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Short description: Complete guide to Slovenia’s Type D long-stay visa for self-employment or investor-related residence steps, including eligibility, documents, work rules, family, and renewal.

Last Verified On: 2026-04-07

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country Slovenia
Visa name National Long-Stay Visa (Type D) – Self-Employment / Investor
Visa short name D-Self-Employed
Category National long-stay visa linked to longer-term residence purpose
Main purpose Entry and longer stay connected to self-employment, business establishment, or investor-related residence arrangements
Typical applicant Non-EU/EEA/Swiss national intending to reside in Slovenia for self-employment or business purposes
Validity Usually more than 90 days and up to 1 year for a Type D visa, depending on basis and issuance details
Stay duration Long stay in Slovenia; exact allowed stay follows visa validity and underlying legal basis
Entries allowed Often multiple, but check the visa sticker and issuing authority
Extension possible? Type D visa itself is generally not the long-term status endpoint; applicants usually move to or rely on a residence permit framework. Verify case-by-case
Work allowed? Limited/explain: only for the purpose and conditions authorized under Slovenian immigration and employment rules
Study allowed? Limited: incidental study may be possible, but this is not the main study route
Family allowed? Possible, but family reunification usually follows residence permit rules, not a simple visitor add-on
PR path? Possible indirectly through lawful residence if residence permit conditions are met
Citizenship path? Indirect through long-term lawful residence and later naturalization rules

Slovenia’s Type D visa is a national long-stay visa for third-country nationals who intend to stay in Slovenia for longer than 90 days and up to 1 year for a legally recognized purpose under Slovenian law.

For self-employment / investor-style applicants, the Type D visa is usually not a standalone immigration category in the way some countries offer a dedicated entrepreneur visa. Instead, it is best understood as an entry and stay visa connected to a longer-term residence basis, often involving:

  • self-employment in Slovenia,
  • establishment of a company,
  • residence based on work/self-work authorization,
  • or residence related to business activity/investment where the applicant later or simultaneously falls under residence permit rules.

In Slovenia’s immigration system, the main long-term status is generally the temporary residence permit. The Type D visa can function as:

  • an entry clearance before arrival,
  • a long-stay visa sticker placed in the passport,
  • and in some cases a practical bridge for applicants who need to enter Slovenia on a lawful long-stay basis before or alongside residence-permit formalities.

Why it exists

It exists to allow non-EU nationals to enter and remain in Slovenia for a recognized long-stay purpose where a Schengen short-stay visa or visa-free 90/180 stay is not enough.

Who it is meant for

For this guide, it is meant for people who want to move to Slovenia for:

  • self-employment,
  • company formation,
  • running a Slovenian business,
  • investor-related residence planning,
  • or similar business/residence purposes.

How it fits into Slovenia’s immigration system

Slovenia generally distinguishes between:

  • short-stay Schengen travel,
  • national long-stay Type D visas,
  • temporary residence permits,
  • permanent residence permits.

For self-employment, many applicants ultimately need to focus on the temporary residence permit and related work/self-employment authorization, not just the visa sticker.

Alternate official names and local terminology

Common official or near-official naming includes:

  • Long-stay visa (Type D)
  • National visa
  • Visa D
  • In Slovene context: vizum D
  • Residence-related framework: temporary residence permit under the Foreigners Act

Important: Slovenia does not always publicly label a separate visa product exactly as “self-employed visa” on official websites. In practice, self-employment/investor applicants often deal with a combination of:

  • visa rules,
  • residence permit rules,
  • labor/self-employment rules,
  • and business registration rules.

2. Who should apply for this visa?

Best-fit applicants

Founders, entrepreneurs, and self-employed professionals

This is the main target group if you are a non-EU national who plans to:

  • register and run a business in Slovenia,
  • work for your own Slovenian company,
  • become self-employed in Slovenia,
  • or live in Slovenia through a legally recognized business activity route.

Investors

Potentially relevant if your investment leads to a legally recognized residence basis. However, Slovenia does not publicly present a simple “buy investment, get visa” golden visa model on the same terms as some other countries. You must verify the precise residence basis.

Existing business owners relocating operations

Relevant if you are creating or managing a Slovenian entity and your residence basis is tied to that role.

Usually not the right visa for these applicants

Tourists

Use:

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

Business visitors attending meetings only

Use a short-stay route unless you will actually reside and work in Slovenia.

Job seekers

This is generally not a pure job-seeker visa. If you want employment with a Slovenian employer, the work/residence process is usually different.

Employees

If you will work for a Slovenian employer as an employee, you likely need:

  • a single permit / work-and-residence route,
  • or another employer-sponsored residence/work basis.

Students

Use a study-based residence route.

Spouses and children

Usually they should use a family reunification route, not piggyback on your self-employment purpose unless officially instructed.

Digital nomads

Slovenia has discussed and developed remote-work interest over time, but if you are simply working online for foreign clients/employers while residing in Slovenia, do not assume this self-employment/business route automatically covers you. Check the current official basis.

Retirees

Not the normal route unless there is a separate residence ground.

Transit passengers

Not applicable.

Medical travelers

Not applicable as a primary route.

Diplomatic/official travelers

Different status rules apply.

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted purposes

Subject to the exact legal basis and approval conditions, this route may be used for:

  • long stay in Slovenia tied to self-employment,
  • establishing or operating a business in Slovenia,
  • entering Slovenia to take up an approved residence basis,
  • investor-related business activity where immigration conditions are met,
  • longer-term residence connected to lawful economic activity.

Activities often allowed only if separately authorized

  • active work in your own company,
  • receiving local business income,
  • management functions,
  • invoicing clients through a Slovenian entity,
  • opening and operating business infrastructure.

These usually depend on:

  • your residence basis,
  • labor market/self-employment authorization rules,
  • business registration compliance,
  • tax and social security compliance.

Prohibited or risky uses

Do not use this route for:

  • tourism only,
  • undeclared employment,
  • working for a Slovenian employer without proper authorization,
  • freelancing in Slovenia without the required legal basis,
  • hidden remote work if your status does not permit it,
  • long-term study as the main purpose,
  • sham business creation with no real activity,
  • immigration through passive investment alone unless officially recognized,
  • family reunion without the proper family route.

Grey areas and misunderstandings

Remote work

A common misunderstanding is: “I own a foreign company, so I can just live in Slovenia under a self-employment or investor visa.”

That is not automatically true. Slovenian immigration, tax, and labor classification may treat actual residence and work activity differently from how applicants assume.

Investor claims

Another misunderstanding: “If I invest money in Slovenia, I automatically qualify.”

Officially, investment by itself does not always equal immigration eligibility. The key question is whether your activity fits a recognized residence basis.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Official program name

  • Long-stay visa (Type D)
  • Related legal framework: temporary residence permit under Slovenian foreigner legislation

Short name / code

  • Type D
  • Visa D
  • National long-stay visa

Long name

  • National Long-Stay Visa (Type D)

Internal streams or related permit names

For business/self-employment applicants, you may encounter:

  • temporary residence permit for work or self-employment,
  • single permit concepts for residence and work,
  • first temporary residence permit,
  • consent/work authorization processes involving labor authorities.

Old vs current naming

Names and administrative structure can shift in public guidance. In Slovenia, the practical distinction that matters most is:

  • visa for entry/long stay,
  • residence permit for continued lawful residence,
  • work/self-employment authorization for lawful economic activity.

Commonly confused categories

Category What it is How it differs
Schengen Type C visa Short stay up to 90 days in 180 Not for long-term self-employment residence
Type D visa National long-stay visa Entry/stay mechanism for longer stay
Temporary residence permit Longer-term residence status Often the core legal basis for business/self-employment applicants
Employer-sponsored work route Residence/work tied to employer Different from self-employment
Family reunification Residence based on family ties Not based on business activity

5. Eligibility criteria

Core eligibility overview

Because Slovenia’s self-employment/investor route is often governed across visa + residence + business + work authorization rules, eligibility must be checked on all four levels.

Nationality rules

This route primarily concerns third-country nationals (non-EU/EEA/Swiss nationals).

EU/EEA/Swiss citizens generally do not need this visa and follow EU free movement registration rules.

Passport validity

Applicants need a valid passport. Exact minimum validity and blank-page rules should be checked with the relevant embassy/consulate and application instructions.

Age

Applicants must be legally capable of entering into business and immigration arrangements. For principal self-employment applicants, this usually means adults.

Education

No universal public rule says all self-employment applicants need a specific degree. But regulated professions or sector-specific activities may require qualifications.

Language

No general publicly stated language requirement for the Type D visa stage was clearly found in standard summaries. Later residence or integration stages may differ.

Work experience

May be relevant if your business activity requires proof of competence, credibility, or regulated-profession eligibility.

Sponsorship

Not always required in the classic sense, but applicants may need:

  • a business basis,
  • company documents,
  • proof of intended activity,
  • and possibly labor authority approval depending on the exact route.

Invitation

Not necessarily required unless your case is tied to a Slovenian company or host institution.

Job offer

Not required for pure self-employment, but may be required for employee routes.

Points requirement

Not applicable based on publicly available official frameworks for this route.

Relationship proof

Only relevant for accompanying family.

Admission letter

Not applicable unless mixed with a study purpose.

Business/investment thresholds

This area is sensitive and can change. Slovenia has had rules around self-employment and company-based residence that may involve:

  • company registration,
  • actual business activity,
  • possible prior lawful residence periods in Slovenia before self-employment under some frameworks,
  • and work authorization conditions.

Warning: Official conditions can differ depending on whether you are: – registering as a sole trader, – acting as a company representative, – employed by your own company, – self-employed directly, – or relying on an investment/business-performance basis.

You must verify the current exact route with the embassy and Slovenian administrative unit.

Maintenance funds

Applicants usually must prove sufficient means of subsistence. Official practice often accepts proof that you can support yourself during your stay, but the exact amount and acceptable evidence can vary.

Accommodation proof

Usually required: – rental agreement, – host statement, – title deed, – or other accepted accommodation evidence.

Onward travel

May be requested at visa stage, but for long-stay routes this is often less central than in short-stay tourism cases.

Health

Applicants may need health insurance coverage at least for the visa/entry period and later full insurance compliance under residence rules.

Character / criminal record

Police clearance may be required, especially for first residence permit procedures.

Insurance

Yes, usually required in some form. Check whether: – travel insurance is sufficient for visa issuance, and/or – broader health insurance is needed for residence approval.

Biometrics

Usually part of visa/residence processing.

Intent requirements

You must show a genuine long-stay purpose consistent with self-employment/business activity.

Return intent vs dual intent

For long-stay residence-linked visas, the analysis is less about tourism return intent and more about genuine legal purpose, compliance, and admissibility.

Residency outside Slovenia

Application location rules can vary. Some applicants must apply in: – their country of nationality, or – their country of legal residence.

Local registration rules

After arrival, address registration and related administrative steps are usually mandatory.

Quota/cap/ballot requirements

No public lottery-style system is generally associated with this route.

Embassy-specific rules

Yes, document lists and appointment practice can vary by mission.

Special exemptions

EU family members and certain special-status individuals may follow different rules.

Eligibility matrix

Factor Usually required? Notes
Non-EU nationality Yes Main target group
Valid passport Yes Check mission-specific validity rules
Genuine business/self-employment purpose Yes Core requirement
Sufficient funds Yes Exact proof varies
Accommodation proof Usually Commonly requested
Insurance Usually Check visa vs residence stage
Criminal record certificate Often Especially for residence stage
Business registration documents Often Depends on route
Work/self-employment authorization Often Depends on legal structure
Biometrics Usually Standard in long-stay processing

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Ineligibility factors

You may be ineligible if:

  • your planned activity is not legally permitted under the chosen route,
  • you lack a genuine residence basis,
  • your company or business structure is not valid,
  • you cannot show enough funds,
  • you have serious immigration violations,
  • you are subject to an entry ban or security objection,
  • your passport is invalid or near expiry.

Common refusal triggers

Mismatch between purpose and documents

Example: saying “self-employed” but submitting documents that only show tourism or exploratory travel.

Insufficient funds

If statements do not show that you can support yourself and any dependents.

Wrong visa class

Many applicants choose a self-employment/business route when they really need an employer-sponsored permit or family reunification route.

Incomplete application

Missing apostilles, missing translations, unsigned forms, expired certificates.

Weak or vague business case

No coherent explanation of: – what the business does, – why Slovenia, – what your role will be, – how you will support yourself, – whether the business is active.

Prior overstays or immigration violations

Anywhere in the Schengen system can matter.

Criminal, security, or public-order concerns

A standard refusal ground.

Unverifiable documents

Especially: – bank statements, – company ownership papers, – business contracts, – accommodation documents.

Insurance problems

Wrong territory, wrong dates, inadequate coverage, or unrecognized policy.

Translation/notarization mistakes

A frequent technical reason for delay or refusal.

Interview mistakes

Inconsistent answers on: – business model, – timeline, – accommodation, – source of funds, – family plans.

7. Benefits of this visa

Main benefits

  • Allows a lawful long stay beyond normal Schengen short-stay limits
  • Can support entry for a business/self-employment residence purpose
  • Can be part of a longer immigration pathway in Slovenia
  • May allow multiple entries if issued that way
  • Can lead into residence-permit life in Slovenia if the underlying basis remains valid

Business benefits

  • Ability to establish a real operational presence in Slovenia
  • Access to local administration, banking, registration, and tax processes
  • Possible route to develop a company and hire staff, subject to Slovenian law

Family benefits

  • Possible later family reunification, depending on residence status and timing

PR and long-term residence potential

A properly held and maintained residence status in Slovenia may count toward:

  • long-term residence,
  • permanent residence,
  • and eventually citizenship,

but this depends on the underlying residence permit, continuity, and statutory residence counting rules.

8. Limitations and restrictions

Key restrictions

  • This is not a free-form do-anything visa
  • You cannot assume unrestricted work rights outside the authorized basis
  • The visa itself may be temporary while residence authorization carries the real legal weight
  • Family members may need separate approvals
  • You must maintain the legal business/residence basis
  • Public benefits access may be limited or unavailable
  • Address registration and status compliance are mandatory

No automatic right to all Schengen work

A Slovenian long-stay visa does not authorize you to work freely across Schengen states.

Reporting obligations

You may need to report: – address changes, – permit changes, – business status changes, – family composition changes.

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Type D duration

A Slovenian Type D visa is generally for stays longer than 90 days and up to 1 year.

Validity

The visa sticker will show:

  • validity dates,
  • entries,
  • duration and/or permitted stay conditions.

Entries

Can be single or multiple depending on issuance. Many long-stay visas are issued to facilitate practical travel, but check your visa sticker.

When the clock starts

The visa is valid from the date printed on it, not from your first day of travel.

Overstay consequences

Overstaying can lead to:

  • fines,
  • removal,
  • entry bans,
  • future Schengen refusals,
  • residence permit complications.

Renewal timing

For continued stay, you often need to address residence permit renewal, not “extend the visa sticker” in the ordinary sense.

Bridging/interim status

Slovenian law may provide procedural effects when a renewal is filed on time, but applicants should verify current rules directly with the administrative unit.

10. Complete document checklist

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Completed application form Official visa/residence form Starts the legal process Old version, unsigned, incomplete answers
Passport Valid travel document Identity and admissibility Damaged passport, low validity
Photos Passport-style photos Identity verification Wrong size/background
Purpose statement / cover letter Applicant explanation Clarifies business plan and residence purpose Too vague, inconsistent with documents

B. Identity/travel documents

  • Valid passport
  • Copies of bio page and used pages if requested
  • Previous passports if relevant
  • Proof of legal residence in the country where you apply, if not applying in your home country

C. Financial documents

  • Bank statements
  • Proof of savings
  • Proof of business capital if relevant
  • Income evidence
  • Tax returns if requested
  • Source-of-funds evidence for large balances or transfers

D. Employment/business documents

This is the most important section for this route.

Possible documents include:

  • company registration or incorporation documents,
  • proof of ownership/shareholding,
  • founder act or articles of association,
  • Slovenian business registry extract,
  • tax registration where applicable,
  • contracts with clients/suppliers,
  • business plan,
  • proof of intended activity,
  • proof of office/operating address,
  • permits/licenses for regulated activities,
  • labor/work authorization approvals if applicable.

Warning: Exact required business documents vary heavily depending on whether you are: – already registered, – applying as a future founder, – joining your own company as director, – entering a self-employment status, – or relying on a work-and-residence route.

E. Education documents

Only if relevant to your profession or the authority requests them.

F. Relationship/family documents

For dependents:

  • marriage certificate,
  • birth certificates,
  • custody documents,
  • consent letter for minor travel if required.

G. Accommodation/travel documents

  • lease agreement,
  • host invitation with proof of address,
  • title deed,
  • temporary housing booking if accepted.

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

If applicable:

  • company invitation,
  • host statement,
  • proof of sponsor identity,
  • proof of sponsor legal status.

I. Health/insurance documents

  • travel medical insurance for visa stage if required,
  • broader health coverage evidence for residence stage where required.

J. Country-specific extras

Depending on nationality and application location, missions may request:

  • local residence permit,
  • translation into Slovene,
  • apostille/legalization,
  • local police certificate.

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

  • long-form birth certificate,
  • parental consent,
  • custody judgment,
  • school records if needed.

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

Foreign public documents often require:

  • certified translation,
  • apostille,
  • or legalization.

Check the specific mission’s instructions and Slovenian administrative requirements.

M. Photo specifications

Use the exact size and quality required by the embassy/consulate. If the mission does not publish it clearly, ask before submission.

11. Financial requirements

Minimum funds

Slovenia generally requires proof of sufficient means of subsistence for long-stay and residence processes, but the exact amount and acceptable proof for this route may vary and is not always presented in one simple public visa page.

Applicants should verify:

  • current minimum monthly support threshold,
  • whether business capital counts,
  • whether personal savings are required,
  • dependent maintenance amounts.

Acceptable proof

Usually:

  • recent bank statements,
  • salary/income records,
  • dividends or lawful business income,
  • company capital proof where relevant,
  • sponsor support only if officially accepted.

Sponsorship

For self-employment routes, the strongest proof is usually your own funds and business viability, not third-party promises.

Seasoning rules

No universal public “seasoning” rule was clearly published, but sudden large deposits should always be explained.

Hidden costs

Expect costs for:

  • housing deposit,
  • company setup,
  • notarization,
  • health insurance,
  • translations,
  • apostilles,
  • tax/accounting setup.

Proof strength tips

Official rule: show sufficient means.

Practical advice: – use statements covering several months, – explain large transfers, – match business capital with bank evidence, – separate personal maintenance funds from company operating funds where possible.

12. Fees and total cost

Fees change and can vary by mission. Check the latest official fee page.

Typical cost categories

Cost item Notes
Visa application fee Type D visa fee may apply
Residence permit fee Often separate if applicable
Biometrics fee Sometimes included, sometimes separate
Police certificate cost Issuing-country dependent
Translation cost Varies by language and page count
Apostille/legalization cost Country-specific
Courier fee If passport return is by courier
Insurance cost Depends on duration and coverage
Company setup cost If forming a Slovenian entity
Notary/accounting/legal help Optional but common
Dependents’ fees Usually separate per person

Practical total cost reality

A serious self-employment move to Slovenia often costs far more than the visa fee alone because of:

  • business registration,
  • relocation,
  • compliance setup,
  • and family documentation.

13. Step-by-step application process

1. Confirm the correct route

Check whether you actually need:

  • Type D visa only,
  • temporary residence permit,
  • single permit/work authorization,
  • or a family/business combination.

2. Gather official guidance

Review the relevant embassy or consulate instructions and Slovenian government pages.

3. Prepare business structure

If applicable:

  • register company,
  • prepare incorporation documents,
  • determine ownership/management role,
  • confirm tax and work authorization implications.

4. Complete the application form

Use the latest official form.

5. Gather supporting documents

Include: – identity, – finances, – accommodation, – insurance, – business basis, – police records if required.

6. Book appointment

At: – Slovenian embassy/consulate, – or other designated authority.

7. Submit application

Depending on route, this may be: – abroad through a diplomatic mission, – or in some cases through a Slovenian administrative unit if lawful grounds exist.

8. Provide biometrics

Fingerprints/photo if required.

9. Attend interview if requested

Be ready to explain: – business purpose, – planned stay, – funds, – accommodation, – family arrangements.

10. Respond to additional requests

Authorities may ask for: – updated statements, – company extracts, – better translations, – criminal record updates.

11. Receive decision

If approved, you may get: – a visa sticker, – or instructions for residence permit collection/finalization.

12. Travel to Slovenia

Carry key supporting documents in hand luggage.

13. Register address and complete local formalities

This step is often mandatory soon after arrival.

14. Activate residence/business compliance

Obtain: – tax number if needed, – health insurance compliance, – company operation setup, – social security registration if applicable.

14. Processing time

Official standard times

Publicly posted timelines can vary significantly by mission and legal route.

For this route, processing may depend on:

  • whether only a visa is being issued,
  • whether residence permit approval is also involved,
  • whether labor authority consent is needed,
  • security/background checks.

What affects timing

  • incomplete documents,
  • apostille/translation problems,
  • peak summer periods,
  • business-structure complexity,
  • nationality-specific checks,
  • police certificate delays,
  • embassy appointment scarcity.

Priority options

No general official premium-processing option was clearly identified for this route.

Practical expectation

Expect this to take longer than a basic tourist visa, especially if business registration and residence approval are intertwined.

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

Usually required for long-stay/residence-related processing.

Interview

May be required. Typical topics:

  • Why Slovenia?
  • What exactly will your business do?
  • How will you support yourself?
  • Where will you live?
  • Are you already operating the company?
  • Why is this not just remote work from abroad?
  • Will family join you?

Medical

No universal public rule for a full medical exam was clearly found for all applicants under this route. Health insurance is more clearly relevant than a blanket medical exam requirement.

Police clearance

Often required for residence procedures and sometimes for long-stay processing.

Exemptions

Can vary by mission, age, nationality, and document category.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

Official approval-rate statistics specifically for Slovenia’s Type D self-employment/investor subpopulation were not clearly published in a simple public source.

Practical refusal patterns

Most refusals tend to arise from:

  • wrong route selection,
  • weak business basis,
  • inability to prove sufficient means,
  • document defects,
  • unclear work authorization status,
  • security/admissibility concerns,
  • trying to use a business route for undeclared ordinary employment.

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Practical, ethical ways to improve your case

Write a clear cover letter

Explain: – your business activity, – legal basis you are relying on, – why Slovenia, – financial support, – accommodation, – family plan, – intended timeline.

Show business reality

Include: – client pipeline, – incorporation records, – service contracts, – invoices if already operating, – market explanation, – proof of actual activity.

Present funds cleanly

Use: – recent statements, – source-of-funds notes, – separated personal and business accounts if possible.

Explain unusual facts proactively

Examples: – recent company formation, – large capital injection, – prior Schengen refusal, – dual residence history.

Use proper translations

Poor translations create distrust and delay.

Keep the narrative consistent

Your form, letter, interview answers, company docs, and bank statements should all tell the same story.

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

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

Apply only after your business route is clearly mapped

A major cause of refusal is applying too early, before understanding whether your case is: – self-employment, – director of your own company, – employee of your own company, – or investor without operational work rights.

Create one master index

Prepare a 1-page index listing: 1. identity documents, 2. business documents, 3. financial evidence, 4. accommodation, 5. insurance, 6. police records, 7. family documents.

This helps both you and the officer.

Label every business document in plain English

Example: – “Company_Extract_Slovenia_2026-03-20” – “Articles_of_Association_Translated” – “Bank_Statements_Jan-Mar_2026”

Explain large deposits

If you sold an asset, received dividends, or injected startup capital, attach proof. Do not leave large unexplained deposits sitting in statements.

Bring duplicate sets

Some missions keep copies; some ask you to produce extra copies on the spot.

Align accommodation dates

The housing evidence should overlap logically with: – intended arrival date, – visa validity, – and business start date.

Do not overstate “investment”

If your route is really company formation or self-employment, say that. Calling yourself an “investor” without a clear legal basis can confuse the case.

Contact the embassy strategically

Contact them when: – a document rule is unclear, – your nationality/residence status raises a jurisdiction issue, – the website lacks the current checklist.

Do not email repeated status chasers too early.

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

When needed

Even if not always mandatory, for this route it is highly recommended.

What to include

Suggested structure

  1. Your identity and nationality
  2. The exact visa/residence basis you believe applies
  3. Nature of your business or self-employment
  4. Why Slovenia
  5. Company details or planned setup
  6. Source of funds and maintenance means
  7. Accommodation details
  8. Family details if relevant
  9. Compliance statement
  10. List of attached supporting documents

What not to say

  • vague “I want to explore Europe”
  • undeclared plans to work in another country
  • contradictory plans such as “tourism” plus “full-time business operation”
  • unsupported claims of large investment

Tone

Clear, factual, modest, precise.

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

If relevant

For this route, a “sponsor” may be:

  • your Slovenian company,
  • a business partner,
  • a host/accommodation provider,
  • or a family supporter in limited contexts.

Invitation letter structure

If a Slovenian company is involved, the letter should state:

  • company identity,
  • legal registration details,
  • your role,
  • purpose of invitation,
  • duration,
  • who covers what,
  • address where activity occurs,
  • contact details.

Sponsor mistakes

  • unsigned letter,
  • no company stamp where customary,
  • no company extract attached,
  • vague wording about the applicant’s role,
  • claiming work rights that are not yet approved.

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Are dependents allowed?

Potentially yes, but generally through family reunification or related residence procedures, not automatically through the principal applicant’s visa sticker.

Who qualifies

Usually: – spouse, – minor children, – in some cases other dependents under Slovenian law.

Proof required

  • marriage certificate,
  • birth certificates,
  • proof of cohabitation/relationship where legally relevant,
  • custody/consent documentation for children.

Work/study rights of dependents

These depend on the family member’s own residence status and current Slovenian rules.

Family timeline strategy

Often the cleanest approach is:

  1. principal applicant secures the correct residence basis,
  2. then dependents apply under family reunification rules if available.

But in some cases simultaneous processing may be possible. Verify locally.

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

Work rights

This route is about business/self-employment, but work rights are not unlimited.

You must distinguish between:

  • residence authorization,
  • work authorization,
  • self-employment registration,
  • company-director status.

Self-employment rules

These are central and can be technical. In practice, applicants should verify:

  • whether they may immediately register as self-employed,
  • whether prior residence in Slovenia is required under the current framework,
  • whether a single permit is needed,
  • whether labor authority consent is required,
  • whether a company representative route applies instead.

Remote work

Do not assume remote work for foreign clients is automatically lawful just because you have a business-style visa. Tax and labor classification matter.

Volunteering

Only if separately lawful.

Passive income

Passive investment income may be allowed as income, but it does not itself create work rights.

Study rights

Incidental study may be possible, but this is not the main student route.

Business meetings

Yes, if consistent with your authorized purpose.

Receiving payment in Slovenia

Only if your residence/work/business setup legally permits it.

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

Entry clearance vs final admission

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

Documents to carry

Bring:

  • passport with visa,
  • copy of approval letter if any,
  • accommodation proof,
  • business/company documents,
  • proof of funds,
  • insurance,
  • contact details for company/host.

Re-entry

Check whether your visa is single or multiple entry.

New passport

If your visa is in an old passport and the passport expires, border practice may depend on carrying both old and new passports and the validity of the visa. Confirm before travel.

Dual passport issues

Travel on the same passport used for the visa unless officially advised otherwise.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Can it be extended?

The Type D visa is not usually the long-term endpoint. Continued lawful stay is generally handled through a temporary residence permit or its renewal.

Inside-country renewal

Possible for residence permits depending on your status and timing.

Switching

Switching depends on the legal category. Business/self-employment to family or employment may be possible under law, but not automatically and not informally.

Changing sponsor/business structure

Changes in: – company role, – employer, – self-employment status, – address, may require notification or a new approval.

Restoration / implied status

Do not rely on assumptions. File renewals early and confirm current procedural protection rules.

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

Does this count toward PR?

Potentially yes, but the relevant counting is usually based on lawful residence permit status, not merely holding a visa sticker.

Residence counting rules

Check whether your time is counted under: – temporary residence permit, – uninterrupted lawful residence, – absences from Slovenia.

Long-term residence / permanent residence

Slovenia offers longer-term residence pathways after sufficient lawful residence, subject to statutory conditions.

Citizenship

Naturalization is a separate process that usually requires: – years of lawful residence, – integration conditions, – language and other statutory requirements, – clean legal record.

When this route does not help PR

If you never transition to or maintain the correct residence status, the visa alone will not create a reliable PR pathway.

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Tax residence risk

If you move to Slovenia, you may become a Slovenian tax resident depending on:

  • days present,
  • center of vital interests,
  • business location,
  • family location.

Social security

If self-employed or company-based, Slovenian social security obligations may arise.

Registration obligations

Expect obligations relating to:

  • address registration,
  • tax number,
  • health insurance,
  • business registration,
  • social insurance,
  • permit renewal.

Overstays and violations

Violations can harm: – future Slovenian applications, – Schengen mobility, – permanent residence planning.

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

EU/EEA/Swiss nationals

Generally not applicable; they use EU mobility rights.

Visa-waiver nationals

Even if you can enter visa-free for short stays, you still need the proper long-stay/residence basis for self-employment residence.

Applying from a third country

Some embassies only accept applicants who are: – nationals there, or – legal residents there.

Special bilateral exceptions

If any bilateral arrangement affects your nationality, confirm directly with the mission. Public summaries may not be complete.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Not typical principal applicants for self-employment.

Divorced/separated parents

For child dependents, custody and consent documents are critical.

Same-sex spouses/partners

Treatment depends on Slovenian family and immigration law as applied to the specific relationship category. Verify current recognition standards and documentary requirements.

Stateless persons / refugees

May face special document and jurisdiction issues. Get mission-specific guidance.

Prior refusals

Disclose them honestly and explain what changed.

Criminal records

Even minor records can complicate approval. Check whether the offense affects admissibility.

Applying from a third country

Often possible only if you hold lawful residence there.

Name or gender-marker mismatch

Ensure all documents are linked with explanatory legal documents if names or markers differ.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs fact

Myth Fact
“If I open a company in Slovenia, I automatically get residence.” Not automatically. Immigration, work, and business rules must all align.
“A Type D visa alone gives full work rights.” No. Work rights depend on the legal basis and authorization.
“Any investment qualifies me.” Not necessarily. Investment must connect to a recognized residence basis.
“I can use this instead of a work permit.” Usually not if you are really taking normal employment.
“If I’m visa-free for Schengen, I don’t need this route.” Wrong for long-term self-employment residence.
“My spouse and kids can just enter with me and stay.” They usually need their own lawful family status.

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

After refusal

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

Appeal / review

Slovenian administrative decisions may be appealable, but the route, deadline, and forum depend on whether the decision was made by a diplomatic mission or an administrative authority.

Deadlines

Deadlines can be short. Read the refusal carefully.

Refund

Application fees are usually not refunded after refusal.

Reapply or appeal?

  • Appeal if the decision is legally or factually wrong.
  • Reapply if the problem is weak documents, missing proof, or wrong category.

How to fix refusal reasons

Match the refusal ground exactly: – funds problem -> stronger financial evidence – wrong route -> correct legal category – unclear business plan -> structured explanation plus supporting documents – document authenticity concern -> reissue, apostille, proper translation

31. Arrival in Slovenia: what happens next?

At immigration

You may be asked for: – purpose of stay, – accommodation, – business/company details, – proof of funds.

Shortly after arrival

You may need to:

  • register your address,
  • complete residence permit collection/formalities,
  • obtain tax identification,
  • arrange health insurance,
  • activate business registration,
  • handle social security registration if applicable.

First 30 days

This period is often critical for: – administrative registration, – insurance compliance, – opening bank access, – setting up accounting, – ensuring your actual activity matches your legal status.

32. Real-world timeline examples

Entrepreneur founder

  • Weeks 1-4: clarify legal route, collect documents, prepare company setup
  • Weeks 5-8: incorporation/business evidence, police certificate, translations
  • Weeks 9-10: file visa/residence application
  • Weeks 11-18+: processing and requests for more documents
  • Approval: travel to Slovenia
  • First month after arrival: address registration, tax, insurance, business activation

Spouse/dependent

  • Principal applicant first secures strong residence basis
  • Family documents legalized and translated
  • Family application filed after or alongside principal route depending on advice
  • Arrival and school/housing/insurance setup

Worker mistakenly considering self-employment

  • Initial review shows actual employer-employee arrangement
  • Applicant switches to proper employer-sponsored route instead of risking refusal

33. Ideal document pack structure

Recommended organization

  1. Cover page
  2. Document index
  3. Application form
  4. Passport copies
  5. Photos
  6. Cover letter
  7. Business/company documents
  8. Financial evidence
  9. Accommodation proof
  10. Insurance
  11. Police certificate
  12. Translations/apostilles
  13. Family documents if relevant

Naming convention

Use: – 01_Application_Form02_Passport_Bio_Page03_Cover_Letter04_Company_Extract05_Articles_of_Association06_Bank_Statements_Jan-Mar_2026

Scan quality tips

  • color scans,
  • readable stamps,
  • one PDF per section unless instructed otherwise,
  • no cut-off edges,
  • no phone screenshots unless unavoidable.

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • Confirm correct legal route
  • Check official embassy jurisdiction
  • Check latest forms
  • Confirm passport validity
  • Obtain police certificate if needed
  • Prepare business documents
  • Prepare financial evidence
  • Prepare accommodation proof
  • Confirm insurance requirements
  • Confirm translation/apostille needs

Submission-day checklist

  • Appointment confirmation
  • Passport original
  • Copies of all documents
  • Printed forms signed
  • Photos
  • Fee payment method
  • Cover letter
  • Business evidence set
  • Financial evidence set

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

  • Passport
  • Appointment letter
  • Originals of key civil and business documents
  • Clean summary of business plan
  • Contact details of company/host
  • Calm, consistent answers

Arrival checklist

  • Carry all approval papers
  • Carry accommodation details
  • Carry company contact details
  • Register address
  • Confirm permit collection steps
  • Arrange tax/insurance/business setup

Extension/renewal checklist

  • Track permit expiry early
  • Gather updated financials
  • Gather updated company activity proof
  • Confirm continued accommodation
  • Renew insurance
  • File before expiry

Refusal recovery checklist

  • Read refusal line by line
  • Identify exact defect
  • Get fresh documents if outdated
  • Correct legal category if wrong
  • Prepare explanatory letter
  • Decide appeal vs reapply quickly

35. FAQs

1. Is there an official Slovenian “self-employed visa” by that exact name?

Not always in public official wording. In practice, applicants usually deal with a Type D visa plus residence/work/self-employment rules.

2. Is this the same as a golden visa?

No. Slovenia is not publicly presenting a simple golden-visa purchase route for this category.

3. Can I open a company and immediately move?

Possibly, but immigration and work authorization conditions must also be met.

4. Do I need a Type D visa or a residence permit?

Often both issues are connected. The permit is usually the more important long-term status.

5. Can I work for my own Slovenian company?

Only if your residence/work authorization allows it.

6. Can I freelance for foreign clients while living in Slovenia?

Not automatically. Check self-employment, tax, and immigration compliance.

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

Generally over 90 days and up to 1 year.

8. Is multiple entry guaranteed?

No. Check your visa sticker.

9. Can my family apply with me?

Potentially, but family members usually need their own lawful basis.

10. Do children need separate applications?

Yes, usually.

11. Is a police certificate required?

Often yes for residence-related processing.

12. Do bank statements need to show several months?

That is best practice and often expected, though exact periods can vary.

13. Can a sponsor show funds instead of me?

Sometimes limited third-party support may help, but self-employment cases are strongest when you show your own funds.

14. Can I apply while visiting Slovenia?

Do not assume yes. Application location rules vary by status and route.

15. Can I switch from tourist to self-employed status inside Slovenia?

Not always. Verify the current legal rule before making plans.

16. Do I need health insurance before arrival?

Usually yes, at least for the visa/entry stage.

17. Is a business plan mandatory?

It may not always be listed as mandatory, but it is highly advisable.

18. What if my company is brand new?

Then explain capital, business model, expected clients, and how you will support yourself.

19. Can I invest passively in real estate and qualify?

Not automatically.

20. What if I had a Schengen refusal before?

Disclose it honestly and address the issue directly.

21. What if my passport expires soon?

Renew it first if possible; low validity can derail the application.

22. Do I need Slovenian-language translations?

Often certified translations are required for foreign documents. Verify accepted language and translator rules.

23. Can my spouse work in Slovenia immediately?

Only if their own status grants that right.

24. Does this visa lead to permanent residence?

Indirectly, possibly, if you move into and maintain qualifying residence status.

25. Is there a minimum investment amount?

No single simple official “investor visa amount” was clearly confirmed in public official materials for this route; verify the exact legal basis.

26. Can I be both owner and employee of my company?

Possibly, but this can affect the legal route and work authorization analysis.

27. Do I need to rent housing before applying?

Usually you need accommodation evidence, but exact format varies.

28. Can I use hotel bookings?

For long-stay business residence, a more stable accommodation basis is usually stronger.

29. What happens if my business plan changes after approval?

You may need to notify authorities or apply for a new status depending on the change.

30. Can I travel around Schengen with this visa?

A national long-stay visa may allow limited Schengen travel under Schengen rules, but it does not grant unlimited residence/work rights in other states.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are official sources relevant to Slovenia long-stay visas, foreigners’ residence, business-related residence processing, and Slovenian diplomatic guidance.

37. Final verdict

Slovenia’s Type D long-stay visa for self-employment/investor-style applicants is best for non-EU nationals who have a real, documentable, legally compliant plan to live in Slovenia through self-employment, company activity, or another recognized business-based residence route.

Biggest benefits

  • lawful stay beyond 90 days,
  • possible bridge into Slovenian residence,
  • potential long-term pathway if properly structured,
  • useful for genuine founders and business operators.

Biggest risks

  • choosing the wrong category,
  • assuming company ownership automatically equals residence,
  • misunderstanding self-employment vs employment rules,
  • weak business evidence,
  • poor document legalization and translation.

Top preparation advice

  1. Confirm the exact legal route before filing.
  2. Distinguish visa, residence permit, and work authorization.
  3. Build a coherent business evidence file.
  4. Present clean financial proof.
  5. Verify document legalization and mission-specific requirements.

When to consider another visa

Choose another route if you are really:

  • a tourist,
  • a business visitor only,
  • an employee of a Slovenian company,
  • a student,
  • a family reunification applicant,
  • or a remote worker without a recognized Slovenian business residence basis.

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

  • Whether your exact case is best treated as Type D visa, temporary residence permit, or single permit
  • Current official list of documents required by the specific Slovenian embassy/consulate handling your case
  • Whether your nationality may apply from a third country or only from country of nationality/legal residence
  • Current visa and permit fees
  • Current proof-of-funds threshold and whether dependent amounts are separately required
  • Whether a police certificate is mandatory for your exact route and how recent it must be
  • Whether health insurance must be travel insurance only for entry, or full Slovenian coverage from the start
  • Whether your planned activity qualifies as self-employment, company management, employment, or another category
  • Whether prior lawful residence in Slovenia is required for any self-employment scenario under current rules
  • Whether family members can apply simultaneously or only after the principal applicant secures residence
  • Whether your civil documents need apostille, legalization, certified translation, or all three
  • Whether the mission requires original documents, copies, or both
  • Current processing times at your specific embassy or administrative unit
  • Whether any labor-market or Employment Service approval is required in your specific business structure
  • Current permanent residence counting rules for time spent on this visa versus subsequent residence permit status

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