We work hard to keep this guide accurate. If you spot outdated info, email updates to contact@desinri.com.

Short Description: A complete, practical guide to the Mauritius Premium Visa: eligibility, documents, remote work rules, family options, renewal, costs, and risks.

Last Verified On: 2026-04-05

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country Mauritius
Visa name Premium Visa
Visa short name Premium
Category Long-stay remote residence/extended visitor visa route
Main purpose Long stay in Mauritius for tourism, retirement, or remote work for clients/employers/businesses based outside Mauritius
Typical applicant Remote workers, digital nomads, long-stay visitors, retirees, families relocating temporarily
Validity Up to 1 year
Stay duration Up to 1 year per approval
Entries allowed Multiple entries, as described by official Economic Development Board guidance
Extension possible? Yes, renewal/extension is possible subject to continued eligibility and approval
Work allowed? Limited: remote work for employer/business/clients outside Mauritius is permitted; working in the Mauritian labor market is not the purpose of this visa
Study allowed? Limited/unclear: not designed as a student visa; short informal study may be possible, but formal study should be checked with authorities and may require another permit
Family allowed? Yes, spouse/partner and dependents can be included or apply as accompanying family, subject to evidence and funds
PR path? No direct PR path stated for this visa
Citizenship path? Indirect at best; this visa is not a direct citizenship route

The Mauritius Premium Visa is a long-stay immigration facility introduced to allow non-citizens to remain in Mauritius for up to one year, with possible renewal, while:

  • holidaying for an extended period,
  • retiring temporarily,
  • or living in Mauritius while working remotely for an employer, company, or clients based outside Mauritius.

It was introduced as part of Mauritius’s strategy to attract long-stay visitors and remote workers.

In practice, it sits somewhere between a long-stay visitor visa and a temporary residence facility. Officially, Mauritius refers to it as a Premium Visa rather than a work permit or occupation permit.

Why it exists

Mauritius created this route to attract:

  • digital nomads,
  • long-stay tourists,
  • retirees,
  • families seeking a temporary island base,
  • and foreign nationals whose income is generated outside Mauritius.

Who it is meant for

It is mainly for people who can support themselves from abroad and do not need a local Mauritian job.

Typical users include:

  • remote employees,
  • freelancers serving overseas clients,
  • online business owners,
  • retirees with foreign income,
  • long-stay visitors,
  • accompanying family members.

How it fits into Mauritius’s immigration system

Mauritius has several distinct immigration routes, including:

  • ordinary entry visas / visa-free entry for short visits,
  • occupation permits for employment, self-employment, or investment,
  • residence permits,
  • retired non-citizen permits,
  • student permits,
  • and the Premium Visa.

The Premium Visa is not the main route for taking up local employment or establishing yourself permanently in Mauritius.

What kind of status is it?

It is best understood as a special long-stay visa/status granted to eligible non-citizens. Official materials describe it as a visa, but functionally it also gives permission for a longer temporary stay than an ordinary tourist entry.

Alternate names

Officially used name:

  • Premium Visa

I did not find a separate public subclass code or administrative code on the official public-facing pages reviewed.

2. Who should apply for this visa?

Ideal applicants

Tourists

Good fit for:

  • long-stay tourists,
  • slow travelers,
  • seasonal residents,
  • people spending several months in Mauritius beyond standard visitor periods.

Business visitors

Good fit only if the person is:

  • attending meetings,
  • managing offshore operations remotely,
  • dealing with non-Mauritian clients/businesses.

Not the right route for local employment or running local labor activities requiring a business/work authorization.

Job seekers

Generally not the right visa for job seeking in Mauritius if the real goal is local employment.

Better route: – occupation permit/work-related route, if eligible.

Employees

Good fit for: – employees working remotely for a company based outside Mauritius.

Not appropriate for: – employment by a Mauritian employer in Mauritius.

Students

Generally not the main student route.

Better route: – student permit/student visa route for formal education in Mauritius.

Spouses/partners

Good fit where: – the main applicant qualifies and can support accompanying partner/family.

Children/dependents

Possible, if included and documented properly.

Researchers

Possible only if: – research is remote or independent and not local employment. If attached to a Mauritian institution, another permit may be required.

Digital nomads

One of the strongest-fit categories.

Founders/entrepreneurs

Possible if: – they are running a company/business based outside Mauritius and income arises outside Mauritius.

Not ideal if: – they want to establish and actively operate a Mauritian business locally. In that case, business/investment routes may be better.

Investors

Usually not the best route if the core purpose is investment migration into Mauritius. Consider residence/investment or occupation permit categories instead.

Retirees

A strong fit if supported by foreign pension or other offshore income.

Religious workers

Usually not the correct route if undertaking organized religious work in Mauritius.

Artists/athletes

Possible only if they are residing temporarily and earning from abroad. Local paid performances may require other permission.

Transit passengers

Not applicable. This is not a transit visa.

Medical travelers

Possible for longer recuperation if they meet the rules, but medical-specific documentation may matter. For short treatment visits, ordinary visitor arrangements may be more suitable.

Diplomatic/official travelers

Not the right category.

Who should not use this visa?

Do not use the Premium Visa if your main purpose is:

  • taking a local Mauritian job,
  • earning income from a Mauritian source as your core activity,
  • enrolling in full-time formal study that requires student authorization,
  • immigrating permanently,
  • setting up under a route that specifically requires investor/self-employed authorization.

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted purposes

Based on official Mauritius guidance, the Premium Visa is used for:

  • long-stay tourism,
  • extended family stay,
  • retirement stay,
  • remote work for an employer outside Mauritius,
  • online business activity serving clients outside Mauritius,
  • living temporarily in Mauritius while financially supported from abroad.

Prohibited or restricted purposes

Employment

The visa is not intended for:

  • taking employment in Mauritius,
  • entering the Mauritian labor market as a normal worker,
  • being paid by a Mauritian employer under this visa route unless separately authorized.

Local business activity

Grey area: – passive ownership of foreign business is usually consistent with this visa; – active local trading or work in Mauritius may require a different permit.

Internship

Not clearly stated as a Premium Visa use. If the internship is with a Mauritian entity, assume another permit may be needed.

Study

Formal long-term study is generally not the purpose of this visa.

Volunteering

Not clearly addressed in the public official material reviewed. Structured volunteering with a Mauritian organization may require clarification from authorities before travel.

Paid performance

Likely not appropriate without proper authorization if payment/activity is in Mauritius.

Journalism

Media activity can be sensitive and may require specific authorization depending on the nature of work. This is not clearly covered under Premium Visa public guidance.

Medical treatment

Possible as part of long stay, but not its primary design.

Transit

Not applicable.

Marriage

Getting married in Mauritius is not itself the purpose of the visa, but a visitor may marry if otherwise lawfully admitted and compliant with local marriage formalities.

Religious activity

Informal private worship is fine; structured religious work may require another route.

Long-term residence

This is temporary stay, not a direct long-term residence permit.

Family reunion

It can be used for accompanying family, but it is not a classic permanent family reunification route.

Investment/business setup

Not the ideal route if the main objective is investing or setting up a Mauritian business. Specialized permits are more suitable.

Common misunderstandings

Remote work is allowed — but not local employment

This is the most important distinction.

Living in Mauritius for a year does not mean permanent residence

A one-year Premium Visa does not equal PR.

Tax treatment is separate from visa status

Even if immigration allows you to stay, tax residence may still arise depending on time spent and source of income.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Item Official/Public Position
Official program name Premium Visa
Short name Premium
Long name Premium Visa
Public stream names No separate public streams clearly published in the official sources reviewed
Related categories Occupation Permit, Residence Permit, Retired Non-Citizen Permit, Student Permit, Visitor/Entry Visa

Commonly confused categories

Premium Visa vs Occupation Permit

  • Premium Visa: for people earning from abroad and staying temporarily.
  • Occupation Permit: for people working, investing, or self-employing in Mauritius under specific conditions.

Premium Visa vs Tourist stay

  • Tourist entry is usually shorter and may depend on nationality.
  • Premium Visa is specifically for longer temporary stay up to one year.

Premium Visa vs Retired Non-Citizen Permit

  • Premium Visa is temporary and flexible.
  • Retired Non-Citizen Permit is a separate residence route with its own financial requirements.

5. Eligibility criteria

Core eligibility

Based on official Mauritius Economic Development Board guidance, applicants generally must show:

  • a valid passport,
  • intention to stay for a long period in Mauritius,
  • proof of travel and accommodation arrangements,
  • sufficient funds and/or regular source of income from outside Mauritius,
  • that the main place of business and source of income/profits are outside Mauritius,
  • and that they will not enter the Mauritian labor market.

Nationality rules

The Premium Visa is meant for non-citizens. However:

  • ordinary entry visa rules still vary by nationality,
  • some nationalities may have additional scrutiny or entry requirements,
  • embassy or airline practice may differ.

If your nationality is subject to ordinary visa control, verify whether any pre-entry clearance or travel documentation is also required.

Passport validity

A valid passport is required. The exact minimum remaining validity is not always stated on the same Premium Visa page, so applicants should ensure:

  • passport validity comfortably exceeds the intended stay,
  • preferably at least 6 months beyond travel dates unless authorities state otherwise.

Age

No general official minimum age specific to the main route was clearly published beyond ordinary passport/travel capacity. Minors can be included as dependents with parental documentation.

Education, language, work experience

No points system, language test, education threshold, or mandatory work experience was publicly stated for the Premium Visa.

Sponsorship / invitation

No classic sponsor requirement is stated for the main applicant. However, applicants may need:

  • host/accommodation evidence,
  • family evidence for accompanying dependents,
  • income proof from employer/business abroad.

Job offer

Not required. In fact, a local Mauritian job offer would usually suggest the wrong visa category.

Points requirement

Not applicable for this visa.

Relationship proof

Required for spouse/partner/children if accompanying.

Admission letter

Not applicable unless some dependent is pursuing a course and another permit is needed.

Business/investment thresholds

No fixed investment threshold is the core basis of the Premium Visa.

Maintenance funds

Official guidance indicates applicants must have enough funds and support themselves from abroad. Official material commonly refers to:

  • evidence of at least USD 1,500 per month for the applicant,
  • and additional monthly amounts for dependents.

Because financial thresholds may be updated or described differently across official pages/forms, applicants should confirm the latest amount on the current official application page.

Accommodation proof

Usually expected. This may include:

  • hotel booking,
  • lease/rental,
  • host accommodation documents.

Onward travel

Official guidance has referred to: – return or onward ticket evidence.

Health

No universal public requirement for a medical test was clearly stated for all Premium Visa applicants in the official public summary reviewed. However, health/travel compliance may still arise at border or later stages.

Character / criminal record

A police certificate is not always clearly listed as a standard initial requirement on every public Premium Visa summary. Still, authorities may request additional documents, including character-related evidence.

Insurance

Travel or health insurance is strongly advisable and may be requested depending on processing practice. Applicants should verify current official document requirements before submission.

Biometrics

No universal public rule was clearly published for biometrics on the main Premium Visa guidance reviewed.

Intent requirements

You should be able to show:

  • genuine temporary stay intent,
  • genuine offshore income/business,
  • no intent to work locally without authorization.

Residency outside Mauritius

The structure of the visa assumes your economic base is outside Mauritius.

Local registration rules

There is no widely published post-arrival residence card process specific to all Premium Visa holders on the core public summaries reviewed. Check current arrival instructions after approval.

Quota/cap/ballot

No official quota, cap, lottery, or invitation round was identified.

Embassy-specific rules

Possible in practice for document submission or travel documentation, but not clearly standardized publicly.

Special exemptions

None clearly published beyond normal immigration discretion.

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Ineligibility factors

You may be ineligible or at risk if:

  • your source of income is mainly in Mauritius,
  • you intend to work for a Mauritian employer,
  • you cannot show sufficient offshore funds,
  • your travel purpose does not match the Premium Visa category,
  • your documents are inconsistent or incomplete.

Common refusal triggers

  • insufficient financial proof,
  • unclear source of funds,
  • inability to show foreign employment/business activity,
  • lack of accommodation evidence,
  • weak explanation of stay purpose,
  • missing family relationship documents,
  • passport problems,
  • prior immigration violations,
  • security concerns,
  • false or unverifiable documents.

Mismatch between purpose and documents

Example: – You say you are a remote worker, but provide no employer letter, no freelance contracts, and no income trail.

Poor ties to home country

This is less central than in some short-stay visitor visas, but if your case looks like undeclared migration intent without the right route, it can still hurt credibility.

Incomplete application

A technically weak file can delay or sink approval even when the applicant is otherwise eligible.

7. Benefits of this visa

Main advantages

  • Up to 1 year stay in Mauritius
  • Multiple-entry flexibility
  • Suitable for remote workers and digital nomads
  • Family accompaniment possible
  • No need for a local job offer
  • Renewable, subject to continued eligibility
  • Straightforward concept compared with work/investment permits

Legal rights

You may generally:

  • reside temporarily in Mauritius,
  • travel in and out during validity,
  • work remotely for a non-Mauritian source,
  • stay with family if approved.

Family benefits

  • spouse/partner and children can accompany,
  • one family unit can live together in Mauritius for the approved period.

Travel flexibility

Public guidance indicates multiple entry.

Duration benefit

One year is significantly more generous than normal short visitor stays.

8. Limitations and restrictions

No local labor market access

This is the biggest restriction.

No direct PR benefit

This is not marketed as a permanent migration route.

Study limitations

Formal study may require another permit.

Reporting/registration

Any approval conditions must be followed. Because post-arrival formalities can change, verify them in your approval letter.

Insurance and compliance

Even if not always emphasized in public summaries, maintaining health/travel insurance is prudent.

Tax exposure

Longer presence may create tax questions.

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Rule Position
Maximum validity Up to 1 year
Entries Multiple entries
Renewal Possible, subject to eligibility
Clock starts Typically from approval/entry depending on issuance terms; confirm on the visa grant terms
Grace period Not clearly published
Overstay consequences Fines, immigration complications, future visa problems, possible removal

Important practical point

Always distinguish between:

  • visa validity period,
  • and your actual authorized stay period.

Check the approval notice carefully.

10. Complete document checklist

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Completed application Official Premium Visa form/online submission Starts the process Wrong category, incomplete answers
Cover letter/explanation Short statement of purpose Clarifies eligibility Too vague; fails to explain offshore income
Passport biodata page Identity page copy Identity and nationality proof Blurry scan, expired passport

B. Identity/travel documents

  • passport copy,
  • recent passport-size photo if requested,
  • copies of previous immigration approvals if relevant,
  • birth certificate for minors where needed.

C. Financial documents

  • recent bank statements,
  • proof of regular foreign income,
  • pension statements if retired,
  • salary slips,
  • employer certificate,
  • contracts/invoices for freelancers,
  • business registration and earnings evidence for founders.

D. Employment/business documents

For remote employees: – employer letter stating remote work, – employment contract, – salary proof.

For freelancers: – client contracts, – invoices, – payment records.

For business owners: – company registration, – shareholder/director documents, – business bank statements, – tax or accounting evidence if available.

E. Education documents

Not usually central unless linked to accompanying family or another purpose.

F. Relationship/family documents

  • marriage certificate,
  • birth certificates for children,
  • custody papers if applicable,
  • consent letter from absent parent if a minor travels with one parent.

G. Accommodation/travel documents

  • hotel booking or lease,
  • host letter if staying with someone,
  • return/onward flight booking if required.

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

Not usually sponsor-driven, but host documents may help: – host ID/passport copy, – proof of address, – accommodation letter.

I. Health/insurance documents

  • travel/health insurance if requested or prudently included.

J. Country-specific extras

Depending on nationality or processing office, you may be asked for: – police certificate, – translated civil documents, – legalized copies.

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

  • birth certificate,
  • passport,
  • school letter if useful,
  • parental consent,
  • custody orders where relevant.

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

If documents are not in English or French, certified translation may be required. Public Premium Visa pages do not always spell out every legalization rule, so verify with the receiving authority.

M. Photo specifications

Use the official application portal instructions if photos are required. Do not assume tourist visa photo standards are identical unless stated.

11. Financial requirements

Official rule direction

Applicants must show they can support themselves and that income comes from abroad.

Official Mauritius guidance has referred to a minimum income/funds expectation of:

  • USD 1,500 per month for the main applicant
  • plus additional support for dependents

Some official materials have also referenced: – USD 500 per month per dependent

Because thresholds can change, confirm the current figure on the official page before applying.

Acceptable proof

  • bank statements,
  • salary statements,
  • pension documents,
  • employer letters,
  • contracts,
  • proof of business income,
  • foreign-source passive income evidence.

Who can sponsor?

The scheme is primarily self-supported rather than sponsor-based. If relying on another person’s support, the case may need especially strong proof and may not be treated as standard.

Bank statement period

The exact required period is not always clearly stated on public summaries; 3–6 months is often a sensible preparation range unless the official form says otherwise.

Hidden costs

  • rent/security deposit,
  • private medical insurance,
  • flights,
  • school costs for children,
  • banking charges,
  • document translation.

Currency issues

If your funds are not in USD, include: – statement currency clearly shown, – approximate conversion note if helpful.

12. Fees and total cost

Official application fee

Official Mauritius guidance has stated that the Premium Visa itself is issued free of charge.

That does not mean total relocation/application cost is zero.

Other likely costs

Cost Item Likely Position
Application fee Usually no fee for the Premium Visa itself, per official guidance
Biometrics fee Unclear/not publicly standardized
Medical exam Usually not a standard upfront fee publicly stated for all applicants
Police certificate Varies by country
Translation/notary/apostille Varies
Courier/scanning Varies
Insurance Varies widely
Flight costs Varies
Accommodation deposits Often substantial
Renewal fee Check latest official rules

Warning

A “free visa” can still become expensive once you include: – insurance, – long-stay accommodation, – family costs, – school fees, – document preparation.

13. Step-by-step application process

1. Confirm this is the correct route

Ask: – Is my income from outside Mauritius? – Am I avoiding local employment? – Am I staying temporarily?

2. Gather documents

Prepare identity, finances, remote work/business proof, accommodation, and family documents.

3. Complete the official application

Use the official Mauritius Premium Visa application route.

4. Submit supporting documents

Upload or send the required evidence as instructed.

5. Await review

Authorities may request clarification or extra documents.

6. Receive decision

If approved, follow the issuance instructions carefully.

7. Travel to Mauritius

Carry all key supporting documents in hand luggage.

8. Arrival checks

Border officers make the final admission decision.

9. Post-arrival compliance

Follow any conditions in the approval letter and monitor renewal timing if staying longer.

Online vs paper

The Premium Visa has primarily been presented as an online application process through official Mauritius channels.

14. Processing time

Official public pages have often described Premium Visa processing as relatively fast, but a fixed guaranteed processing time is not always stated clearly.

What affects timing

  • completeness of file,
  • quality of financial evidence,
  • family composition,
  • nationality-specific checks,
  • public holiday periods,
  • document clarification requests.

Practical expectation

Apply well before travel. A buffer of several weeks is sensible even if some cases are quicker.

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

No universal public requirement clearly stated on the main official summaries reviewed.

Interview

Not routinely published as a mandatory feature for all applicants.

Medical

No blanket upfront medical exam rule clearly published for all Premium Visa applicants in the official summary materials reviewed.

Police checks

Not always listed as mandatory for every case, but can be requested depending on circumstances.

Practical advice

Be ready in case authorities ask for: – additional identity verification, – police clearance, – or health/travel insurance evidence.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

No official public approval-rate dataset for the Mauritius Premium Visa was identified in the sources reviewed.

Practical refusal patterns

Most likely issues are:

  • weak evidence of foreign income,
  • unclear source of funds,
  • documents inconsistent with claimed remote work,
  • poor or missing accommodation/travel proof,
  • family documents not properly linked,
  • using Premium Visa for an activity that really belongs under an Occupation Permit.

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Stronger application tactics

  • Use a short, clear cover letter.
  • Show exactly how you earn money abroad.
  • Include an employer letter or client contracts.
  • Provide recent bank statements with regular credits.
  • Explain any large unusual deposits.
  • Label all documents clearly.
  • Keep dates consistent across passport, flight, accommodation, and income documents.
  • If bringing family, show total family budget, not just the main applicant’s income.

Pro Tip

A one-page income summary table can make your file much easier to assess: – employer/client, – monthly amount, – currency, – supporting document reference.

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

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

Apply with a “review-friendly” file

Use one merged PDF per category: – identity, – finances, – remote work proof, – accommodation, – family.

Explain your economic setup simply

Reviewers should understand in under two minutes: – who pays you, – where they are based, – why your work is outside Mauritius.

Handle large bank deposits transparently

If you recently received: – a bonus, – business sale proceeds, – family transfer, include a note and documentary proof.

Families should present a combined funding picture

Do not make the officer guess whether one income supports four people.

Avoid overclaiming work rights

Do not say you plan to “work in Mauritius” unless you mean remote work for foreign sources and can explain that clearly.

Contact authorities only when necessary

Good reasons: – technical portal issue, – missing acknowledgment, – change in passport details, – urgent correction.

Bad reasons: – repeated status-chasing after only a short wait.

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

When needed

A cover letter is not always expressly mandatory, but it is highly useful.

What to include

  1. Your identity and nationality
  2. Why you want to stay in Mauritius
  3. Length of intended stay
  4. Your income source outside Mauritius
  5. Confirmation you will not join the Mauritian labor market
  6. Accommodation details
  7. Family members accompanying you
  8. List of attached supporting documents

What not to say

  • vague statements like “I’ll find opportunities there”
  • anything suggesting undeclared local work
  • contradictory travel plans

Sample outline

  • Introduction
  • Purpose of stay
  • Source of income outside Mauritius
  • Financial sufficiency
  • Family details
  • Accommodation/travel details
  • Compliance statement
  • Document list

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

This visa is not primarily sponsor-led.

If staying with a host

Useful documents may include:

  • invitation/accommodation letter,
  • host ID/passport copy,
  • proof of address,
  • proof the host can accommodate you.

Host letter should state

  • full name and contact details,
  • address,
  • relationship to applicant,
  • duration of stay,
  • whether accommodation is free or paid.

Common host mistakes

  • no signature,
  • no proof of address,
  • mismatch between host name and property record,
  • vague stay dates.

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Are dependents allowed?

Yes, accompanying family is generally possible.

Who qualifies?

Public guidance commonly refers to: – spouse, – children, – and dependents.

For unmarried partners, the official public Premium Visa pages reviewed do not clearly define evidentiary rules. This should be verified before applying.

Required proof

  • marriage certificate for spouse,
  • birth certificates for children,
  • custody/consent documents where applicable,
  • passports for each family member,
  • proof of financial capacity for the full family unit.

Work/study rights of dependents

Not independently broad. A dependent’s own work or formal study rights are not clearly granted simply by accompanying a Premium Visa holder. If a dependent wants local work or formal study, check whether a separate permit is required.

Separate or combined applications

Usually handled in connection with the principal applicant, but each traveler may need individual documentation.

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

Work rights

Activity Allowed? Notes
Remote work for foreign employer Yes Core purpose of the visa
Freelance work for foreign clients Yes If source of income remains outside Mauritius
Employment for Mauritian employer No / not the intended route Use an Occupation Permit or other work authorization
Local self-employment in Mauritius Generally not under this visa Use relevant business/self-employed route
Paid local performances/services Risky / usually requires proper authorization Check with authorities

Study rights

Activity Position
Informal/self-study/online courses Generally compatible
Formal study in Mauritius May require student authorization

Volunteering

Not clearly addressed. Seek clarification if the volunteering is organized and local.

Passive income

Usually compatible: – dividends, – pension, – rental income from abroad, – investment income from abroad.

Taxable activity

Immigration permission does not decide tax liability. Get tax advice if staying long.

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

Visa approval is not the final word

Border officers still decide admission.

Carry these documents

Bring print or digital copies of:

  • passport,
  • Premium Visa approval,
  • accommodation proof,
  • return/onward ticket,
  • proof of funds,
  • employer/client letter,
  • family civil documents if traveling together.

Onward/return ticket issues

Even long-stay applicants may be asked how and when they intend to leave.

Immigration interview at arrival

Expect basic questions: – purpose of stay, – duration, – where you will stay, – how you support yourself.

Dual passports

Travel with the same passport used in the application, unless formally updated.

New passport after approval

If your passport changes, contact the relevant authority before travel.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Can it be extended?

Yes, official guidance indicates the Premium Visa can be renewed, subject to continued eligibility.

Renewal basis

You normally need to show:

  • continued offshore income/support,
  • continued temporary stay basis,
  • continued compliance with visa conditions.

Inside-country or outside-country renewal

Public guidance indicates renewal is possible, but exact procedure and whether it must be done from inside Mauritius should be checked on the latest official page or directly with authorities.

Switching to another visa

Possible in principle only if you qualify for another immigration route, such as:

  • Occupation Permit,
  • Residence Permit,
  • Student Permit.

But the public official materials do not clearly present Premium Visa as a formal in-country “switching” route. Verify current practice before relying on this.

Overstay risk

Do not assume implied status. Apply for renewal early enough and get official confirmation of your legal status during any pending period.

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

Does this visa count toward PR?

There is no clear official statement that the Premium Visa itself is a direct PR-qualifying status.

Direct path?

No direct PR path is publicly promoted for the Premium Visa.

Indirect path?

Only indirectly, if later you move into another qualifying residence route such as:

  • occupation permit categories,
  • investor residence pathways,
  • other long-term residence statuses.

Citizenship?

Mauritian citizenship rules are separate and much stricter. Premium Visa alone is not a straightforward naturalization route.

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Tax residence risk

A person spending substantial time in Mauritius may trigger tax residence questions. Immigration permission does not exempt you from tax law.

Key compliance points

  • do not work locally without authorization,
  • keep passport valid,
  • maintain truthful records,
  • renew before expiry,
  • comply with any arrival conditions.

Health insurance

Even where not always explicitly mandatory in summaries, maintaining valid insurance is wise and may be expected in practice.

Overstays and violations

These can affect: – future Mauritius applications, – border entry, – possible fines or removal.

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

Visa waivers and entry rules

Mauritius has nationality-specific entry rules for ordinary visitors. These may interact with travel logistics even if you are applying for a Premium Visa.

Important caveat

The official public Premium Visa framework does not always spell out every nationality-specific exception. Check:

  • whether your nationality requires pre-travel entry authorization,
  • whether there are airline boarding requirements,
  • whether additional security checks apply.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Need: – passport, – birth certificate, – consent/custody documents where relevant.

Divorced/separated parents

Carry: – custody order, – notarized consent from non-traveling parent where required.

Adopted children

Be ready with legal adoption records.

Same-sex spouses/partners

Official treatment may depend on the type of relationship evidence and Mauritian legal recognition rules. Public Premium Visa materials reviewed do not clearly detail unmarried or same-sex partner evidence standards, so verify before applying.

Stateless persons / refugees

May face additional documentation hurdles. Official public guidance is limited; direct authority clarification is advisable.

Prior refusals

Declare honestly if asked and explain what changed.

Criminal records

May cause refusal depending on nature and seriousness.

Applying from a third country

Possible in some cases, but submission mechanics may vary.

Name change / gender marker mismatch

Include supporting civil records and a clear explanation to avoid identity confusion.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs Fact

Myth Fact
The Premium Visa lets me work for a Mauritius company. No. It is mainly for foreign-source income and remote work.
It is a permanent residence visa. No. It is a temporary long-stay route.
If it’s free, there are no real costs. False. Insurance, housing, translations, flights, and family costs can be substantial.
A one-line bank balance screenshot is enough. Usually not. You should show regular, credible funds and income source.
Dependents automatically get full work rights. No. Their rights are limited and may require separate authorization for work/study.
Border entry is guaranteed once approved. No. Final admission remains at the border.

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

After refusal

You should receive or request reasons if not clearly provided.

Appeal rights

A formal public appeal or administrative review mechanism specific to the Premium Visa is not clearly described in the public sources reviewed.

Refund

If there is no application fee, refund is less relevant. Ancillary costs are generally not recoverable.

Reapply or challenge?

Usually: – reapply if the issue is document weakness or missing proof, – seek clarification if refusal seems based on misunderstanding.

Best reapplication strategy

  • address every refusal point,
  • add a concise explanation note,
  • do not submit the same weak file again.

31. Arrival in Mauritius: what happens next?

At immigration

Expect to show:

  • passport,
  • approval,
  • accommodation details,
  • return/onward plan,
  • proof of funds if asked.

First 7 days

  • settle accommodation,
  • keep digital and paper copies of visa documents,
  • check any local registration instruction in your approval.

First 30 days

  • confirm insurance remains active,
  • organize schooling if family is accompanying,
  • understand tax and banking implications if staying long term.

First 90 days

  • monitor passport validity and visa end date,
  • if planning to renew, start preparing early.

Bank, SIM, housing

Practical setup rules vary by private provider. Immigration approval alone may not guarantee easy bank account opening.

32. Real-world timeline examples

Solo remote worker

  • Week 1: gather passport, employer letter, bank statements, lease
  • Week 2: submit application
  • Weeks 3–6: await decision / answer queries
  • After approval: travel and present documents on arrival

Family of four

  • Weeks 1–2: collect marriage/birth certificates, consent docs, finances
  • Week 3: submit
  • Weeks 4–8: possible follow-up due to family complexity
  • After approval: travel together with full document pack

Retiree

  • Week 1: pension proof, bank statements, accommodation
  • Week 2: application
  • Weeks 3–6: decision
  • Arrival: carry pension evidence and insurance

Founder with foreign company

  • Week 1: company registration, ownership proof, contracts, invoices
  • Week 2: submit
  • Weeks 3–7: possible clarification on offshore business
  • Arrival: carry business documents

33. Ideal document pack structure

Recommended naming convention

  • 01-Passport-Main-Applicant.pdf
  • 02-Application-Form.pdf
  • 03-Cover-Letter.pdf
  • 04-Bank-Statements-6-Months.pdf
  • 05-Employer-Letter-Contract.pdf
  • 06-Accommodation.pdf
  • 07-Flight-Booking.pdf
  • 08-Marriage-Certificate.pdf
  • 09-Child1-Birth-Certificate.pdf

PDF order

  1. Index
  2. Application/cover letter
  3. Identity
  4. Finances
  5. Employment/business proof
  6. Accommodation/travel
  7. Family documents
  8. Explanatory notes

Scan quality tips

  • color scans,
  • readable edges,
  • no cut-off stamps,
  • one upright orientation.

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • Confirm Premium Visa is the right route
  • Confirm no local employment planned
  • Passport valid
  • Offshore income proof ready
  • Bank statements ready
  • Accommodation proof ready
  • Family civil documents ready
  • Return/onward travel evidence ready
  • Cover letter drafted

Submission-day checklist

  • All names match passport
  • Dates are consistent
  • Files are readable
  • Income source clearly explained
  • Dependents linked to main applicant
  • Contact details correct

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

Not applicable for this visa as a standard published requirement, but if called: – bring passport, – appointment proof, – original supporting documents, – copy of submitted application.

Arrival checklist

  • Passport
  • Visa approval
  • Address details
  • Return/onward plan
  • Proof of funds
  • Insurance proof
  • Family records for minors

Extension/renewal checklist

  • Current visa still valid
  • Updated bank statements
  • Updated remote work/pension proof
  • Updated accommodation proof
  • Passport validity sufficient
  • Compliance history clean

Refusal recovery checklist

  • Read refusal reasons carefully
  • Identify missing evidence
  • Prepare point-by-point response
  • Add clearer financial proof
  • Clarify source of income
  • Reapply only after fixing weaknesses

35. FAQs

1. Is the Mauritius Premium Visa a digital nomad visa?

Effectively yes, although Mauritius officially calls it the Premium Visa.

2. Can I work remotely for my foreign employer from Mauritius?

Yes, that is one of the main intended uses.

3. Can I work for a Mauritian company on this visa?

Generally no.

4. How long can I stay?

Up to 1 year per approval.

5. Can I renew it?

Yes, subject to continued eligibility.

6. Is it free?

Official guidance has stated the visa itself is free, but other costs still apply.

7. Do I need a minimum income?

Official guidance has referred to around USD 1,500 per month for the main applicant, plus more for dependents. Verify the latest amount.

8. Can I bring my spouse?

Yes, generally.

9. Can I bring children?

Yes, generally.

10. Do dependents need separate documents?

Yes.

11. Can my spouse work locally in Mauritius as my dependent?

Not automatically. Separate authorization may be needed.

12. Is health insurance required?

It is strongly advisable and may be requested; verify current rules.

13. Do I need a police certificate?

Not always clearly listed for every case, but authorities may request one.

14. Do I need biometrics?

No universal public rule was identified; follow the current process instructions.

15. Can freelancers apply?

Yes, if clients and income are outside Mauritius.

16. Can business owners apply?

Yes, if the main business and income are outside Mauritius.

17. Can I open a local company on this visa?

If your real goal is local business establishment, another permit may be more appropriate.

18. Is this a path to permanent residence?

Not directly.

19. Does time on this visa count toward citizenship?

No direct public rule indicates that this visa is designed for that purpose.

20. Can I study in Mauritius on this visa?

For formal study, check whether a student permit is required.

21. Can I volunteer?

This is not clearly addressed; get official confirmation first.

22. What if I changed my passport after approval?

Contact the relevant authority before travel.

23. Can I apply while in another country?

Possibly, but practical submission rules may vary.

24. What if I was previously refused another country’s visa?

Usually not fatal, but answer honestly if asked and provide a clean explanation if relevant.

25. Can I arrive before my family and have them follow later?

Usually possible, but make sure their documents clearly link to the principal applicant.

26. Do I need a return ticket?

Often yes or at least onward travel evidence is prudent.

27. Can retirees apply?

Yes, if they can show foreign pension or other support.

28. Is there an age limit?

No specific general age limit was clearly published for the main category.

29. Can I do online consulting for overseas clients while in Mauritius?

Yes, if the income source remains outside Mauritius.

30. If I stay many months, do I become tax resident?

Possibly. That depends on tax law, not just visa law.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are official sources relevant to the Mauritius Premium Visa and related immigration framework.

  • Economic Development Board Mauritius — Premium Visa:
    https://www.edbmauritius.org/premium-visa

  • Mauritius government portal — Premium Visa information/services:
    https://mauritiusnow.com/premium-visa/

  • Passport and Immigration Office, Mauritius Police Force:
    https://passport.govmu.org/

  • Prime Minister’s Office / Passport and Immigration Office section on entry and residence formalities:
    https://pmo.govmu.org/

  • Economic Development Board Mauritius — Occupation and Residence permits overview:
    https://residency.mu/

  • Mauritius Revenue Authority — tax residency and tax information:
    https://www.mra.mu/

  • Government of Mauritius portal:
    https://govmu.org/

Important source note

Mauritius sometimes publishes immigration information across multiple official portals, and page locations can change. If one official link moves, start from the main government or EDB portal and navigate to the updated page.

37. Final verdict

The Mauritius Premium Visa is best for:

  • digital nomads,
  • remote employees,
  • freelancers with foreign clients,
  • retirees with offshore income,
  • and families wanting a legal long-stay temporary base in Mauritius.

Biggest benefits

  • up to 1 year stay,
  • multiple entry,
  • family-friendly structure,
  • remote work compatibility,
  • generally simple concept,
  • official guidance indicates no visa fee.

Biggest risks

  • confusing remote work with local work,
  • weak proof of offshore income,
  • unclear family documentation,
  • assuming it leads to PR,
  • overlooking tax and compliance issues.

Top preparation advice

  • prove your foreign income clearly,
  • organize documents professionally,
  • explain your stay in a concise cover letter,
  • verify current financial thresholds and renewal rules on official pages,
  • do not rely on unofficial summaries.

When to consider another visa

Choose another route if you plan to:

  • take local employment,
  • establish yourself as a self-employed person in Mauritius,
  • invest for residence purposes,
  • study formally in Mauritius,
  • or pursue permanent residence.

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

  • Exact current monthly income/funds threshold for the main applicant and each dependent
  • Whether travel/health insurance is currently mandatory or only strongly recommended
  • Whether police certificates are required upfront for all applicants or only on request
  • Whether biometrics are required for certain nationalities or locations
  • Exact renewal procedure and whether renewal must be filed inside Mauritius
  • Whether unmarried partners are accepted and what proof standard applies
  • Whether dependents may undertake formal study without a separate permit
  • Nationality-specific pre-entry requirements that may interact with Premium Visa travel
  • Current document upload format and size rules on the official application portal
  • Any recent policy changes announced after the last verification date

By visa

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *