Mobility
We place residence rights within a broader family strategy rather than separating the visa from the property acquisition.
Service · Greece Golden Visa
The Greece Golden Visa can create a mobility option, but the decision should remain grounded in a real property asset that makes sense for your family.
We place residence rights within a broader family strategy rather than separating the visa from the property acquisition.
Location, liquidity, possible use, and future management matter as much as the investment threshold.
The goal is to avoid a purely administrative purchase and favor an asset decision that can remain meaningful over time.
Service guide
Greece Golden Visa by property investment does not start with a listing. The right starting point is your real objective, budget, family calendar, and the way the property will be used after completion. Safety Net Property Investment supports international families who want to combine mobility, family security, and a real property asset from Paris, Montreal, Beirut, and other international markets so the decision is structured before properties are shortlisted.
This page answers both informational and commercial intent: understand the options, avoid common mistakes, and know how to move forward. Our role is to translate a Mediterranean idea into verifiable criteria: location, access, use, tax exposure, management, local partners, and the ability of the property to remain relevant over time.
We begin by clarifying the use scenario. Some clients need a home for several family stays each year. Others are preparing retirement, family mobility, or patrimonial diversification. This clarification prevents the comparison of unlike-for-like properties and creates a calmer decision framework.
We then build a reading of the relevant markets in Spain and Greece. We look at access from your home country, seasonality, depth of demand, nearby services, management constraints, and long-term value signals. The goal is not to collect options; it is to narrow the field to addresses that deserve serious analysis.
Spain can fit when the priority is European proximity, infrastructure, frequent air links, established coastal towns, and steady international demand. Greece can become more relevant when the project is more connected to mobility, patrimonial scarcity, islands, coastlines, or a more emotional Mediterranean family logic.
The comparison is never limited to destination appeal. We connect each country to real use: number of stays, length of stays, rental needs, personal tax position, tolerance for remote management, expected service level, and the possibility of resale if your situation changes.
The main risk is buying only to satisfy an administrative threshold without assessing liquidity, management, and real use. An international property decision can feel simple during a trip, then become more complex when questions arise around deeds, banking, insurance, tax, works, rental permissions, or day-to-day management.
We help slow the process at the right moments. That means asking questions before viewings, checking assumptions before an offer, and bringing in necessary partners before emotion dominates the decision. A successful purchase should remain defensible after the initial excitement fades.
A solid project relies on external validation. Depending on the case, we coordinate or recommend immigration lawyers, notaries, tax advisors, and local specialists who confirm the current rules before commitment. These specialists do not replace your decision, but they reduce blind spots around title, planning, charges, rental constraints, tax, financing, residence, insurance, and management.
We also work to make costs visible. Purchase price, acquisition costs, works, furnishing, building charges, local tax, insurance, management, and travel need to be considered together. This global reading often separates a comfortable project from a purchase that becomes heavy over time.
A good result is not only a property acquired. It is a clear residence option connected to a property you could hold, understand, and use. You should understand why this destination, why this area, why this property type, and how the asset can remain useful across several life scenarios.
We favor decisions that can be explained simply: easy access, likely use, verifiable demand, manageable upkeep, identified partners, and consistency with your existing patrimony. That simplicity matters when several countries, languages, and legal systems are part of one decision.
The timeline should remain realistic. Before a viewing, you need to know which documents to request, which questions to ask, and which points can actually be checked on site. During the visit, we look at constraints as much as qualities: access, noise, orientation, neighbors, services, building condition, management options, and ease of arrival from your home market.
After a viewing, the decision should not collapse into a feeling. We return to the criteria defined at the beginning and separate emotional, practical, legal, and financial topics. This review protects the project when several family members, countries, or objectives are involved in the same purchase.
A service never exists in isolation. A project from Paris is not prepared in the same way as a project from Montreal or Beirut, and a purchase in Spain does not raise the same questions as a purchase in Greece. That is why we connect each page to the client hubs and acquisition markets that are genuinely useful.
This internal structure also clarifies your next step. If you are comparing a second home, retirement plan, patrimonial investment, or mobility strategy, it becomes easier to evaluate the services against your real situation instead of jumping directly into property listings.
Before moving further, we try to confirm three things: the project fits your life, the chosen market can support your buying logic, and the necessary partners can validate the sensitive points. If any of these answers remains unclear, the right work is to clarify before accelerating. This keeps the search focused and makes the eventual shortlist easier to defend.
The first step is a framing conversation. We discuss your situation, timeline, the people affected by the project, and what you do not want to experience. Those answers then guide the countries, regions, budgets, and property types worth studying.
From there, we can build a shortlist of directions rather than a long list of properties. This approach creates more clarity, reduces wasted viewings, and helps bring in the right local partners when the project becomes concrete.
Areas we serve
Timing depends on your initial clarity, financing, chosen country, and legal validation. Serious projects often start with several weeks of framing before useful viewings.
Our main role is guidance and coordination. As the project advances, we help involve the right local partners without implying unconfirmed local offices.
No. It is often better to start with use, budget, mobility, and management tolerance, then compare both markets against those criteria.
That depends on location, regulation, seasonality, and the management level you accept. We treat income as an assumption to verify, not an automatic promise.
Most projects require a lawyer, notary or local equivalent, bank, tax advisor, insurer, and sometimes a property manager or architect.
Much of the framing can happen remotely, especially from Paris, Montreal, or Beirut. Final viewings and legal checks still need careful organization and documentation.
Define criteria before viewings: use, access, total budget, management, resale, partners, and constraints. The property must satisfy those criteria even if it is beautiful.
The next step is to clarify your objective, budget, timeline, and relevant countries before looking at specific properties.
We clarify the link between mobility, budget, family needs, and asset quality before moving forward.