Andean low-cost residency popular with retirees and remote workers.
Duration
1 year, renewable; PR at 2
Threshold
≈ $1,000/mo lifetime passive income (+$500 per dependant)
Application fee
≈ $260 + carnet fees
Path to PR
Permanent residency at 2 years; citizenship at 2.
Tax treatment
Resident if 183+ days; foreign income exempt for first 6 months.
Family
Spouse and minors included.
Apostille & legalization
Apostille routeApostille only — both United States and Peru are parties to the 1961 Hague Apostille Convention.
Documents that must be apostilled
- ·Notarised power of attorney
- ·Police / criminal-record clearance
- ·Document explicitly flagged for legalisation
Bank statements, employment contracts, photos, passport copies and the application form itself do not need an apostille.
- Obtain originals or certified copies of each civil/criminal record (birth certificate, marriage certificate, police clearance, diploma, etc.).
- Have each document apostilled by the competent authority in United States (U.S. Department of State — Office of Authentications).
- Translate the apostilled document into the official language of Peru — the apostille itself is also translated.
- Submit the apostilled + translated bundle directly to the Peru immigration authority or consulate; no further consular stamp is required.
Translation: Most documents must be translated into the local language by a certified translator. Agency translations are usually accepted.
Issuing authority in United States: U.S. Department of State — Office of Authentications
Documents older than 3–6 months are often rejected. Plan to obtain fresh originals shortly before your visa application.