Lanka. You should look at the correct employment or investor-related residence category instead.

Students

This is not a student route. Use a student residence route if your main purpose is study.

Founders/entrepreneurs/investors

If your main purpose is running a business or investing under an investment scheme, this retirement route may be the wrong category.

Digital nomads / remote workers

Sri Lanka’s public guidance for this retirement visa does not present it as a remote-work visa. Because remote work rules are often a gray area in many countries, applicants should not assume work for an overseas employer is permitted unless Sri Lanka Immigration confirms it in writing.

Religious workers

Use the religious residence route, not this one.

Artists/athletes/journalists

If your purpose involves performances, media work, competitions, or paid appearances, this is likely the wrong category.

Medical travelers

If you are seeking treatment only, use the appropriate short-stay/medical entry route if available.

Diplomatic/official travelers

Use official/diplomatic channels.

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted purpose

The main permitted use is:

  • long-term residence in Sri Lanka after retirement

Likely incidental lawful activities include: – residing in Sri Lanka, – maintaining a home, – ordinary private life activities, – spending retirement income, – family life with eligible accompanying spouse/dependents.

Prohibited or restricted uses

This route is not meant for: – local employment, – taking up a job in Sri Lanka, – operating as a normal work-permit substitute, – enrolling as a full-time student under a study-based purpose, – journalism or media work without proper authorization, – missionary or religious work without the appropriate religious category, – paid performances, – internship/work placements.

Gray areas and misunderstandings

Tourism

You may of course travel around Sri Lanka while resident, but this is not a tourist visa.

Meetings

Occasional private or incidental meetings are one thing; using a retirement visa for systematic business activity is another. If business activity is central, check another route.

Remote work

This is a major gray area. Sri Lanka’s official retirement-visa materials do not clearly frame this as a lawful remote-work category. Do not assume remote work is allowed simply because the employer or clients are overseas.

Volunteering

If volunteering becomes structured, service-based, or resembles work, you should get formal guidance before doing it.

Marriage

Marriage itself is not the visa purpose, but marriage to the principal retiree can matter for dependent eligibility.

Medical treatment

Retirees can of course access healthcare privately, but this visa is not a medical-treatment-specific route.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Item Official/Publicly Used Name
Official program name My Dream Home Programme
Official visa label Residence Visa
Combined name Residence Visa – My Dream Home Programme
Category type Retirement residence
Related categories often confused with it Tourist visa, business visa, investor residence, dependent residence, employment residence

Old vs current naming

Publicly available official pages continue to refer to My Dream Home Programme. I found no official notice that it has been discontinued, replaced, or renamed as of the verification date above. Still, applicants should check the current Sri Lanka Immigration page before applying.

5. Eligibility criteria

Core official eligibility

Based on official Sri Lankan sources, the key conditions generally include:

  • applicant must be a foreign national
  • applicant must be at least 55 years old
  • applicant must be in receipt of a monthly income/remittance from abroad
  • applicant must place a required deposit in a Sri Lankan bank in foreign currency
  • applicant must maintain the required financial conditions for residence
  • applicant must not seek local employment under this route

Financial thresholds commonly stated in official sources

The public official guidance commonly states: – a deposit of USD 15,000 or equivalent in approved foreign currency for the main applicant – an additional USD 750 or equivalent for each dependent – a monthly inward remittance/income requirement, commonly stated as USD 1,500 for the main applicant and USD 750 for each dependent

Because financial thresholds can be updated, applicants should verify the latest exact wording directly with the Department of Immigration and Emigration.

Nationality rules

No general nationality restriction is clearly stated on the main public program description I reviewed. However: – nationality-specific security checks, – embassy handling rules, – sanctions-related banking issues, – and document legalization requirements

may differ by country.

Passport validity

Applicants should hold a valid passport. The exact minimum remaining validity is not always stated on every public page for this specific route, so use a conservative standard: ideally at least 6 months validity and enough blank pages. Verify exact mission-specific requirements.

Age

  • Main applicant: typically 55 years or older
  • Dependents: separate rules apply

Education, language, work experience

Not publicly stated as core criteria for this retirement route: – no points test, – no language test publicly stated, – no education minimum publicly stated, – no work experience requirement publicly stated.

Sponsorship / invitation / job offer

Not generally required in the way work or student visas require them.

Relationship proof

Required for spouse/dependents if included.

Accommodation proof

Official public guidance is limited on whether pre-arranged accommodation proof is mandatory for this specific route. In practice, it may still be helpful.

Onward travel

Not a central residence-visa requirement, but border officers may still ask about travel plans and where you will stay.

Health / character

Sri Lanka may require applicants to be of good character and may request: – police clearance, – medical evidence, – or additional checks.

These requirements are not always fully detailed on every public-facing page for this route, so verify case-specifically.

Insurance

I did not find a clear, universal official statement making private health insurance mandatory for all My Dream Home applicants. Because this is a retirement route, private medical coverage is still strongly advisable even if not expressly mandatory.

Biometrics

Public guidance is limited. Check with the processing office or Sri Lanka mission handling your application.

Intent requirement

The intent should align with: – retirement, – long-term residence, – self-sufficiency, – no unlawful work.

Local registration rules

Residence visa holders may need to comply with local registration or reporting requirements depending on how the visa is issued and renewed. Confirm this upon approval and after arrival.

Quota/cap/ballot

No official quota, cap, or lottery was identified in the public sources reviewed.

Embassy-specific rules

Yes, these may exist, especially regarding: – application channel, – legalized documents, – translations, – and whether to apply abroad or in Sri Lanka.

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Likely ineligibility factors

  • under the minimum age
  • inability to show required deposit
  • inability to show monthly foreign remittance/income
  • intent to work in Sri Lanka
  • false or unverifiable financial evidence
  • relationship claims without proof for dependents
  • passport problems
  • serious criminal/security concerns

Common refusal triggers

Wrong visa purpose

Applying under retirement while your actual plan is employment or business operations.

Insufficient funds

Not meeting the deposit or monthly remittance threshold.

Unclear source of funds

Large deposits without explanation can cause concern.

Incomplete application

Missing civil documents, missing bank confirmation, or missing passport pages.

Poorly documented dependents

Marriage certificate, birth certificate, custody evidence, or dependency evidence not sufficient.

Immigration history issues

Prior overstays, deportation, or status violations may lead to refusal or deeper scrutiny.

Criminal or security concerns

Police or security issues can affect approval.

Unverifiable documents

Bank statements, certificates, or translations that cannot be authenticated.

Translation/notarization errors

Especially for civil status documents.

Interview mistakes

If interviewed, inconsistent answers about retirement, finances, family, or work plans can hurt the case.

7. Benefits of this visa

Main benefits

  • lawful long-term residence in Sri Lanka
  • a route specifically designed for retirees
  • ability to live in Sri Lanka without repeated short-stay tourist renewals
  • possibility of including spouse and some dependents
  • renewable status, if conditions remain satisfied

Family benefits

Depending on approved structure, spouse and certain dependents may accompany the principal applicant.

Travel flexibility

Residence status may offer easier long-term living than repeated visitor entries, but you should verify current re-entry mechanics.

Duration benefits

It is substantially more suitable than tourism status for those genuinely relocating for retirement.

Work/study rights

The main tradeoff is that this route offers residence, not local labor-market access.

Long-term residence value

For retirees who can meet the financial criteria, this can be one of the clearest lawful routes to remain in Sri Lanka over time.

8. Limitations and restrictions

Main restrictions

  • no local employment
  • not a substitute for a work permit
  • not a student visa
  • continued compliance with deposit/remittance conditions required
  • dependent rights are limited and should not be assumed to include work rights
  • renewal is not automatic

Possible administrative obligations

Applicants may need to: – keep passport valid, – maintain qualifying bank deposit, – continue inward remittance, – notify relevant authorities of major status changes, – renew before expiry.

Re-entry and travel restrictions

These can vary depending on how the residence visa is endorsed and processed. Confirm before travel outside Sri Lanka.

Public funds

There is no indication this route gives access to Sri Lankan public welfare benefits.

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Validity

Official public material confirms this is a residence visa, but exact grant periods are not always clearly laid out on every public-facing summary page. Historically, such visas are typically issued for a set period and renewed if conditions continue.

Stay duration

You may stay while the residence visa remains valid and conditions are met.

Entries

Not always clearly stated on the program summary page. Residence visa holders should confirm: – whether separate re-entry permission is needed, – whether multiple exits and returns are permitted automatically.

When the clock starts

Usually from issuance/endorsement of residence status, but verify on the visa endorsement itself.

Overstay consequences

Overstaying can lead to: – fines, – future immigration issues, – difficulty renewing or re-entering, – possible removal action.

Renewal timing

Apply well before expiry. A good practical window is at least 30 to 60 days before expiration, unless official instructions say otherwise.

Grace periods

No public universal grace rule was identified for this category. Do not rely on an assumed grace period.

10. Complete document checklist

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Application form Official residence visa application form Starts the case Old form version, incomplete fields
Cover letter Applicant explanation of retirement plan Helps explain purpose and finances Too vague, mentions work plans
Passport copy set Bio page and used pages Identity and travel history Missing pages, unclear scans

B. Identity/travel documents

  • valid passport
  • passport-size photos
  • previous passports if relevant
  • proof of legal stay in current country if applying from a third country

Common mistake: submitting a passport with too little validity left.

C. Financial documents

  • bank confirmation of required foreign currency deposit in Sri Lanka
  • recent bank statements from abroad
  • proof of pension or monthly income/remittance
  • evidence of lawful source of funds

Why needed: this is the heart of the program.

Common mistake: unexplained lump sums shortly before application.

D. Employment/business documents

Usually not central for retirees, but you may include: – retirement letter, – pension authority statements, – proof of former employment or retirement status if relevant.

E. Education documents

Not applicable for this visa unless specifically requested.

F. Relationship/family documents

  • marriage certificate for spouse
  • birth certificates for children
  • custody/consent documents for minors where relevant
  • dependency evidence if a child is older but claimed as dependent

G. Accommodation/travel documents

May include: – address in Sri Lanka, – lease, hotel booking, or host details if requested.

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

Not generally a sponsor-driven route. If staying with family/friends initially, host details may still help.

I. Health/insurance documents

If requested: – medical reports, – health declaration, – private medical insurance evidence.

J. Country-specific extras

Depending on nationality or place of application: – police clearance certificate, – document legalization/apostille, – certified translation.

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

  • birth certificate
  • parental consent
  • custody orders
  • school letters if relevant

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

If documents are not in English, expect the need for: – certified translations, – notarization, – and possibly legalization/apostille depending on the issuing country and office receiving the application.

Warning: Rules here can vary by embassy and by document type.

M. Photo specifications

Use current Sri Lanka visa photo standards from the relevant application instructions. If not stated, use standard recent passport photos with: – plain background, – clear face, – no heavy edits, – matching passport appearance.

11. Financial requirements

This is the most important section for this visa.

Core financial rules publicly associated with this program

Official Sri Lankan public guidance commonly states:

  • USD 15,000 deposit for the main applicant
  • USD 750 additional deposit for each dependent
  • USD 1,500 monthly remittance/income for the main applicant
  • USD 750 monthly remittance/income per dependent

What kind of proof is likely accepted

  • bank letter confirming fixed deposit or qualifying foreign currency deposit in Sri Lanka
  • foreign bank statements
  • pension slips/statements
  • proof of annuity, retirement income, or other regular overseas income
  • remittance records

Source of funds

Funds should be: – lawful, – traceable, – documented.

Seasoning rules

I did not find a publicly stated fixed “seasoning period” for these funds on the official page reviewed. But in practice, having statements for 3 to 6 months is helpful unless the office asks for another period.

Who can sponsor

This program is usually based on the applicant’s own financial capacity. Third-party sponsorship is not the core structure. If someone else financially supports you, confirm first whether that is acceptable.

Hidden costs

In addition to the required deposit/remittance, budget for: – translations, – notary/legalization, – police certificates, – medical costs if required, – travel, – rent, – private health insurance, – bank charges, – visa fees.

Currency issues

If your funds are not in USD: – ask the receiving bank/immigration office what exchange rate basis is used, – keep records showing the equivalent amount clearly.

Proof strength tips

Strong evidence includes: – bank letter on official letterhead, – account statements showing stable funds, – pension statements, – source-of-funds explanation for major transfers.

12. Fees and total cost

Official fee position

One of the challenges with this visa is that publicly posted fee information may be incomplete, updated, or handled through different offices. For exact current fees, applicants should check the latest official immigration fee schedule or ask the Department of Immigration and Emigration directly.

Likely cost categories

Cost Item Official Status
Application / residence visa fee Verify current official fee
Renewal fee Verify current official fee
Dependent fee Verify current official fee
Bank deposit Core program requirement, not a fee
Police certificate Country-specific cost
Medical exam If requested
Translation/notary/legalization Variable
Courier/service charges Variable
Travel costs Variable
Private health insurance Variable but advisable

Total cost reality

The largest financial burden is usually not the filing fee but: – the required deposit, – proof of steady monthly funds, – relocation and living costs.

Warning: Do not rely on old blog posts or forums for current fee amounts.

13. Step-by-step application process

Because operational handling can vary, this is the safest official-practical sequence.

1. Confirm this is the correct visa

Make sure your real purpose is retirement residence, not work, study, or business activity.

2. Gather official guidance

Check the Sri Lanka Immigration page for My Dream Home and any relevant forms.

3. Prepare financial arrangements

Arrange: – required Sri Lankan bank deposit, – proof of monthly foreign remittance/income, – supporting bank statements.

4. Gather civil documents

Collect: – passport, – photos, – marriage/birth certificates if family is included, – police/medical records if required.

5. Complete the application

Use the latest official form/process required by the handling office.

6. Pay fees

Pay the official application/residence fee as instructed.

7. Submit the application

Submission may be: – directly through Sri Lanka Immigration, – through a Sri Lankan mission abroad, – or by another official channel depending on location.

8. Attend biometrics/interview if requested

Not always clearly stated publicly, but comply if called.

9. Respond to additional document requests

This is common, especially for: – finances, – dependents, – translations, – source of funds.

10. Receive decision

If approved, follow the instructions for: – visa endorsement, – residence authorization, – passport submission if needed, – arrival arrangements.

11. Travel to Sri Lanka if applying from abroad

Carry key supporting documents in your hand luggage.

12. Post-arrival compliance

Complete any registration, endorsement, or renewal setup required.

14. Processing time

Official standard times

I did not identify a reliable, publicly posted standard processing time dedicated specifically to the My Dream Home Program on the official sources reviewed.

What affects timing

  • completeness of the application
  • bank deposit verification
  • document legalization needs
  • police/security checks
  • number of dependents
  • office workload
  • whether you apply inside Sri Lanka or through a mission

Priority options

No official premium/priority route was identified for this category.

Practical expectation

Applicants should allow several weeks to a few months, depending on complexity. This is a practical estimate, not an official service standard.

Warning: Do not book irreversible travel before approval unless you are prepared to absorb the risk.

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

Public guidance is not fully clear for this exact route. Some applicants may be asked for fingerprints/photo capture depending on where and how they apply.

Interview

Not always required, but possible.

Typical questions if interviewed

  • Why do you want to retire in Sri Lanka?
  • How will you support yourself?
  • What is your monthly income?
  • Will you work in Sri Lanka?
  • Who is accompanying you?
  • Where will you live?

Medical

A medical certificate may be requested in some cases. Confirm with the handling office.

Police clearance

This may be required, particularly for long-stay residence. Expect to provide a police certificate from your country of citizenship and/or recent residence if instructed.

Exemptions

Age, nationality, or office-specific exemptions are not clearly published for this route, so verify directly.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

Official approval data

I did not find official publicly released approval-rate statistics specifically for the My Dream Home Program.

Practical refusal patterns

Most likely weak points are: – failing the age threshold, – financial evidence not meeting threshold, – unclear source of funds, – trying to use a retirement visa for employment, – incomplete dependent proof, – inconsistent statements.

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Practical legal steps

Use a precise cover letter

Explain: – your age and retirement status, – why you want to live in Sri Lanka, – your monthly income, – your deposit compliance, – who is accompanying you, – confirmation that you will not work.

Present finances clearly

Include: – one summary sheet, – deposit proof, – monthly income proof, – bank statements, – source-of-funds explanation.

Explain unusual transactions

If a large deposit came from: – property sale, – pension commutation, – inheritance, – investment liquidation,

attach proof.

Organize family evidence carefully

Use separate labeled sections for spouse and each child.

Translate properly

Use certified translations and keep originals/certified copies together.

Apply with enough time

Leave room for follow-up requests and document corrections.

Keep your narrative consistent

Your application form, cover letter, bank documents, and any interview answers should all match.

18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

Open and document the bank deposit early

Because this visa depends heavily on financial compliance, applicants often reduce delays by arranging the qualifying bank evidence before filing.

Create a financial summary page

Reviewing officers appreciate a simple table showing: – deposit amount, – date placed, – monthly pension/income, – dependent count, – total remittance requirement.

Label every file with dates

Example: – 01_Passport_MainApplicant_2026-04.pdf02_BankDepositLetter_ABCBank_2026-03-29.pdf

Explain family composition proactively

If a child is dependent, explain exactly why and attach supporting evidence.

Be transparent about past refusals or overstays

If asked, disclose them honestly and attach a short explanation.

Contact the embassy or immigration office only when necessary

Good reasons: – conflicting official instructions, – unclear document legalization requirement, – dependent eligibility uncertainty.

Bad reasons: – asking for updates too frequently, – asking questions already answered on the official page.

Keep hard copies while traveling

Border officers may want to see: – approval letter, – address in Sri Lanka, – proof of funds, – return or onward plan if relevant.

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

When needed

Even if not explicitly mandatory, a cover letter is highly advisable for this visa.

What to include

  1. Your identity and passport details
  2. Your age and retirement status
  3. Why you want to live in Sri Lanka
  4. Confirmation of deposit and monthly income
  5. Details of accompanying spouse/dependents
  6. Statement that you do not intend to work in Sri Lanka
  7. List of enclosed documents

What not to say

  • vague business plans that sound like local work
  • “I will look for opportunities after arrival”
  • contradictory statements about employment or study

Sample outline

  • Introduction
  • Retirement background
  • Financial compliance summary
  • Family details
  • Residence plan in Sri Lanka
  • Compliance statement
  • Document list
  • Thank you

Tone

Use: – formal, – short, – factual, – calm.

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

Is sponsorship relevant?

Not in the usual work/student sense. This route is primarily self-funded.

If staying with a host at first

A host letter may help, stating: – host name and ID/passport details, – address, – relationship to applicant, – period of stay, – confirmation of accommodation.

Sponsor mistakes

  • host letter without proof of address
  • host cannot be contacted
  • host letter conflicts with application details

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Are dependents allowed?

Yes, spouse and certain dependents may be possible, subject to: – relationship proof, – additional deposit, – additional monthly remittance requirement.

Who qualifies

Clearly qualifying: – legally married spouse

Possible but verify: – dependent children

Less clear: – unmarried partners, adult children, other relatives

Proof required

  • marriage certificate
  • birth certificate
  • passport copies
  • dependency proof
  • custody or consent documents where applicable

Work/study rights of dependents

Do not assume dependents can work. Public guidance does not present this as a dependent work-rights route.

Age-out rules

Not clearly published on the main public page reviewed. Verify directly for children approaching adulthood.

Same-sex partners

Sri Lanka’s immigration treatment of same-sex spouses/partners under this retirement route is not clearly published in public guidance reviewed. Applicants in this situation should seek written clarification from Sri Lanka Immigration or the relevant mission before applying.

22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules

Work rights

Main applicant

  • No local employment under this retirement route.

Dependents

  • no publicly stated automatic work right.

Self-employment

Do not assume self-employment or freelancing in Sri Lanka is allowed under a retirement visa.

Remote work

Official guidance is not clear. Because this can create tax and immigration risk, get written clarification before relying on this route for active remote work.

Volunteering

Only low-risk informal activity may be acceptable; structured service work may require another status.

Passive income

Receiving pension, annuity, investment income, or other passive income from abroad is consistent with the nature of a retirement route.

Study rights

This is not designed for full-time study. Short recreational learning may be tolerated, but full academic enrollment should use a student route.

Business activity

Casual private investment management is different from actively doing business in Sri Lanka. If your main activity is running a business, use the appropriate category.

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

Entry clearance vs final admission

Even with approval, border officers still make the final admission decision.

Documents to carry

Carry printed and digital copies of: – passport – approval/residence documents – address in Sri Lanka – bank deposit proof – proof of monthly income – marriage/birth certificates if traveling with family

Onward/return tickets

Requirements can vary depending on how the visa is issued and whether residence has already been endorsed. Check before travel.

Accommodation proof

Be ready to show where you will stay initially.

Sponsor/host contact

Keep a reachable phone number for your host, landlord, or local contact.

Re-entry after travel

Check whether your residence visa allows seamless re-entry or whether a separate endorsement is needed.

New passport

If your passport expires, ask Sri Lanka Immigration how to transfer or link the residence status to your new passport.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Can it be extended or renewed?

Yes, this residence route is generally understood to be renewable if: – you still meet the age requirement, – maintain the required deposit, – maintain the monthly remittance requirement, – comply with visa conditions.

Inside-country vs outside-country renewal

This is typically something to handle with Sri Lanka Immigration, but exact procedures can vary. Confirm before expiry.

Switching to another visa

Not clearly advertised as a conversion route to work or study. If your purpose changes, ask Sri Lanka Immigration whether you must: – apply for a different residence category, – exit and reapply, – or convert in-country.

Restoration/reinstatement

No clear public restoration regime specific to this category was identified. Do not let the visa expire.

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

Permanent residency

I did not find official public guidance stating that the My Dream Home Program leads directly to permanent residence.

Citizenship

Sri Lankan citizenship is governed separately. This retirement visa is not marketed as a citizenship pathway.

Indirect possibility

Long-term residence may have practical value for those building lawful residence history, but applicants should not assume: – PR eligibility, – citizenship counting, – or automatic naturalization benefits.

Warning: If PR or citizenship is your main goal, get specific legal advice and verify nationality law separately.

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Tax residence risk

Long-term residence can create tax residence issues. This depends on: – Sri Lankan tax law, – your physical presence, – source of income, – tax treaties if any.

You should get tax advice before relocating.

Compliance obligations

Likely obligations include: – keeping a valid passport, – renewing on time, – maintaining the qualifying deposit, – maintaining the remittance threshold, – complying with Sri Lankan immigration laws.

Address registration / local reporting

May apply depending on the office and form of residence endorsement. Confirm after arrival.

Overstay and status violations

Working without authorization, overstaying, or failing to maintain conditions can jeopardize the visa.

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

Visa waivers / bilateral exceptions

I found no publicly stated nationality exemption from the core retirement criteria of this program.

What may vary by nationality

  • document legalization
  • police certificate standards
  • sanctions/banking limitations
  • mission-specific filing route
  • additional security checks

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Possible as dependents, but documentary requirements are stricter.

Divorced/separated parents

Expect custody orders and consent documents if a child is moving.

Adopted children

Provide formal adoption records recognized by the relevant authorities.

Same-sex spouses/partners

Public guidance is unclear; verify in writing before filing.

Stateless persons / refugees

This route may be difficult due to passport and civil-document requirements. Check directly with Sri Lanka Immigration.

Dual nationals

Apply with the passport you intend to use consistently for travel and residence.

Prior refusals

Disclose honestly if asked and explain what changed.

Overstays / previous deportation

These may seriously affect approval and should be addressed transparently.

Expired passport but valid visa

You would usually need to carry both old and new passports, but confirm current Sri Lanka practice.

Applying from a third country

May be possible if you are lawfully resident there, but mission acceptance policies vary.

Gender marker/name mismatch

Use supporting legal documents and a brief explanation note.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs Fact

Myth Fact
“It’s basically a tourist visa for retirees.” No. It is a residence visa category, not ordinary tourism status.
“I can work remotely without checking.” Not safely assumed. Official public guidance does not clearly authorize remote work.
“Only the deposit matters.” No. Ongoing monthly inward remittance/income is also central.
“All dependents are automatically covered.” No. Each dependent needs eligibility proof and usually additional financial support.
“If I’m approved, entry is guaranteed.” No. Final admission is still at the border.
“This leads automatically to PR.” No such direct official pathway is publicly stated.
“A consultant can fix weak finances.” No lawful adviser can replace missing eligibility.

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

What happens after refusal

You should receive a refusal decision or notice, though the level of detail may vary.

Appeal or review

I did not find a clearly published public appeal framework specifically for refusals under this program. That does not mean no remedy exists, only that it is not clearly set out in the public materials reviewed.

Reapplication

You can generally consider reapplying if: – you now meet the financial threshold, – documents were corrected, – you can better explain your case.

Refunds

Application fees are often non-refundable once processing starts, but verify the current policy.

When to seek legal help

Consider professional help if: – refused for fraud/misrepresentation concerns, – prior deportation or overstay exists, – family/dependency status is complex, – nationality/document issues are unusual.

31. Arrival in Sri Lanka: what happens next?

At immigration control

Expect possible questions about: – residence approval, – where you will live, – financial support, – family members traveling with you.

After arrival

Depending on how your residence visa was processed, you may need to: – complete endorsement formalities, – confirm local address, – liaise with Sri Lanka Immigration for residence validity, – maintain the required bank arrangements.

First 30 days practical checklist

  • confirm your visa/endowment details are correct
  • keep copies of all immigration documents
  • finalize long-term accommodation
  • verify renewal timing
  • confirm whether any local registration is required
  • arrange private healthcare coverage if not already done
  • understand local banking access and remittance process

32. Real-world timeline examples

Scenario 1: Solo retiree

  • Weeks 1–2: review official rules, confirm eligibility
  • Weeks 2–6: arrange documents and bank deposit
  • Weeks 6–8: submit application
  • Weeks 8–16: processing and possible follow-up
  • After approval: travel and complete residence formalities

Scenario 2: Retiree with spouse

  • Add 2–4 weeks for marriage certificate, translation, and extra financial evidence

Scenario 3: Retiree with spouse and child

  • Add time for birth certificate, school records if relevant, custody/consent review

Scenario 4: Applicant with complex finances

  • Add several weeks to document source of funds, asset sales, annuity records, or multiple pensions

Scenario 5: Applicant with prior immigration refusal elsewhere

  • Add time for explanation letter and supplemental documentation

33. Ideal document pack structure

Recommended file order

  1. Cover letter
  2. Application form
  3. Passport copy
  4. Photo
  5. Retirement/pension proof
  6. Sri Lanka bank deposit confirmation
  7. Foreign bank statements
  8. Monthly income/remittance evidence
  9. Marriage certificate
  10. Child documents
  11. Police/medical documents
  12. Translation certifications
  13. Index of contents

Naming convention

Use: – 01_CoverLetter_MainApplicant.pdf02_ApplicationForm.pdf03_Passport.pdf04_DepositConfirmation_SLBank.pdf

Scan quality tips

  • color scans
  • upright pages
  • no cropped edges
  • file size within portal limits
  • searchable PDFs if possible

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • confirm age eligibility
  • confirm retirement purpose
  • confirm no intent to work
  • confirm deposit amount
  • confirm monthly remittance requirement
  • gather passport and family civil documents
  • check translation/legalization needs
  • verify current official forms and fees

Submission-day checklist

  • signed form
  • passport copy complete
  • photos included
  • financial proofs included
  • spouse/dependent docs included
  • cover letter attached
  • fee payment ready
  • copies saved

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

  • passport original
  • appointment notice
  • printed application copy
  • financial summary sheet
  • originals of civil documents
  • concise answers prepared

Arrival checklist

  • passport with visa/residence approval
  • address details
  • host/hotel contact
  • printed financial proof
  • family certificates
  • copies in hand luggage

Extension/renewal checklist

  • apply before expiry
  • updated bank deposit proof
  • updated income/remittance proof
  • updated passport copies
  • address proof if requested
  • family status updates if relevant

Refusal recovery checklist

  • read refusal reasons carefully
  • identify each missing/weak point
  • gather corrected evidence
  • prepare concise rebuttal/explanation
  • verify whether review or fresh application is better

35. FAQs

1. What is the minimum age for Sri Lanka’s My Dream Home retirement visa?

Official public guidance commonly states 55 years.

2. Is this a tourist visa?

No. It is a residence visa for retirees.

3. Do I need to invest in a business?

No general business investment is the core requirement. The main requirement is the financial deposit/remittance structure for retirees.

4. How much deposit is required?

Official public guidance commonly states USD 15,000 for the main applicant, plus USD 750 per dependent.

5. Is there also a monthly income requirement?

Yes. Public guidance commonly states USD 1,500 per month for the main applicant and USD 750 per dependent.

6. Can my spouse come with me?

Usually yes, subject to proof of marriage and extra financial requirements.

7. Can children be included?

Possibly, but the exact dependent rules should be verified directly.

8. Can I work in Sri Lanka on this visa?

No, not for local employment.

9. Can I run a company in Sri Lanka on this visa?

Do not assume so. If business operation is your main goal, use the appropriate business/investment route.

10. Can I work remotely for a foreign company?

This is not clearly authorized in the public retirement-visa guidance. Get written clarification before relying on that.

11. Do I need health insurance?

It may not always be expressly stated as mandatory in public guidance, but it is strongly advisable.

12. Is a police certificate required?

It may be requested for long-stay residence. Confirm with the handling office.

13. Do I need a medical exam?

Possibly, depending on the office and case.

14. Is there an interview?

Sometimes, but not always.

15. How long does processing take?

No clear official standard was found for this exact route. Expect several weeks to a few months.

16. Can I apply from inside Sri Lanka?

Possibly, depending on current procedures. Verify with Sri Lanka Immigration.

17. Is the visa renewable?

Yes, generally if conditions continue to be met.

18. Do I need to keep the deposit in Sri Lanka?

Yes, that is a core feature of the program as publicly described.

19. Can the deposit be in a local-currency account?

The public description refers to foreign currency deposit requirements; confirm current bank/immigration specifications.

20. Can someone else fund me?

This route is designed around the retiree’s own financial capacity. Third-party support should be confirmed before relying on it.

21. Does this visa lead to permanent residence?

No direct official PR pathway is clearly stated.

22. Does time on this visa count toward citizenship?

No clear official statement says it does. Do not assume.

23. What if my passport expires after approval?

Ask Sri Lanka Immigration how to link or transfer the residence status to the new passport.

24. What if I was previously refused a visa to another country?

That does not automatically bar you, but answer honestly if asked.

25. Can unmarried partners apply together?

Public guidance is unclear. Legally married spouses are the clearest dependent category.

26. Can I buy property in Sri Lanka on this visa?

Property ownership is governed by separate Sri Lankan laws. This visa does not itself guarantee property-purchase rights.

27. Do I need to show accommodation before approval?

Not always clearly stated, but having an address plan is helpful.

28. What happens if I fail to maintain the monthly remittance?

Your renewal or continued compliance could be at risk.

29. Can I leave Sri Lanka and come back freely?

Possibly, but confirm current re-entry mechanics linked to your residence status.

30. What is the biggest reason applications fail?

Usually weak or non-compliant financial evidence, or using the wrong visa for the real purpose.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are official sources relevant to Sri Lanka immigration and the My Dream Home retirement residence route. Applicants should always verify the latest rules directly.

37. Final verdict

Sri Lanka’s Residence Visa – My Dream Home Program is best for genuine retirees aged 55+ who want to live long term in Sri Lanka and can comfortably meet the required deposit and monthly overseas income/remittance conditions.

Biggest benefits

  • purpose-built for retirees
  • long-term lawful residence
  • possible family inclusion
  • renewable structure

Biggest risks

  • financial documentation problems
  • misunderstanding work restrictions
  • unclear assumptions about remote work or dependent rights
  • relying on outdated fee/process information

Top preparation advice

  • verify the latest official financial thresholds
  • arrange deposit evidence early
  • prepare a strong financial summary
  • be explicit that you will not work in Sri Lanka
  • confirm dependent rules in writing if family is involved

When to consider another visa

Choose another route if your real purpose is: – employment, – starting/running a business, – studying full time, – religious work, – or long-term residence tied to a family relationship other than retirement.

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

Before applying, verify these points directly with the Department of Immigration and Emigration, Sri Lanka or the relevant Sri Lankan mission:

  • current application fee and renewal fee
  • exact current validity period granted on first approval
  • whether applications must be filed abroad, in Sri Lanka, or either
  • whether police clearance is mandatory for all applicants
  • whether medical certificates are mandatory for all applicants
  • exact dependent eligibility rules, especially for adult children
  • whether unmarried partners are recognized
  • current re-entry rules for residence visa holders
  • whether health insurance is mandatory or only recommended
  • exact bank/account format required for the foreign currency deposit
  • whether remote work for foreign employers is allowed, restricted, or prohibited
  • embassy-specific translation and legalization requirements
  • nationality-specific security or documentary requirements
  • whether any recent amendments changed the deposit/remittance thresholds or age requirement

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