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Short Description: Complete guide to Slovenia’s Type D family reunification visa: eligibility, documents, process, fees, arrival steps, and residence pathway.

Last Verified On: 2026-04-06

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country Slovenia
Visa name National Long-Stay Visa (Type D) – Family Reunification
Visa short name D-Family
Category National long-stay visa
Main purpose Entry and longer stay connected to family reunification and other Residence Permit Act grounds requiring a Type D visa before entry
Typical applicant Non-EU/EEA/Swiss family member of a person legally residing in Slovenia, usually before or alongside temporary residence permit formalities
Validity More than 90 days and up to 1 year
Stay duration Up to the visa validity, subject to the purpose and underlying immigration basis
Entries allowed Usually multiple entries for Type D visa validity, but applicants must check the issued visa sticker and mission instructions
Extension possible? Generally no direct “extension” of the visa itself; long-term stay is usually continued through a temporary residence permit
Work allowed? Limited/explain: Type D itself is not the main source of work rights; work rights depend on the underlying residence/work authorization
Study allowed? Limited/explain: incidental study may be possible, but this is not a student visa; long-term study needs the correct residence basis
Family allowed? Yes; this route is specifically tied to family reunification
PR path? Possible/explain: the visa itself is usually only an entry/stay document, but lawful residence under family reunification can count toward long-term residence/permanent residence under Slovenian law
Citizenship path? Indirect/explain: the visa itself does not give citizenship, but long-term lawful residence may contribute toward later naturalization if statutory conditions are met

Slovenia’s Type D visa is a national long-stay visa for stays longer than 90 days and up to one year. It is different from a short-stay Schengen visa (Type C). In the family context, it is used by certain non-EU/EEA/Swiss family members who need a long-stay entry document connected to family reunification or to facilitate entry before or while arranging residence status in Slovenia.

In practical terms, this route sits between:

  • a short-stay visa for temporary visits, and
  • a temporary residence permit for longer legal residence.

For many family applicants, the visa is not the final status. It is often a way to enter Slovenia legally for a longer stay, after which the person either already has, or proceeds with, residence formalities under the Foreigners Act.

Why it exists

It exists so Slovenia can allow lawful long-term entry for people who do not fit short-stay visitor rules and who need to join family in Slovenia for a longer period.

Who it is meant for

Generally, this route is meant for:

  • non-EU/EEA/Swiss nationals,
  • who have a recognized family relationship,
  • with a sponsor or family member legally residing in Slovenia,
  • and who need a national long-stay visa rather than only a short Schengen visa.

Where it fits in Slovenia’s immigration system

Slovenia’s system broadly separates:

  • short stay: up to 90 days in a 180-day period,
  • national long-stay visa (Type D): over 90 days up to 1 year,
  • temporary residence permit: for residence based on family reunification, work, study, research, etc.,
  • permanent residence: after qualifying lawful residence.

Is it a visa or a residence permit?

It is a visa, not a residence permit.

That matters because:

  • a visa mainly authorizes entry and stay for a defined period,
  • a residence permit creates a more stable immigration status with broader rights and longer-term renewal structure.

Official and local naming

Common official naming includes:

  • National visa
  • Type D visa
  • Long-stay visa
  • In Slovenian administrative context, references may appear as vizum za dolgoročno bivanje (vizum D).

For family reunification, the visa is usually tied to the legal ground of family reunification under Slovenia’s foreigners legislation.

2. Who should apply for this visa?

Best-fit applicants

Spouses and family members

This is the main target group. It is suitable for:

  • spouses,
  • certain registered or legally recognized partners where accepted,
  • minor children,
  • in some cases other dependent family members if Slovenian law allows family reunification for that category.

Dependents of foreign workers, students, researchers, or residents

If your family member legally resides in Slovenia and Slovenian law allows reunification, this may be the correct entry route.

Family of Slovenian citizens

Sometimes a family member of a Slovenian citizen may use this route or a related residence pathway, but the exact procedure can differ depending on nationality and whether EU free movement rules or national rules apply.

People who usually should not use this visa

Tourists

If you only want to visit family for a short trip, this is usually the wrong route. You likely need:

  • visa-free short stay, or
  • a Schengen short-stay visa (Type C).

Business visitors

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

Employees moving for work

Usually need the correct work/residence authorization, not a family Type D unless entering as a dependent family member.

Students

If the main purpose is study, the proper student residence route is usually more appropriate.

Job seekers

This is not a job-seeking visa.

Founders, investors, digital nomads

This is not a business migration or digital nomad route.

Transit passengers

This is not a transit visa.

Medical travelers

If the main purpose is treatment, another route may be more suitable.

Journalists, performers, religious workers

These categories should use the correct specialized basis if that is the primary purpose.

Quick suitability guide

Applicant type Good fit for D-Family? Notes
Spouse joining resident in Slovenia Yes Often one of the main use cases
Minor child joining parent in Slovenia Yes Subject to relationship and consent rules
Parent of a child in Slovenia Sometimes Depends on legal category and dependency rules
Tourist visiting relatives No Use short-stay route
Worker relocating for employment No Use work/residence route
Student enrolling in Slovenia No Use student residence route
Digital nomad living remotely from Slovenia No No dedicated digital nomad family visa basis here

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted purpose

The core permitted purpose is:

  • family reunification / joining family in Slovenia for a long stay

Depending on the applicant’s exact case, the Type D visa may also function as an entry document linked to future residence procedures.

Usually allowed or incidental activities

Tourism

Incidental tourism during lawful stay is generally not the main issue, but tourism cannot be the main reason for applying under this family category.

Family life

Yes. This is the main purpose.

Attending family events

Yes, if consistent with the family reunification basis.

Preparing residence formalities

Often yes, where the applicant needs to complete legal residence steps after arrival.

Prohibited or not covered as the main purpose

Employment

Not automatically. The visa itself is generally not a standalone work authorization.

Remote work

This is a grey area in many countries, and Slovenia does not publicly frame the family Type D as a remote work route. If paid work is involved, especially from Slovenia, applicants should verify with the relevant authority whether separate permission, tax registration, or residence authorization is needed.

Internship

Not the proper route if internship is the main purpose.

Study

Not the proper route if study is the main purpose.

Volunteering

Not the proper route if organized volunteering is the main purpose.

Paid performance

Not the proper route.

Journalism

Not the proper route.

Medical treatment

Not the proper route if treatment is the primary purpose.

Transit

Not applicable.

Marriage in Slovenia

If the main purpose is to enter solely to marry, applicants should confirm with the consulate whether this route is accepted; family reunification normally assumes an existing qualifying relationship.

Religious activity

Not the primary purpose route.

Investment/business setup

Not the primary purpose route.

Common misunderstanding

Common Mistake: Assuming a family Type D visa automatically gives unrestricted work rights. In Slovenia, long-term employment rights usually depend on the underlying residence/work authorization, not just the visa sticker.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Official program name

The official visa class is generally referred to as:

  • National Visa (Type D)

In the family context, it is best described as:

  • Type D visa for family reunification purposes

Short name / code

  • Type D
  • National long-stay visa
  • Here: D-Family as a reader-friendly short label, not an official subclass code

Related permit names

People often confuse the visa with:

  • Temporary residence permit for family reunification
  • Short-stay Schengen visa (Type C)
  • Residence card
  • Permit to reside as a family member of an EU citizen

Old vs current naming

Slovenia still publicly uses the standard EU-consistent distinction between:

  • Type C short stay
  • Type D national long stay

There is no clear evidence from current official pages that the family Type D has been renamed into a separate branded scheme.

5. Eligibility criteria

Because Slovenia’s family migration rules depend heavily on the sponsor’s status, the exact category of family member, and whether the person is applying for a visa, residence permit, or both, applicants should confirm the exact route with the Slovenian diplomatic mission or administrative unit.

Core eligibility factors

1) Nationality

Generally for third-country nationals who are not EU/EEA/Swiss citizens.

EU/EEA/Swiss family cases can follow different residence rules and often do not use a Type D visa in the same way.

2) Valid travel document

Applicants must hold a valid passport/travel document. For visas, Slovenia generally requires:

  • passport validity extending beyond intended stay,
  • sufficient blank pages,
  • acceptable condition.

The exact minimum remaining validity should be checked with the mission.

3) Genuine qualifying family relationship

You must show a legally recognized family relationship, such as:

  • spouse,
  • child,
  • other eligible dependent relative where Slovenian law allows.

4) Sponsor’s lawful status in Slovenia

The person in Slovenia usually must have lawful residence or another legal status that allows family reunification.

5) Proof of means / maintenance

Applicants usually need to show that the family member or sponsor has enough means for support, although exact thresholds can vary by case and residence basis.

6) Accommodation

Proof of accommodation in Slovenia is commonly required.

7) Health insurance

Applicants may need to prove health insurance coverage, especially before public or compulsory coverage is activated.

8) No security/public order concerns

Criminality, security alerts, or public order concerns may lead to refusal.

9) Purpose consistency

Documents must match the claimed purpose: joining family, not tourism or undeclared work.

10) Biometrics / personal appearance

Applicants usually need to appear in person for submission and biometrics where required.

Factors that are often relevant but not always public in one single checklist

Criminal record certificate

May be required depending on the case, age, and residence procedure.

Legalized/apostilled civil status documents

Marriage and birth certificates often need legalization/apostille and translation.

Residence permit dependency rules

Some family members can only apply after the sponsor has held status for a certain period. This depends on the sponsor’s category and current law.

Minor consent

For children, consent from the non-accompanying parent may be needed.

Not typical eligibility criteria for this route

  • points system: No
  • lottery/ballot: No
  • language test for the visa itself: not generally stated as a visa prerequisite
  • education/work experience: not the core basis
  • job offer: not required unless tied to another status
  • admission letter: not relevant unless mixed with a study case

Embassy-specific variation

Warning: Some Slovenian embassies or consulates publish local submission procedures, appointment systems, or document formatting requirements. Always follow the instructions of the mission where you apply.

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Ineligibility factors

You may be ineligible or at high risk of refusal if:

  • you do not have a qualifying family relationship,
  • the sponsor in Slovenia does not have the right status for reunification,
  • your documents are incomplete or inconsistent,
  • your passport is invalid or expiring too soon,
  • you cannot prove accommodation or maintenance,
  • your civil documents are not legalized/translated correctly,
  • there are public security concerns,
  • you have prior immigration violations.

Common refusal triggers

Relationship evidence is weak

Examples:

  • marriage certificate not recognized,
  • no proof of ongoing relationship where needed,
  • unexplained discrepancies in names/dates.

Wrong category

Applying as family reunification when the real purpose is:

  • work,
  • study,
  • short visit.

Financial evidence is weak

Examples:

  • irregular or unexplained bank statements,
  • sponsor income not documented,
  • no proof of who will support the applicant.

Civil documents are defective

Examples:

  • missing apostille/legalization,
  • poor translation,
  • unofficial translator where sworn translation is required,
  • certificates too old if current copies are needed.

Child cases lack custody proof

Examples:

  • one parent applying without the other parent’s consent,
  • no court order,
  • no proof of sole custody.

Inconsistent statements

Examples:

  • visa form says one thing,
  • cover letter says another,
  • sponsor letter says something different.

Past immigration problems

Examples:

  • previous overstay in Schengen,
  • prior deportation,
  • misrepresentation in another application.

7. Benefits of this visa

Main benefits

  • Allows legal long stay in Slovenia beyond ordinary short-stay rules
  • Supports family unity
  • Can serve as the practical bridge into longer-term lawful residence
  • May allow easier arrival and in-country formalities than trying to manage everything on a short-stay basis
  • Often relevant where a person needs to join a spouse, parent, or other qualifying family member

Family-related benefits

  • lets families live together in Slovenia,
  • helps children join parents for long-term residence,
  • can be the first step before residence permit issuance or continuation.

Travel flexibility

Type D visas generally support long stay in Slovenia and may allow travel consistent with Schengen rules, but border and movement rights should be checked carefully because a national visa is not identical to a residence permit.

Pathway benefits

The biggest long-term benefit is usually indirect:

  • lawful residence under family reunification may contribute toward later residence renewal,
  • long-term residence/permanent residence may become possible,
  • citizenship may later be possible if all statutory requirements are met.

8. Limitations and restrictions

Main limitations

  • It is not the same as a residence permit
  • It is not automatically a work permit
  • It has limited validity: over 90 days up to 1 year
  • It may be tied closely to the sponsor and purpose
  • Address registration and other administrative obligations still apply

Potential restrictions

Sponsor dependence

If the family link or sponsor’s status ends, your own immigration position may be affected.

No unrestricted switching assumption

Do not assume you can freely switch to work, student, or business status without a separate legal procedure.

Reporting obligations

You may need to:

  • register residence,
  • report address changes,
  • maintain health insurance,
  • carry valid documents.

Re-entry conditions

Always check whether the issued visa is single or multiple entry and whether travel could affect your residence procedure.

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Official duration

Slovenia’s Type D national visa is for stays longer than 90 days and up to 1 year.

When the clock starts

The visa validity starts on the date printed on the visa sticker, not when you decide to travel.

Stay calculation

For Type D, the stay is generally based on the validity period and conditions printed on the visa. This is different from the short-stay 90/180 Schengen calculation.

Entries

Many Type D visas are issued for multiple entries, but this must be verified from:

  • the issued visa sticker,
  • mission instructions,
  • your purpose.

Grace periods

No general public rule promises a grace period after expiry. Do not rely on one.

Overstay consequences

Overstaying can lead to:

  • fines,
  • removal,
  • future Schengen/Slovenia visa problems,
  • difficulty obtaining residence later.

Renewal timing

If your long-term residence will continue, you typically need to resolve the residence permit side well before visa expiry.

Pro Tip: Treat the Type D visa as a time-sensitive bridge document. Start residence follow-up steps as early as the authorities allow.

10. Complete document checklist

Because document lists can vary by embassy and by whether the applicant is also pursuing a residence permit, use the official mission checklist first. The table below covers the documents most commonly required or relevant.

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Visa application form Official national visa form Starts the application Using outdated form, incomplete answers, mismatched signatures
Passport Valid travel document Identity and travel authorization Too little validity, damaged passport, insufficient pages
Passport photos Recent biometric photos Visa issuance Wrong size/background/age of photo
Fee payment proof Receipt if required Confirms payment Wrong amount or wrong payment method

B. Identity/travel documents

  • Current passport
  • Copies of passport bio page and used visas/stamps where requested
  • Previous passports if requested
  • National ID card copy if relevant

Common mistakes

  • submitting unclear copies,
  • omitting old passports when travel history matters,
  • mismatch between passport spelling and civil certificates.

C. Financial documents

  • sponsor’s payslips,
  • employment contract,
  • bank statements,
  • proof of savings,
  • maintenance undertaking if accepted.

Common mistakes

  • statements missing account holder name,
  • unexplained large deposits,
  • inconsistent balances.

D. Employment/business documents

Usually relevant for the sponsor, not the family applicant:

  • employer confirmation,
  • employment contract,
  • proof of self-employment or business registration,
  • income records.

E. Education documents

Not usually central for a family visa.

Not applicable for this visa unless specifically requested to clarify dependency, age, or another residence basis.

F. Relationship/family documents

This is one of the most important sections.

  • marriage certificate,
  • birth certificate,
  • adoption papers if relevant,
  • custody order,
  • consent letter from non-traveling parent,
  • proof of dependency for dependent relatives,
  • proof of genuine relationship if requested.

Common mistakes

  • not legalizing the certificate,
  • submitting church certificate where civil certificate is required,
  • no translation,
  • old names not explained after marriage or name change.

G. Accommodation/travel documents

  • proof of address in Slovenia,
  • lease,
  • ownership extract,
  • host declaration if accepted,
  • intended travel details if requested.

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

  • copy of sponsor passport/ID,
  • proof of sponsor’s lawful residence in Slovenia,
  • invitation/support letter,
  • evidence of relationship,
  • proof sponsor can host/support.

I. Health/insurance documents

  • travel or health insurance if required before full residence registration,
  • proof of public insurance eligibility where relevant.

J. Country-specific extras

Depending on nationality or mission, you may also be asked for:

  • police certificate,
  • proof of legal stay in country of application,
  • local civil registry extracts,
  • legalization/apostille confirmation.

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

  • birth certificate,
  • parental consent,
  • custody judgment,
  • school records if useful to explain family move,
  • copy of both parents’ IDs/passports.

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

Civil status documents often require:

  • certified translation into Slovene or another accepted language according to mission instructions,
  • apostille or full legalization unless exempt by treaty.

Warning: Whether a translation into English is enough varies. Slovenian authorities often require Slovene translations for residence-use documents. Verify with the mission or administrative unit.

M. Photo specifications

Check the official mission’s current photo standard. Usually:

  • recent,
  • passport-style,
  • light background,
  • no heavy editing.

11. Financial requirements

This is one of the least consistently published items in a simple visa-only format, because family reunification finance rules often sit in residence-permit law and can vary by sponsor type and family member category.

What is usually required

Applicants normally must show that the family will have sufficient means of subsistence in Slovenia. This can be proved through:

  • sponsor salary,
  • employment contract,
  • bank statements,
  • pension income,
  • business income,
  • savings,
  • support declarations where accepted.

Minimum amount

A single universal public number for every D-family case is not always clearly published on embassy pages. The amount may be tied to Slovenian social-support benchmarks or statutory maintenance thresholds under current law.

Check the latest official instructions from the diplomatic mission and, if relevant, the administrative unit handling the residence side of the case.

Who can sponsor

Usually:

  • spouse,
  • parent,
  • legal guardian,
  • other qualifying family sponsor residing lawfully in Slovenia.

Acceptable proof

Most persuasive evidence usually includes:

  • last 3–6 months of bank statements,
  • recent payslips,
  • employment confirmation,
  • tax records if self-employed,
  • pension statements,
  • lease or housing documents to show stable accommodation.

Hidden costs

Even when formal maintenance is met, families often underestimate:

  • translation costs,
  • apostille/legalization,
  • travel,
  • temporary private insurance,
  • local registration expenses,
  • initial living costs before salary or insurance systems fully activate.

Practical proof-strength tips

  • keep statements consistent,
  • explain non-routine deposits,
  • include sponsor income plus accommodation proof together,
  • make sure names match exactly across all records.

12. Fees and total cost

Exact fees can change and can vary by mission, currency conversion, and whether the applicant is paying only for a visa or also later for a residence card/permit process.

Typical cost components

Cost item Notes
Visa application fee Check latest official consular fee page
Biometrics fee Often included, but verify locally
Residence permit fee/card fee May apply separately if a permit is issued/collected
Police certificate Varies by country
Translation fee Varies widely
Apostille/legalization Varies by country and document
Courier/postage If used by mission
Insurance Depends on duration and provider
Travel to consulate Often significant if no local mission
Post-arrival registration costs May apply depending on procedure

Official fee caution

Warning: Slovenian consular fees are updated periodically. Always use the current official fee list of the embassy/consulate or the Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs.

13. Step-by-step application process

1. Confirm the correct route

Check whether you need:

  • only a Type D visa,
  • a temporary residence permit,
  • both in sequence,
  • or a different route if you are an EU family member.

2. Gather family and civil documents

Start early with:

  • marriage/birth certificates,
  • legalization/apostille,
  • translations,
  • sponsor residence proof.

3. Contact the competent Slovenian mission

Find the embassy/consulate responsible for your country or region. Some countries are covered by non-resident embassies.

4. Complete the application form

Use the current official form and mission instructions.

5. Book an appointment

Many missions require advance booking.

6. Pay the fee

Use the exact payment method instructed by the mission.

7. Submit in person

Bring originals and copies. Biometrics may be taken.

8. Provide extra documents if requested

This is common in family cases.

9. Wait for processing

The mission may consult Slovenian authorities.

10. Receive decision

If approved, a Type D visa is placed in your passport.

11. Travel to Slovenia

Carry all supporting documents in hand luggage.

12. Complete arrival formalities

Depending on your case, this may include:

  • address registration,
  • administrative unit visit,
  • residence permit collection or follow-up,
  • insurance enrollment.

Paper vs online

For this route, applications are generally consular/paper-based or appointment-based, not fully digital e-visa style.

14. Processing time

There is no single publicly guaranteed processing time for every family Type D case.

What affects timing

  • embassy workload,
  • completeness of documents,
  • need to verify foreign civil records,
  • nationality-specific security checks,
  • whether Slovenian internal authorities must approve aspects of the case,
  • peak travel seasons.

Practical expectation

Family cases often take longer than simple short-stay tourism cases because:

  • relationship documents are reviewed,
  • sponsor status may be checked,
  • legalizations/translations may be scrutinized.

Priority processing

No general public premium or super-priority route is commonly advertised for this category.

Pro Tip: Apply as early as your documents and sponsor status allow. Civil document legalization can take longer than visa processing itself.

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

Usually required through personal appearance, especially for first-time long-stay visa applicants.

Interview

A formal interview may or may not happen. If it does, questions usually focus on:

  • relationship,
  • sponsor in Slovenia,
  • intended address,
  • planned length of stay,
  • who pays expenses.

Medical

No universally published general medical exam requirement for all D-family applicants was clearly identified from public visa pages, but health insurance and public-health admissibility remain relevant. If a residence procedure requires more, the authority will usually specify it.

Police clearance

May be requested depending on the broader residence context, age, or local mission practice.

Exemptions

Children and some categories may have modified biometrics rules depending on age.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

Official public approval-rate statistics specific to Slovenia’s Type D family reunification visa are not clearly published in a simple applicant-facing format.

So, instead of inventing percentages, here is the practical reality:

Frequent refusal patterns

  • incomplete family documentation,
  • relationship proof not recognized,
  • failure to legalize or translate documents properly,
  • insufficient sponsor income or unproven means,
  • wrong category selection,
  • inconsistent statements,
  • unresolved custody issues for minors.

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Use a simple evidence logic

Your file should answer four questions clearly:

  1. Who are you?
  2. Who is your family member in Slovenia?
  3. Why do you qualify legally?
  4. How will you live lawfully and support yourself?

Practical ways to improve the file

  • Include a short cover letter summarizing the legal basis.
  • Add a document index.
  • Put civil records in chronological order.
  • Explain name changes clearly.
  • If bank deposits are unusual, attach a written explanation and source proof.
  • If the sponsor changed jobs recently, include old and new employment evidence.
  • If applying for a child, include custody and consent evidence upfront.

Common Mistake: Sending dozens of chat screenshots instead of the core legal documents. Family visas are primarily document-law cases, not social-media evidence cases.

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

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

1. Build the file around the legal relationship

Start with the official civil record first:

  • marriage certificate,
  • birth certificate,
  • adoption/custody order.

Then add supporting context only if needed.

2. Make translations easy to review

For each foreign document, place in this order:

  1. original,
  2. apostille/legalization page,
  3. certified translation.

3. Explain every mismatch

If a sponsor’s surname differs from the applicant’s document due to:

  • marriage,
  • transliteration,
  • old passport,
  • local naming practice,

add a one-page explanation.

4. Use a sponsor letter strategically

The sponsor letter should confirm:

  • relationship,
  • legal status in Slovenia,
  • address,
  • financial support if applicable,
  • intention to live together.

5. For children, over-document custody

Child files often stall because of missing consent. Include:

  • consent letter,
  • court order,
  • death certificate of absent parent if relevant,
  • sole custody evidence.

6. Contact the embassy only when necessary

Good reasons to contact:

  • unclear legalization rule,
  • no appointment availability,
  • uncertain jurisdiction,
  • special humanitarian urgency.

Bad reasons:

  • asking for daily updates,
  • asking questions clearly answered on the official page.

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

Is it required?

Not always, but it is often very useful.

What to include

Suggested structure

  1. Applicant identity
  2. Sponsor identity and legal status in Slovenia
  3. Relationship
  4. Purpose: family reunification
  5. Intended address in Slovenia
  6. Financial/support summary
  7. List of attached key documents

What not to say

  • Do not say you plan to work unless you already have the proper authorization.
  • Do not say your main reason is tourism if this is a family application.
  • Do not hide previous refusals or immigration history if asked.

Tone

  • factual,
  • respectful,
  • short,
  • consistent with documents.

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

Who can sponsor

Usually the qualifying family member residing lawfully in Slovenia.

What the sponsor should provide

  • copy of passport/ID,
  • Slovenian residence permit or status proof,
  • address proof,
  • employment/income proof,
  • support/invitation letter,
  • evidence of family link.

Good sponsor letter structure

  • full name and contact details,
  • legal status in Slovenia,
  • relationship to applicant,
  • confirmation of cohabitation or hosting,
  • financial support statement if applicable,
  • signature and date.

Sponsor mistakes

  • vague letters,
  • no address proof,
  • old residence permit copy,
  • claiming support but providing no income proof.

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Are dependents allowed?

Yes. This route is specifically family-focused.

Who usually qualifies

Category Usually possible? Notes
Spouse Yes Civil marriage evidence required
Minor child Yes Birth certificate and consent/custody issues may apply
Adopted child Yes, if legally recognized Adoption documents required
Unmarried partner Unclear/limited Depends on Slovenian legal recognition and case type
Parent of resident Sometimes Depends on dependency and statutory category
Adult child Limited Usually only if dependent and legally covered

Partner definition

If you are not legally married, do not assume Slovenia will treat the case the same way as a spouse. Check the exact official legal category.

Separate vs combined applications

Family members generally submit separate applications, even when linked to the same sponsor.

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

Work rights

The Type D family visa itself should not be treated as unrestricted work permission.

Practical rule

If you want to work in Slovenia, verify whether you need:

  • a temporary residence permit with work rights,
  • separate labor-market authorization,
  • registration under the sponsor-linked family residence status.

Self-employment

Not automatically allowed on the basis of this visa alone.

Remote work

Legally sensitive. Working remotely from Slovenia can create:

  • immigration issues,
  • tax residence issues,
  • social security issues.

Do not assume it is automatically permitted merely because income comes from abroad.

Study rights

Short courses or incidental study may be possible, but full-time study should generally use the proper student route unless your residence status independently allows it.

Business meetings

Attending informal family-related or incidental meetings is not the issue; running business operations is outside the main purpose.

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

Visa is not a guarantee of admission

Even with a visa, final admission is decided at the border.

Carry these on arrival

  • passport with Type D visa,
  • copy of sponsor’s residence permit/ID,
  • accommodation proof,
  • sponsor contact details,
  • marriage/birth certificate copies,
  • insurance proof if relevant.

Re-entry

Check the visa sticker for:

  • number of entries,
  • validity dates,
  • remarks.

New passport issues

If your passport expires before travel or during visa validity, contact the issuing mission for guidance. Do not assume a valid visa can always just be transferred automatically.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Can the visa be extended?

Usually the focus is not extending the visa itself, but moving into or maintaining the correct temporary residence permit.

Renewal inside Slovenia

For long-term family life in Slovenia, renewal usually happens through the residence permit system, not repeated visa extensions.

Switching

Possible switching depends on Slovenian law and your current status. Do not assume free in-country switching from family visa to worker/student route without formal approval.

Deadline risk

Start permit renewal or follow-up well before your visa expires.

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

Does the visa itself count?

The visa alone is usually only an entry/stay instrument. What matters more for PR is the underlying lawful residence status and time legally spent in Slovenia under qualifying permits.

Indirect pathway

Family reunification residence can often contribute toward:

  • long-term residence,
  • later permanent residence,
  • eventually citizenship, if all conditions are met.

Citizenship

Naturalization rules can involve:

  • years of legal residence,
  • actual residence/physical presence,
  • language knowledge,
  • good character,
  • settled status.

Check the current Slovenian nationality rules before relying on this as a citizenship path.

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Tax residence

Longer stay in Slovenia can trigger tax residence questions. This depends on:

  • days spent in Slovenia,
  • center of vital interests,
  • family and economic ties,
  • treaty rules.

Registration obligations

After arrival, you may need to:

  • register your temporary residence,
  • update address changes,
  • maintain valid insurance,
  • carry valid ID/residence documents.

Overstay and status violations

Violations can affect:

  • future visas,
  • residence renewals,
  • fines,
  • removal proceedings.

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

Visa waivers

Some nationals can enter Slovenia/Schengen visa-free for short stays, but that does not automatically remove the need for a Type D visa or residence authorization for long-term family reunification.

EU/EEA/Swiss family mobility

If the sponsor is an EU/EEA/Swiss national, different rules may apply depending on whether free movement law is engaged.

Treaty/document exemptions

Some countries have agreements eliminating apostille/legalization for civil records. This must be checked case by case.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Extra scrutiny is common. Expect custody/consent requirements.

Divorced or separated parents

You may need:

  • court order,
  • notarized consent,
  • sole custody proof.

Adopted children

Adoption must be legally recognized.

Same-sex spouses/partners

Whether and how a same-sex spouse or partner is processed depends on current Slovenian family and immigration recognition rules. Applicants should verify the current official position with the mission, especially if the marriage/partnership was registered abroad.

Stateless persons / refugees

Procedures may differ and may require specialized advice from competent authorities.

Applying from a third country

Some missions accept applications only from residents of their jurisdiction. Check jurisdiction rules first.

Name or gender marker mismatch

Add legal proof of name change or corrected civil status records to avoid delay.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs Fact

Myth Fact
“A Type D family visa is the same as permanent residence.” False. It is a long-stay visa, not permanent residence.
“If my spouse is in Slovenia, I can automatically work.” False. Work rights depend on the underlying legal authorization.
“A short-stay visa is enough for family reunification.” Usually false for long-term living; long-term stay typically needs a Type D visa and/or residence permit.
“Any marriage certificate is accepted as-is.” False. Legalization/apostille and certified translation may be required.
“If I am visa-free, I don’t need to deal with residence formalities.” False for long stays. Visa-free entry only helps with short stays.

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

After refusal

You should receive a written decision or refusal notice explaining the legal basis.

Appeal or review

Whether you can appeal, and within what deadline, depends on the legal instrument and the authority that issued the decision.

Reapplication

Possible if you fix the refusal reason.

Best reapplication strategy

  • read the refusal line by line,
  • identify missing legal elements,
  • correct documentation,
  • explain changes clearly in a new cover letter.

Warning: Reapplying with the same weak file usually leads to the same result.

31. Arrival in Slovenia: what happens next?

At immigration control

Be ready to explain:

  • who you are joining,
  • where you will stay,
  • your legal basis.

After entry

Depending on your case, typical next steps can include:

  • registering your address,
  • contacting the administrative unit,
  • continuing or finalizing residence permit procedures,
  • arranging insurance,
  • obtaining local tax or administrative numbers if needed.

First 30 days

Use the first month to complete:

  • residence paperwork,
  • address confirmation,
  • school arrangements for children,
  • insurance compliance.

32. Real-world timeline examples

Spouse joining a worker in Slovenia

  • Weeks 1–4: collect marriage certificate, sponsor residence and salary proof
  • Weeks 3–8: apostille/legalization and translation
  • Week 8: consular appointment
  • Weeks 9–16+: processing
  • Week 17: visa issued
  • Week 18: travel and arrival
  • After arrival: residence follow-up and registration

Child joining parent in Slovenia

  • Weeks 1–6: birth certificate, consent/custody papers
  • Weeks 5–10: translations/legalization
  • Week 10: submission
  • Weeks 11–18+: processing
  • Arrival after issuance, then local registration/schooling

Entrepreneur in Slovenia wanting family to join

  • First sponsor secures lawful residence
  • Family then prepares relationship and support documents
  • Timing depends heavily on sponsor’s residence category

Student in Slovenia bringing spouse

  • Check whether student status permits family reunification at that time
  • Gather proof of sufficient means and housing
  • Follow the same consular and post-arrival steps

Tourist example

Not applicable for this visa. A tourist should not use the family long-stay route unless the real purpose is long-term family reunification.

33. Ideal document pack structure

Recommended order

  1. Cover letter
  2. Document index
  3. Visa form
  4. Passport copy
  5. Photos
  6. Sponsor status proof
  7. Relationship documents
  8. Financial/support documents
  9. Accommodation proof
  10. Insurance
  11. Additional explanations
  12. Translations and legalization pages attached directly behind each original

File naming convention

  • 01_Cover_Letter.pdf
  • 02_Document_Index.pdf
  • 03_Passport_Applicant.pdf
  • 04_Marriage_Certificate_Apostille_Translation.pdf

Scan quality tips

  • color scans,
  • 300 dpi,
  • full page visible,
  • no cropped seals or signatures.

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • Confirm correct visa/residence route
  • Confirm embassy jurisdiction
  • Check official fee
  • Obtain civil records
  • Legalize/apostille documents
  • Get certified translations
  • Collect sponsor status/income proof
  • Prepare accommodation proof
  • Prepare insurance evidence
  • Book appointment

Submission-day checklist

  • Passport
  • Printed application form
  • Photos
  • Original civil documents
  • Copies of all documents
  • Fee payment method/receipt
  • Appointment confirmation
  • Sponsor documents
  • Cover letter and index

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

  • Passport
  • Appointment email
  • Original supporting documents
  • Clear answers about relationship and address
  • Pen and extra copies

Arrival checklist

  • Passport with visa
  • Sponsor contact details
  • Address details
  • Marriage/birth certificate copies
  • Insurance papers
  • Residence follow-up appointment if required

Extension/renewal checklist

  • Current passport
  • Current visa/permit
  • Proof of ongoing family relationship
  • Current address proof
  • Updated income/support evidence
  • Insurance proof
  • Renewal application filed before expiry

Refusal recovery checklist

  • Read refusal carefully
  • Identify missing legal requirements
  • Replace weak documents
  • Correct translations/legalization
  • Add explanation letter
  • Reapply or appeal within deadline if available

35. FAQs

1. Is Slovenia’s Type D family visa the same as a residence permit?

No. It is a long-stay visa, not a residence permit.

2. Can I join my spouse in Slovenia with a short-stay Schengen visa instead?

Only for a short visit. For long-term family life, you usually need the proper long-stay/residence route.

3. How long can a Type D visa be valid?

More than 90 days and up to 1 year.

4. Is the visa always multiple entry?

Often, but not guaranteed. Check the issued sticker.

5. Can I work in Slovenia on this visa?

Not automatically. Work rights depend on the underlying legal authorization.

6. Can I study on this visa?

Not as the main purpose unless your broader residence status allows it.

7. Do I need health insurance?

Usually yes, at least until the relevant Slovenian coverage status is arranged.

8. Do marriage certificates need apostille?

Often yes, unless an exemption treaty applies.

9. Do documents need Slovene translation?

Often yes for residence-use documents. Verify with the mission.

10. Can unmarried partners apply?

Possibly only if recognized under applicable Slovenian law. Check the exact category.

11. Can my child apply with me?

Yes, but usually via a separate application linked to the same sponsor.

12. Is parental consent needed for a minor?

Often yes, if both parents are not relocating together or if custody is not straightforward.

13. What if my sponsor just changed jobs?

Provide old and new employment evidence and explain continuity of support.

14. Can I apply from a country where I am only visiting?

Not always. Many missions require legal residence in the country of application.

15. How long does processing take?

It varies; there is no single guaranteed timeline for all family cases.

16. Is there premium processing?

No general public premium route is commonly advertised.

17. What happens if my visa expires before I get my residence permit sorted?

This can create serious problems. Start follow-up residence steps early.

18. Can I travel to other Schengen countries with a Slovenian Type D visa?

Possibly within the rules applicable to holders of national long-stay visas, but verify the current Schengen travel conditions before relying on this.

19. Can my spouse sponsor me if they are only in Slovenia temporarily?

Possibly, if their status allows family reunification. Not all sponsor categories are identical.

20. Are same-sex spouses accepted?

This can depend on current Slovenian legal recognition and the facts of the case. Verify directly with the mission.

21. What if my names differ across documents?

Add legal proof of name change and a clear explanation.

22. Can I submit digital copies only?

Usually no. Originals are commonly required at submission or for inspection.

23. What if I had a previous Schengen visa refusal?

Disclose it honestly if asked and explain what has changed.

24. Will weak travel history hurt the case?

It is usually less important than in tourist cases, but weak or inconsistent documentation can still hurt.

25. Can I reapply after refusal?

Yes, if you fix the refusal reasons.

26. Does this visa lead directly to permanent residence?

Not directly. Lawful residence over time under the proper permit framework may help toward PR.

27. Do I need a return ticket?

Not always in the same way as a tourist, but you should follow mission instructions and carry evidence of your legal long-stay purpose.

28. Can my sponsor be self-employed?

Usually yes, if lawful status and sufficient means can be proven.

29. Do children need to attend school after arrival?

If school-age and residing in Slovenia, local education rules may apply.

30. Can I use this visa just to stay long term with family and work remotely for my foreign employer?

Do not assume yes. Remote work can raise immigration and tax issues. Verify officially.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are official sources relevant to Slovenia’s long-stay visa and family/reunification framework. Because embassy pages and ministry structures can change, verify the exact current page for your mission before filing.

Important note: Some official URLs may be reorganized over time inside the GOV.SI platform. If a page moves, navigate from the main ministry portal or your local Slovenian embassy page.

37. Final verdict

Slovenia’s Type D family visa is best for non-EU/EEA/Swiss family members who need a lawful long-stay entry route to join close family in Slovenia and continue with or support a broader family reunification residence process.

Biggest benefits

  • lawful long stay beyond 90 days,
  • family unity,
  • practical bridge into Slovenian residence formalities,
  • potential indirect pathway toward longer-term residence.

Biggest risks

  • confusing the visa with a residence permit,
  • assuming automatic work rights,
  • weak family or custody documents,
  • poor translation/legalization,
  • applying under the wrong category.

Top preparation advice

  • confirm the exact route with the competent Slovenian mission,
  • build the application around official civil records,
  • over-prepare custody/consent documents for children,
  • make translations and apostilles clean and easy to review,
  • start early.

When to consider another visa

Use another route if your main purpose is:

  • tourism,
  • study,
  • employment,
  • business/investment,
  • transit,
  • medical treatment.

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

  • Exact current consular fee for your embassy/consulate
  • Whether your embassy has a local checklist for family Type D cases
  • Whether your nationality requires any extra police certificate or legalization
  • Whether your sponsor’s immigration category currently allows family reunification immediately or only after a waiting period
  • Whether the minimum means of subsistence amount has changed
  • Whether documents must be translated into Slovene specifically or if another language is temporarily accepted by your mission
  • Whether the issued Type D visa will be single or multiple entry
  • Whether your case requires a temporary residence permit application before travel, after travel, or in parallel
  • Whether same-sex spouse/partner recognition affects your exact case
  • Whether your mission accepts applications from non-residents in its consular district
  • Whether there are any recent updates to the Foreigners Act, residence card issuance process, or registration rules
  • Whether your planned activity in Slovenia could create work authorization or tax residence issues, especially for remote work

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