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Short description: A complete guide to Romania’s Type D long-stay visa for self-employment and investor activity, including eligibility, documents, process, residence permit steps, and pitfalls.

Last Verified On: 2026-04-06

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country Romania
Visa name National Long-Stay Visa (Type D) – Self-Employment / Investor
Visa short name D-Self-Employed
Category National long-stay visa
Main purpose Entry for foreign nationals carrying out independent professional activity or commercial/investment activity in Romania, followed by residence permit application
Typical applicant Entrepreneurs, company founders, investors, sole professionals, business owners
Validity Officially a long-stay visa; Romanian long-stay visas are generally issued for 90 days validity for entry/stay purpose, subject to the consulate’s issuance details
Stay duration Long-stay visas allow entry for the purpose of applying for a temporary residence permit in Romania
Entries allowed Usually multiple-entry for Type D long-stay visas, but applicants should verify the visa sticker once issued
Extension possible? Yes, indirectly. The visa itself is not the long-term status; after entry, the holder typically applies for a temporary residence permit with the General Inspectorate for Immigration
Work allowed? Limited/conditional. The route is for self-employment/investment activity, not ordinary salaried employment unless separately authorized
Study allowed? Limited. This is not a study visa; incidental study may be possible, but formal study normally requires the study route
Family allowed? Possible, but not automatically. Family members usually need their own visa/residence basis, often family reunification
PR path? Possible. Lawful temporary residence may count toward long-term residence if all statutory requirements are met
Citizenship path? Indirect. Long-term lawful residence may later support naturalization if Romanian nationality law conditions are met

Romania’s Type D long-stay visa is a national visa used by non-EU/EEA/Swiss nationals who intend to stay in Romania for more than 90 days for a legally recognized long-term purpose.

For this guide, the relevant sub-route is the category used for:

  • independent professional activities
  • commercial activities
  • investment/business setup
  • founder or administrator activity connected to a Romanian business

In practice, this route is often described as the Romanian self-employment, commercial activities, or investor/business long-stay route.

It exists so that Romania can admit foreign nationals who plan to:

  • start or run a business in Romania
  • invest in a Romanian company
  • perform certain independent economic/professional activities
  • live in Romania on a lawful economic basis that is not standard salaried employment

Within Romania’s immigration system, this is:

  • a visa first
  • then typically followed by
  • a temporary residence permit issued inside Romania by the General Inspectorate for Immigration (Inspectoratul General pentru Imigrări, IGI)

So this is not permanent residence by itself, and it is not just a visitor authorization. It is an entry clearance leading to residence permission.

Official/administrative naming

Romanian sources commonly refer to:

  • long-stay visa
  • Type D visa
  • visa for commercial activities
  • visa for carrying out independent activities
  • later, a temporary residence permit for the same purpose

The exact label can vary across:

  • the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  • individual Romanian embassies/consulates
  • the General Inspectorate for Immigration
  • translations from Romanian into English

Local-language names you may encounter

You may see Romanian terms such as:

  • viză de lungă ședere
  • viză de lungă ședere pentru activități comerciale
  • viză de lungă ședere pentru activități profesionale independente
  • permis de ședere temporară

Warning: Romanian authorities sometimes separate commercial activities from professional/independent activities. Some embassies also provide slightly different wording in English. Applicants must confirm which exact legal subcategory applies to their case before filing.

2. Who should apply for this visa?

This visa is best for people who want to move to Romania for a genuine, documented economic activity based on their own business, investment, or independent work, rather than tourism, employment, or study.

Ideal applicants

Founders and entrepreneurs

Best suited if you plan to:

  • establish a Romanian company
  • join/manage a Romanian company as an investor or administrator
  • carry out business activity in Romania on a long-term basis

Investors

Suitable if you will:

  • invest capital into a Romanian business
  • create or support commercial activity in Romania
  • meet any business plan and investment expectations requested by the competent Romanian authorities

Self-employed or independent professionals

Potentially suitable if your case fits Romania’s legal route for:

  • independent professional practice
  • legally recognized independent income-generating activity in Romania

This area can be highly technical because some professions are regulated and may require separate recognition, licensing, or membership in a professional body.

Usually not the right visa for:

Tourists

Use a short-stay visa or visa-free entry, if eligible.

Business visitors attending meetings only

Use the short-stay business route, not a long-stay self-employment/investor route.

Job seekers

Romania does not use this route as a general job-seeker visa.

Employees

If you will work for a Romanian employer as staff, the usual route is the employment long-stay visa, typically tied to a work authorization.

Students

Use the study long-stay visa.

Spouses/partners and children

Normally use family reunification or another dependent/family route, not the self-employment/investor category unless they independently qualify.

Digital nomads

Romania has had a distinct digital nomad framework. If your work is for a foreign employer/client base and not Romanian self-employment/commercial activity, that route may be more appropriate than this one.

Retirees

This is not a retirement visa.

Religious workers

Use the religion/religious activities route if applicable.

Artists/athletes

If the purpose is performance, cultural work, or sport, this may not be the right category.

Transit passengers

Not applicable.

Medical travelers

Use the treatment/medical route if applicable.

Diplomatic/official travelers

Use diplomatic/official channels.

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted uses

Subject to the exact subcategory and supporting approvals, this visa is generally used for:

  • setting up and running a Romanian business
  • carrying out commercial activities
  • making and implementing an investment in Romania
  • residing in Romania for the purpose of approved self-employment/independent activity
  • entering Romania in order to apply for a temporary residence permit for that business/self-employment purpose

Usually prohibited or outside scope

This visa is generally not for:

  • tourism as the main purpose
  • general business meetings only
  • ordinary salaried employment for a Romanian employer
  • job hunting
  • full-time study as the main purpose
  • volunteering unrelated to the approved economic purpose
  • journalism without appropriate status/authorization
  • transit
  • medical treatment as the main residence basis
  • sham “investment” without real activity
  • undeclared remote work inconsistent with the declared purpose

Grey areas and common misunderstandings

Remote work

If you simply work online for a foreign employer while living in Romania, that may fit better under a digital nomad route than a self-employment/investor route.

Registering a company is not always enough

In many countries, and effectively in Romania too, having a company on paper alone is not the same as qualifying for residence. Authorities may want to see:

  • a real business purpose
  • investment evidence
  • operating plan
  • lawful funding
  • role in the company
  • viability

Marriage in Romania

You cannot treat this as a marriage visa. If your true purpose is joining a spouse, use the proper family route.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Item Description
Official umbrella class National Long-Stay Visa
Type/code Type D
Relevant subcategory Commercial activities / independent professional activity / investor-type route
Follow-on status Temporary residence permit
Common confusion Employment visa, business visitor visa, digital nomad visa, family reunification visa

Old vs current naming

Public-facing English terminology is not always perfectly standardized across Romanian official sites. You may see:

  • self-employment
  • independent activities
  • commercial activities
  • investor/business activity

If the embassy checklist uses a narrower term than a guide or translation, follow the embassy + legal basis + IGI guidance for your exact case.

Related categories people confuse it with

  • Short-stay business visa: for meetings and brief business travel, not residence
  • Long-stay employment visa: for hired workers
  • Long-stay digital nomad visa: for foreign-employed remote workers
  • Long-stay family reunification visa: for spouses/children joining a resident
  • Long-stay study visa: for university or formal education

5. Eligibility criteria

Because Romania’s self-employment/investor route is document-heavy and subcategory-specific, eligibility can vary. The following reflects the core framework from official Romanian visa and immigration rules.

Basic eligibility

Applicants generally must:

  • be a non-EU/EEA/Swiss national if they require a Romanian long-stay visa
  • hold a valid passport/travel document
  • have a genuine intention to stay in Romania for the approved self-employment/commercial purpose
  • satisfy the Romanian consulate that they meet the legal conditions for the requested subcategory
  • not be subject to entry bans or security concerns
  • not present a threat to public order, national security, or public health
  • submit the required supporting documents
  • usually obtain any required pre-approval/opinion/authorization connected to the business activity

Nationality rules

Nationality matters because:

  • some nationals are visa-exempt for short stays, but visa exemption does not replace a Type D visa if long stay/residence is required
  • some applicants face additional document scrutiny
  • some embassies impose local submission/residence-jurisdiction rules

Passport validity

Applicants generally need:

  • a valid passport
  • enough blank pages
  • validity extending beyond the visa period

Exact validity rules can be checked with the embassy/consulate handling the application.

Age

No general public rule says this is restricted to a narrow age band, but:

  • minors cannot normally be principal commercial/self-employment applicants in the ordinary sense
  • adults are the normal principal applicants

Education, language, work experience

There is no universal public rule stating all investor/self-employment applicants must prove a specific language level. However:

  • regulated professions may require qualifications recognition
  • business viability may be easier to show with experience
  • the authority may assess whether the declared activity is credible

Sponsorship / invitation / pre-approval

This route often requires more than a personal statement. Depending on the subcategory, applicants may need:

  • business registration documents
  • investment plan
  • evidence of shareholder/administrator status
  • support or approval from competent Romanian authorities
  • proof of economic necessity or benefit
  • company constitutional documents

Job offer

Usually not required for true self-employment/investor cases. If you have a job offer from a Romanian employer, you may be in the wrong category.

Points requirement / lottery / cap

No publicly prominent points system or lottery applies to this visa route. No broad public quota system is usually described for this category.

Funds and maintenance

Applicants generally must show:

  • sufficient means of support
  • lawful source of funds
  • ability to sustain themselves in Romania
  • where relevant, funds connected to the business/investment itself

The exact threshold can vary by subcategory and by the legal standard referenced by the consulate/IGI.

Accommodation proof

Applicants are usually expected to show where they will stay in Romania, such as:

  • lease
  • title deed from host
  • hosting declaration where accepted
  • company-provided accommodation where lawful and documented

Onward travel

This is less central than for short-stay visas, but some missions may still ask for travel arrangements or intended entry details.

Health and medical

Applicants may need:

  • medical insurance valid for the visa/residence process
  • proof they do not suffer from diseases threatening public health, where required

Character / criminal record

A criminal record certificate is commonly required in long-stay residence processes.

Insurance

Private medical insurance is commonly required for visa issuance and/or residence permit issuance unless the person later enters the Romanian public health insurance system.

Biometrics

Biometrics may be taken during visa and/or residence permit processing depending on the stage and location.

Intent requirements

The applicant must show:

  • genuine commercial/self-employment intent
  • lawful and realistic purpose
  • consistency between documents and narrative

Residency outside Romania / place of application

Romanian embassies usually expect you to apply in:

  • your country of nationality, or
  • your country of legal residence

Applying from a third country may or may not be accepted depending on embassy rules.

Local registration after arrival

Yes. Long-stay visa holders usually must apply for a residence permit inside Romania before the visa/rightful stay expires.

Embassy-specific rules

This is a major issue. Some missions publish more detailed checklists than others. Local embassy practice can affect:

  • translation requirements
  • appointment systems
  • accepted proof formats
  • whether originals and copies are both needed

Special exemptions

No broad public exemption regime appears to waive the core long-stay visa requirement for this route.

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Ineligibility factors

You are likely not eligible if:

  • your true purpose is employment, study, tourism, or family reunion rather than self-employment/investment
  • your business activity is not lawful in Romania
  • you cannot prove the company/activity is real
  • you lack required approvals or supporting corporate documents
  • you cannot show sufficient funds
  • you have serious immigration violations or entry bans
  • your criminal/security background is disqualifying

Common refusal triggers

Mismatch between purpose and documents

Example: saying “self-employed” but submitting only a meeting invitation and hotel booking.

Weak or unclear business plan

Authorities may doubt whether the activity is real, viable, or economically meaningful.

Insufficient funds

If personal or business funds are too low, poorly documented, or recently deposited without explanation, refusal risk increases.

Wrong visa class

This is one of the biggest issues. A founder applying under self-employment when the facts fit employment, or vice versa, can be refused.

Incomplete application

Missing translations, unsigned forms, missing company documents, missing police certificate, or missing insurance can derail the file.

Prior overstays or immigration violations

Romania and Schengen-related travel history can matter.

Unverifiable documents

If the company papers, bank letters, or source-of-funds evidence cannot be verified, refusal risk is high.

Passport problems

Damaged passport, insufficient validity, or inconsistent personal data.

Insurance issues

Wrong coverage period, wrong territorial coverage, or insurer not accepted.

Translation/notarization mistakes

Romanian authorities often require formal translation quality. Sloppy translations can create contradictions.

Interview mistakes

Contradicting your own application, not knowing your own business plan, or giving vague answers.

7. Benefits of this visa

Main benefits

  • lets you enter Romania for a long-stay economic purpose
  • can support residence in Romania beyond 90 days
  • provides a legal pathway for founders, investors, and independent professionals
  • can lead to a temporary residence permit
  • may contribute toward long-term residence if continuously and lawfully maintained
  • may support later family reunification once residence is established
  • allows lawful presence tied to your approved business purpose

Family and long-term benefits

Depending on your later residence status, this route may help with:

  • family reunification applications
  • renewing residence based on continued business activity
  • building residence time toward long-term residence
  • eventual citizenship eligibility, indirectly

Business benefits

  • ability to lawfully operate and reside in Romania in connection with business activity
  • access to Romanian corporate presence
  • ability to build local commercial substance

8. Limitations and restrictions

Key restrictions

  • not for ordinary salaried employment unless separately authorized
  • not a tourist visa
  • not a blanket permission for any type of work
  • business activity must match the approved purpose
  • residence must usually be maintained through permit renewal
  • reporting and registration obligations apply
  • address changes may need to be reported
  • non-compliance can affect renewal
  • family members do not automatically get the same rights

Important practical limitation

The visa is only the first step. Many applicants mistakenly assume that visa issuance means long-term residence is complete. It is not. The residence permit process after arrival is critical.

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Visa validity

Romanian long-stay visas are generally issued for up to 90 days.

Stay duration

The Type D visa allows entry and presence for the visa period, but its main function is to allow you to enter Romania and apply for a temporary residence permit for longer lawful stay.

Entries

Many Type D visas are issued as multiple-entry, but applicants should verify the actual visa sticker.

When the clock starts

The visa validity runs from the dates shown on the sticker. Do not assume the clock starts when you first enter.

Grace periods

No broad grace period should be assumed. Overstay can create immigration problems.

Overstay consequences

  • fines or administrative penalties
  • refusal of future visas
  • permit complications
  • possible removal measures

Renewal timing

You usually apply for residence permit renewal before the current permit expires. Do not wait until the last days.

Activation rules

Your status becomes useful only if you:

  1. enter Romania within visa validity, and
  2. apply in time for your residence permit

Bridging/interim status

Romanian practice on pending permit applications should be checked with IGI. Applicants should not assume broad “implied status” protections without confirmation.

10. Complete document checklist

Important: Exact documents can vary by embassy and by whether your case is treated as commercial activities or independent professional activities. Always use the checklist issued by the Romanian embassy/consulate and IGI for your subcategory.

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Visa application form Official long-stay visa form Starts the application Incomplete fields, mismatched dates
Cover letter/statement Explanation of purpose Clarifies business plan and intent Too vague, inconsistent with documents
Appointment confirmation Consular booking proof Submission access Missing printout or wrong date/location

B. Identity/travel documents

  • Passport
  • Must be valid and in good condition
  • Usually original plus copies
  • Previous passports, if requested
  • Useful where travel history or identity continuity matters
  • Civil status documents
  • Birth certificate, marriage certificate where relevant

Common mistake: Name spelling differs across passport, corporate records, and police certificate.

C. Financial documents

  • recent personal bank statements
  • proof of lawful source of funds
  • business capital/investment evidence
  • tax records, if relevant
  • accountant letters or bank certificates, if accepted

Why needed: To prove both maintenance funds and business/investment credibility.

D. Employment/business documents

This is the heart of the application. Depending on the exact route, you may need:

  • Romanian company registration documents
  • articles of association/incorporation papers
  • certificate from the Romanian Trade Register
  • proof of shareholding
  • proof of administrator/manager role
  • business plan
  • investment plan and timeline
  • proof of office/registered seat
  • contracts, letters of intent, supplier/customer proof where available
  • approvals/opinions from Romanian authorities if required by law

Warning: A company incorporation certificate alone is usually not enough.

E. Education documents

Only where relevant, especially for:

  • regulated professions
  • independent professional activity requiring qualifications

F. Relationship/family documents

If dependents are involved or family circumstances affect accommodation/funds:

  • marriage certificate
  • children’s birth certificates
  • custody/consent documents

G. Accommodation/travel documents

  • lease agreement
  • ownership papers of host
  • notarized hosting declaration if accepted
  • proof of address in Romania
  • travel reservation or entry plan, if requested by the embassy

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

Not always applicable in the classic sense, but where another Romanian company/entity supports the case:

  • invitation/support letter
  • company ID documents
  • tax compliance proof
  • proof of authority of signatory

I. Health/insurance documents

  • health insurance policy
  • medical certificate if required
  • proof of being medically fit, where requested

J. Country-specific extras

Some embassies may require:

  • local residence permit if applying outside your nationality country
  • legalized police certificate
  • apostilled civil documents
  • translated corporate records

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

Not usually applicable for principal investor/self-employment status, but for accompanying minors:

  • birth certificate
  • parental consent to travel
  • custody orders
  • passport copies of both parents

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

Romanian authorities often require foreign documents to be:

  • translated into Romanian by an authorized translator
  • legalized or apostilled, depending on the document and issuing country
  • notarized where required

Common Mistake: Submitting an English-language corporate package without checking whether Romanian translation is mandatory.

M. Photo specifications

Use the specifications required by the embassy/consulate:

  • recent passport-style photo
  • correct background
  • correct size
  • neutral expression

Because photo rules can vary in practice, check the mission-specific instructions.

11. Financial requirements

Official position

Romanian authorities require proof of sufficient means and, for business routes, proof connected to the investment/commercial activity. However, the exact threshold is not always uniformly published in one easy English source for every subcategory.

What you should expect to prove

Personal maintenance funds

Enough to cover:

  • accommodation
  • daily living costs
  • transition period after arrival
  • dependent support, where relevant

Business/investment funds

Evidence that:

  • the business is capitalized
  • the investment is real and available
  • the funds are lawful
  • the planned activity is viable

Acceptable proof of funds may include

  • bank statements
  • bank balance certificates
  • proof of capital contribution
  • sale agreements or dividend records showing fund source
  • loan agreements, if legitimate and documented
  • company account statements
  • shareholder resolutions

Sponsorship

Pure third-party sponsorship is less central here than in family/student routes. If someone is financially backing the business, explain it clearly and document:

  • legal relationship
  • source of funds
  • transfer method
  • legal availability of funds

Seasoning rules

Romania does not publicly present a universal “funds must be seasoned for X months” rule for this visa. But practically, consulates may scrutinize:

  • sudden large deposits
  • cash-heavy unexplained balances
  • newly opened accounts

Bank statement period

Embassies often ask for recent statements. The exact period may vary.

Investment amount

The exact amount may depend on:

  • legal subcategory
  • company role
  • whether the route is interpreted as commercial activity
  • current law and consular guidance

Because publicly accessible embassy summaries can differ in detail, applicants must confirm the exact threshold directly from the handling mission and IGI/legal text.

Hidden costs

  • document translations
  • apostilles/legalizations
  • company incorporation expenses
  • legal/accounting fees
  • residence permit fees
  • housing deposits
  • insurance

Proof strength tips

  • provide both ending balance and transaction history
  • explain unusual credits
  • connect personal funds to business funding logically
  • use professional bank letters where possible

12. Fees and total cost

Official fee reality

Romanian visa fees can change and may differ by nationality, treaty arrangements, and consular location. Residence permit fees are separate from visa fees.

Fee table

Cost item Typical status
Visa application fee Check latest official consular fee page
Residence permit fee Separate, payable in Romania
Biometrics fee Often included or handled as part of permit issuance, but verify locally
Police certificate cost Varies by issuing country
Translation/notary/apostille Varies significantly
Insurance Varies by age, coverage, duration
Company setup/legal/accounting Varies widely
Courier/service fee Depends on embassy/provider practice
Renewal fee Separate from initial visa fee
Dependents’ fees Separate applications usually mean separate fees

Practical cost reality

For many applicants, the largest non-government costs are:

  • business setup
  • translations/legalizations
  • legal/accounting help
  • travel and accommodation
  • residence permit processing after arrival

Warning: Check the latest official fee page before applying. Do not rely on older blog posts or third-party fee tables.

13. Step-by-step application process

1. Confirm the correct visa category

Decide whether your case is truly:

  • commercial activities
  • independent professional activity
  • investor/founder route

If your facts match employment, family, or digital nomad instead, switch early.

2. Gather documents

Collect:

  • passport and civil documents
  • business/company records
  • proof of funds
  • police certificate
  • insurance
  • accommodation proof
  • translations/legalizations

3. Complete the application

Romania uses the E-VIZA portal for visa applications.

4. Pay fees

Follow the specific mission’s fee instructions.

5. Book appointment / interview

Many applicants must attend at the Romanian embassy/consulate with jurisdiction over their residence.

6. Submit the application

Submit online and/or in person depending on the mission workflow.

7. Upload/send documents

Bring originals and copies if instructed.

8. Medicals/police checks

Provide the required police certificate and any medical documentation requested.

9. Track application

Use the official portal or consular communication channels.

10. Respond to additional requests

If the embassy asks for clarifications, answer quickly and consistently.

11. Decision

If approved, the visa is affixed to your passport.

12. Travel to Romania

Enter within visa validity and carry supporting documents.

13. Post-arrival steps

Apply for the temporary residence permit through IGI before your lawful stay expires.

14. Register/update local information

Provide address and any required company/residence documentation.

15. Collect residence permit

If approved, you receive a Romanian residence card/permit.

14. Processing time

Official standard times

Romanian long-stay visa processing can vary. The official time can depend on:

  • need for approval from Romanian authorities
  • document verification
  • security screening
  • embassy workload

Some long-stay visas can take significantly longer than short-stay visas because of internal clearances.

What affects timing

  • completeness of file
  • complexity of business structure
  • whether pre-approvals are needed
  • nationality/background screening
  • peak summer and holiday periods
  • whether documents require verification in Romania

Priority options

No broad public premium-processing system is commonly advertised for this route.

Practical expectation

Applicants should prepare for a process measured in weeks to months, not days.

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

Biometrics may be collected as part of the visa and/or residence permit procedure.

Interview

An interview may be required or conducted informally at submission.

Typical questions

  • What exactly will your business do in Romania?
  • Why Romania?
  • What is your investment amount?
  • What is your role in the company?
  • How will you support yourself?
  • Where will you live?
  • Do you plan to work as an employee?

Medical

A medical certificate or insurance proof may be requested. Residence permit issuance can also involve health-related documentation.

Police checks

A criminal record certificate is commonly expected for long-stay residence-related cases.

Exemptions

No general exemption should be assumed.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

Romania does not appear to publish easy public approval-rate statistics for this exact subcategory in a user-friendly way.

Practical refusal patterns

Most refusals appear to stem from:

  • wrong visa category
  • poorly documented business activity
  • insufficient or unclear funds
  • missing legalizations/translations
  • inability to prove genuine commercial purpose
  • inconsistency between company documents and applicant narrative
  • weak post-arrival residence planning

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Strong legal strategies

Write a serious cover letter

Explain:

  • your business model
  • why Romania
  • what the company will do
  • your exact role
  • why the route is self-employment/commercial, not employment
  • how you will support yourself

Build a clean document narrative

Your file should tell one coherent story:

  1. who you are
  2. what business you are doing
  3. why it is lawful and real
  4. where the money came from
  5. where you will live
  6. what status you will apply for after arrival

Present funds transparently

If there is a recent large deposit:

  • explain it
  • attach source documents
  • reference the source in the cover letter

Use a document index

Help the officer navigate the file.

Translate properly

Use authorized translations and keep names/dates consistent.

Show substance, not just formation

If possible, include:

  • contracts
  • market analysis
  • office lease
  • accountant confirmation
  • client correspondence
  • business bank account evidence

Apply early

Do not wait until your intended move date is close.

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

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

1. Separate personal funds from business funds

Use clear account statements for each. This reduces confusion.

2. Include a one-page “application map”

List each required document and the page/tab where it appears.

3. Explain company structure visually

If there are multiple shareholders or foreign parent companies, add a simple ownership chart.

4. Be careful with translated company documents

Applicants often translate the certificate of incorporation but forget shareholder resolutions or powers of attorney.

5. If you had a prior visa refusal anywhere, disclose it honestly

Then explain what changed.

6. Use the embassy checklist and your own checklist

Embassy checklists are sometimes brief. Build a second internal checklist covering source-of-funds and business evidence.

7. Keep your role consistent

If company documents say “administrator” but your cover letter says “consultant” or “investor only,” explain the distinction.

8. Prepare for post-arrival residence permit requirements before you travel

Many delays happen after arrival because people did not prepare local housing or company documents in advance.

9. Do not overwhelm with irrelevant papers

Submit a complete but organized pack. Too many unrelated papers can obscure key evidence.

10. Contact the embassy only when you have a precise question

Example: “Do you require Romanian translations for apostilled bank statements issued in English?”
That is better than: “What documents do I need?”

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

When needed

Strongly recommended, even if not expressly mandatory.

What to include

Suggested structure

  1. Applicant identity and nationality
  2. Requested visa type and exact purpose
  3. Business/company overview
  4. Your role and qualifications
  5. Investment/funding summary
  6. Accommodation and planned entry date
  7. Statement of compliance and intent to apply for residence permit after arrival
  8. List of enclosed supporting documents

What not to say

  • Do not say you will “look for work” if this is not an employment visa
  • Do not describe tourism as the main purpose
  • Do not be vague about funding
  • Do not overpromise unrealistic revenue projections

Tone

Professional, factual, concise.

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

This section is partially applicable.

Unlike family or student visas, this route does not always rely on a traditional sponsor. But if a Romanian company, partner entity, or investor group is backing the application, supporting letters should include:

  • full legal name and registration details
  • address and contact information
  • signatory identity and authority
  • explanation of business relationship
  • confirmation of applicant’s role
  • details of premises, support, or contractual relationship

Sponsor mistakes

  • unsigned letters
  • generic “we invite him/her” wording with no legal/business context
  • no proof the signatory can bind the company
  • no supporting company registration documents

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Are dependents allowed?

Yes, potentially, but usually not automatically under the same visa.

Family members generally need:

  • their own visa applications, often under family reunification or accompanying family rules, depending on timing and status
  • proof of relationship
  • proof the principal applicant has lawful residence and sufficient means

Who qualifies

Usually:

  • spouse
  • minor children
  • sometimes other dependents under Romanian family reunification law, subject to strict conditions

Proof required

  • marriage certificate
  • birth certificates
  • legalized/apostilled civil documents
  • translations
  • custody/consent for minors
  • proof of accommodation and funds

Work/study rights of dependents

These rights depend on the dependent’s residence status, not automatically on the principal’s visa.

Unmarried partners

Romanian law is generally more formal than some countries. Unmarried partner recognition may be limited unless specifically recognized under a legal route. Check the latest family reunification rules carefully.

Same-sex spouses/partners

This can be legally sensitive. Romania has had complex treatment in family-residence contexts influenced by European case law. Applicants in this situation should verify the current practical policy directly with Romanian authorities or seek legal advice.

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

Work rights

Activity Allowed? Notes
Running your approved business Usually yes Core purpose of route
Ordinary salaried work for Romanian employer Usually no, unless separately authorized Different visa/permit usually needed
Freelance/self-employed activity matching approved basis Potentially yes Must match legal status
Remote work for foreign employer Unclear/route-dependent May fit digital nomad route better
Paid internships Usually not the main purpose Depends on status
Volunteering Only if incidental and lawful Not the core basis
Passive income Yes, generally, if lawful But passive income alone may not justify this visa
Short courses/study Limited Main purpose must remain business/self-employment

Key rule

You should only perform the activity your status authorizes. If your actual activity changes, immigration consequences can follow.

Taxable activity

If you live and work from Romania, you may trigger Romanian tax residence and local compliance obligations.

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

Entry clearance vs final admission

The visa allows you to travel to Romania, but border police still make the final admission decision.

Documents to carry

Carry printed copies of:

  • passport with visa
  • accommodation proof
  • company/business documents
  • proof of funds
  • health insurance
  • return/onward details if you have them
  • contact details of host/company/accountant/lawyer in Romania

Border questions may include

  • Why are you coming to Romania?
  • How long will you stay?
  • What business will you conduct?
  • Where will you live?

Re-entry after travel

Check your visa sticker and later your residence permit card for re-entry rights.

New passport with valid visa

If your passport expires after visa issuance, check with the embassy/IGI about carrying both passports.

Dual passports

Apply and travel consistently using the same passport where possible.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Can it be extended?

The visa itself is generally not “extended” like a visitor visa. Instead, after arrival, you normally apply for a temporary residence permit.

Renewal

Yes, residence permits may be renewable if:

  • the business activity continues lawfully
  • you still meet the requirements
  • you apply before expiry

Switching inside Romania

Switching from another status to this route, or from this route to another, may be limited and case-specific. Romania is not generally known for broad in-country switching flexibility compared with some other systems.

Change of employer/school

Not applicable in the ordinary sense, because this is not an employment or study route.

Restoration / bridging

No broad “restoration” concept should be assumed without checking Romanian law/current IGI practice.

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

Permanent residence / long-term residence

This route may indirectly lead to long-term residence if:

  • your temporary residence is maintained lawfully and continuously
  • you meet the residence duration requirement under Romanian law
  • you meet other requirements such as means, integration, and legal compliance

For many third-country nationals in Romania, 5 years of continuous legal residence is a key benchmark for long-term residence, but exact counting rules and exceptions must be verified from current law.

Citizenship

This visa does not itself grant citizenship. It may contribute indirectly if it leads to lawful residence over the years and you later qualify under Romanian nationality law.

When this visa does not help PR

If you:

  • do not obtain/renew your residence permit
  • have long absences
  • breach immigration rules
  • cease qualifying activity

then the route may not help long-term residence.

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Tax residence

Living in Romania can create Romanian tax residence depending on:

  • days spent in country
  • center of vital interests
  • domestic tax rules
  • applicable double tax treaty

Business compliance

You may need:

  • company accounting
  • tax registration
  • social contribution compliance
  • corporate filings
  • local licensing

Immigration compliance

  • apply for residence permit on time
  • maintain valid address records
  • renew before expiry
  • update authorities if circumstances change

Health insurance

Maintain required coverage and, where applicable, enroll in the Romanian health system.

Overstays and violations

These can affect:

  • renewals
  • future visas
  • long-term residence eligibility

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

Short-stay visa waiver does not replace long-stay status

Some nationalities may enter Romania visa-free for short stays, but they still generally need the proper Type D route for long-term residence based on business/self-employment.

Embassy jurisdiction differences

Rules can vary based on:

  • nationality
  • place of legal residence
  • local security screening
  • document legalization practice

EU/EEA/Swiss nationals

This visa is generally not applicable to EU/EEA/Swiss nationals, who are subject to free movement/residence registration rules rather than third-country visa rules.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Not normally principal applicants for this route.

Divorced/separated parents

Relevant if children accompany. Consent/custody documents are usually critical.

Adopted children

Adoption papers may need legalization and translation.

Same-sex spouses/partners

Check current Romanian family-residence practice carefully due to evolving legal context.

Stateless persons / refugees

Case-specific. Additional documentation or legal protection rules may apply.

Prior refusals

Must be disclosed if asked.

Overstays

Prior overstays can affect credibility and admissibility.

Criminal records

Even old offenses may matter depending on seriousness and current law.

Urgent travel

No broad emergency fast-track is publicly guaranteed for this route.

Applying from a third country

Possible only if the embassy accepts applicants legally resident there.

Name/gender marker mismatches

Provide linking documents early to avoid identity confusion.

Previous deportation/removal

High-risk case; legal advice is wise.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs Fact

Myth Fact
“If I open a Romanian company, I automatically get residence.” False. Company formation alone is usually not enough.
“A Type D visa means I can do any work in Romania.” False. Your activity must match your authorized status.
“I can enter visa-free and convert later without checking.” Risky. Long-stay residence usually requires the proper route.
“A short business visit visa is enough to run my company long-term.” False. Long-term residence requires the proper long-stay/residence process.
“If my funds arrived yesterday, that is fine as long as the balance is high.” Not necessarily. Source and timing matter.
“English documents are always accepted.” False. Romanian translations are often required.

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

What happens after refusal

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

Appeal/review

Romanian law may allow contesting certain visa/residence decisions, but:

  • procedure
  • deadline
  • forum
  • effectiveness

can vary depending on whether the refusal is a visa refusal abroad or residence refusal in Romania.

Reapplication

Often possible if you fix the issues.

No refund

Visa fees are generally non-refundable after processing starts.

Best reapplication strategy

  1. identify the exact refusal ground
  2. correct the documentary/legal problem
  3. add a concise explanation of what changed
  4. avoid filing the same weak pack again

When to seek legal help

Consider legal help if refusal involves:

  • security/public order reasoning
  • disputed legal classification
  • family-rights issues
  • same-sex spouse recognition
  • prior removal history

31. Arrival in Romania: what happens next?

At the border

Expect passport and visa inspection, plus possible questions.

First steps after arrival

You should usually:

  • move into your registered accommodation
  • keep proof of address
  • organize your business/residence documents
  • apply for your temporary residence permit with IGI before the allowed stay ends

Residence permit process

You may need:

  • passport
  • visa
  • accommodation proof
  • business/company documents
  • funds proof
  • insurance
  • tax/compliance evidence
  • photos/biometrics

Practical first-30-days priorities

First 7 days

  • settle housing
  • obtain local contact details
  • organize all original documents

First 14 days

  • confirm IGI appointment/requirements
  • finalize any company/tax setup still pending

First 30 days

  • submit residence permit application if possible, well before expiry

32. Real-world timeline examples

Entrepreneur/founder

  • Weeks 1–4: company formation, business plan, source-of-funds documents
  • Weeks 5–8: translations, police certificate, insurance
  • Weeks 8–12: visa filing and consular processing
  • Month 3 or 4: visa issuance and travel
  • After arrival: residence permit application

Investor

  • Weeks 1–6: corporate due diligence, investment documents
  • Weeks 7–10: application package
  • Following weeks/months: visa processing and internal clearances
  • Arrival: permit filing

Spouse/dependent

Usually follows after the principal applicant has secured legal residence or proceeds under parallel family documentation where permitted.

Student/worker/tourist

Not applicable for this visa as principal use; those applicants should use their own dedicated category.

33. Ideal document pack structure

Recommended order

  1. Cover letter
  2. Document index
  3. Visa application form
  4. Passport copy
  5. Photos
  6. Company/business documents
  7. Investment/source-of-funds evidence
  8. Personal financial evidence
  9. Accommodation proof
  10. Police certificate
  11. Insurance
  12. Civil status documents
  13. Translations/legalizations
  14. Any embassy-specific forms

File naming convention

Use names like:

  • 01_Cover_Letter.pdf
  • 02_Document_Index.pdf
  • 03_Passport.pdf
  • 04_Company_Registration.pdf

Scan quality tips

  • color scans
  • full page visible
  • no cut-off corners
  • readable stamps/signatures
  • one PDF per section if portal limits allow

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • Confirm correct visa route
  • Confirm embassy jurisdiction
  • Confirm latest checklist from embassy/IGI
  • Gather passport and civil documents
  • Obtain company/business records
  • Prepare source-of-funds package
  • Get police certificate
  • Buy compliant insurance
  • Translate/legalize documents as required
  • Draft cover letter
  • Book appointment if needed

Submission-day checklist

  • Passport original
  • Appointment confirmation
  • Printed application form if required
  • Photos
  • Originals + copies
  • Fee payment proof
  • Organized document pack
  • Contact details for Romanian company/host

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

  • Passport
  • Appointment proof
  • Key business facts memorized
  • Simple explanation of funding source
  • Address in Romania
  • Company registration details

Arrival checklist

  • Carry supporting documents in hand luggage
  • Confirm accommodation access
  • Schedule/prepare residence permit filing
  • Keep copies of all submitted papers

Extension/renewal checklist

  • Check permit expiry date early
  • Updated company documents
  • Updated financial proof
  • Updated accommodation
  • Updated insurance if required
  • Tax/compliance proof
  • Renewal appointment

Refusal recovery checklist

  • Read refusal reason carefully
  • Identify missing/weak evidence
  • Correct translations/legalizations
  • Rewrite cover letter if unclear
  • Add source-of-funds explanation
  • Reapply only when materially stronger

35. FAQs

1. Is this the same as a Romanian business visa?

Not exactly. A short-stay business visa is for brief visits; this Type D route is for long stay leading to residence.

2. Can I use this visa just to attend meetings?

Usually no. That is a short-stay business purpose.

3. Do I need to already have a Romanian company?

Often yes, or at least a well-documented legal business setup/role, depending on the exact subcategory.

4. Is company incorporation alone enough?

Usually not.

5. Can I work for another employer in Romania with this visa?

Usually no.

6. Can I bring my spouse immediately?

Possibly, but they usually need their own immigration basis or family application.

7. Can my children study in Romania if they join me?

Potentially yes, depending on their residence status and local education rules.

8. Do I need a business plan?

In practice, almost always advisable, and often functionally essential.

9. Is there a minimum investment amount?

Possibly, depending on subcategory and current legal interpretation; verify with the embassy/IGI.

10. How long is the visa valid?

Romanian long-stay visas are generally issued for up to 90 days.

11. Can I renew the visa itself?

Usually the route is to get a residence permit, not repeatedly renew the visa.

12. How soon after arrival should I apply for residence?

As early as possible and before lawful stay expires.

13. Can I apply from any country?

Usually only from your country of nationality or legal residence, subject to embassy rules.

14. Do bank statements need translation into Romanian?

Often yes, or at least sometimes; check the handling mission’s practice.

15. Is a police certificate mandatory?

Commonly yes for long-stay residence-type cases.

16. Can I use personal savings as investment proof?

Yes, if lawfully sourced and clearly documented.

17. What if my funds were transferred recently?

Explain the source with evidence.

18. Can I study part-time on this visa?

Limited incidental study may be possible, but this is not a study route.

19. Can I do remote work for foreign clients?

This is a grey area; if that is the main purpose, the digital nomad route may fit better.

20. Is there premium processing?

No broad official premium service is commonly advertised.

21. What happens if my visa is approved but my passport expires soon?

Check whether you can travel with both passports or need transfer/reissuance guidance.

22. Can prior Schengen refusals hurt this application?

Yes, especially if undisclosed or relevant to credibility.

23. Can I apply while already in Romania as a tourist?

Do not assume this is allowed; verify with IGI and the embassy. Long-stay routes often require proper pre-entry visa processing.

24. Can a consultant or lawyer submit everything for me?

They can help prepare, but personal appearance may still be required.

25. Is health insurance mandatory?

Usually yes, at least at the visa and/or initial residence stage.

26. Will this visa lead to permanent residence?

Indirectly possible if you lawfully maintain residence and meet long-term residence requirements.

27. Can family members work if they join me?

Depends on their own residence status and Romanian law at the time.

28. What is the biggest reason applicants fail?

Using the wrong category or submitting a weak business/substance file.

29. Do I need a lease before applying?

Often accommodation proof is required, though the exact acceptable form varies.

30. Can I reapply after refusal?

Yes, usually, if you fix the identified issues.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are official Romanian sources relevant to this visa route and the follow-on residence process.

Primary official sources

Important note on official-source limitations

Romania’s official English-language pages do not always provide a single, fully consolidated checklist specifically titled “self-employed/investor visa” in the same way some countries do. In practice, applicants may need to cross-check:

  • MFA visa category pages
  • E-VIZA portal instructions
  • the specific embassy website
  • IGI residence permit guidance
  • the underlying Romanian immigration legislation

37. Final verdict

Romania’s Type D self-employment/investor route is best for genuine entrepreneurs, investors, founders, and independent professionals who want to build a lawful long-term base in Romania.

Biggest benefits

  • legal long-stay entry route for business/investment purposes
  • path to a Romanian temporary residence permit
  • possible long-term residence pathway over time
  • suitable for real business operators, not just visitors

Biggest risks

  • choosing the wrong subcategory
  • assuming company formation alone is enough
  • weak source-of-funds evidence
  • failing to prepare for the post-arrival residence permit stage
  • inconsistent translations and corporate papers

Top preparation advice

  • confirm the exact Romanian subcategory first
  • use only official embassy/IGI requirements
  • build a coherent business-and-funds narrative
  • prepare translations/legalizations early
  • organize for the residence permit application before you even travel

When to consider another visa

Choose another route if your true purpose is:

  • salaried employment
  • study
  • tourism
  • joining family
  • remote work for a foreign employer without Romanian commercial activity

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

Because this visa category can be presented differently across Romanian official sources, verify the following before filing:

  • the exact legal subcategory for your case: commercial activities vs independent professional activity
  • the current embassy-specific checklist for your country of application
  • whether your embassy requires Romanian translations for all foreign documents or accepts some in English
  • whether apostille/legalization is required for your civil, police, and corporate documents
  • the current visa fee and payment method
  • whether your case requires a Romanian authority approval/opinion before visa issuance
  • the current financial threshold or economic justification standard for your subcategory
  • whether your planned activity is treated as self-employment, investment, company administration, or another legal basis
  • the current IGI residence permit checklist after arrival
  • whether family members can apply in parallel or must wait for your residence permit first
  • whether your nationality or place of residence affects processing times or document verification
  • whether current policy changes affect digital nomad vs self-employment classification for remote work cases

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