AJG Global Nexus ยท TOPIC ยท printable summary
Visa and immigration is the vertical that determines who can move where, on what terms, and for how long. AJG covers visa programmes across 200+ jurisdictions, residency pathways through work-skilled-investor-family-and-special routes, citizenship routes by descent and naturalisation and investment, and the migration-law framework that binds them. The market for cross-border mobility services โ combining immigration-law practice, relocation services, and investment-migration advisory โ is roughly USD 30 billion globally per Henley & Partners 2024 estimates, with roughly USD 25 billion of investment-migration capital flows annually.\n\nWork-visa pathways dominate volumetrically. The US H-1B (85,000 annual cap split 65,000 + 20,000 advanced-degree, with masters-cap supplement, lottery for 2024-2025 cycle ran ~470,000 applications), L-1 intra-company transfer, O-1 extraordinary ability; the UK's Skilled Worker visa post-Brexit (replaces Tier 2, points-based, 2024 reforms raised salary thresholds), Innovator Founder, Global Talent; Canada's Express Entry (Federal Skilled Worker, Canadian Experience Class, Federal Skilled Trades) plus Provincial Nominee Programmes; Australia's subclass 482 TSS (skilled), 186 ENS (employer nomination), and 189 Skilled Independent visas; Germany's EU Blue Card plus the new Skilled Immigration Act 2024 framework with the Chancenkarte points-based job-search route; the Netherlands' Highly Skilled Migrant programme; Singapore's Employment Pass (with progressively higher thresholds โ SGD 5,600 minimum from 2023) and the COMPASS framework; Japan's Specified Skilled Worker categories i and ii; UAE's standard work visas plus the Golden Visa 10-year tier; Saudi Arabia's Premium Iqama. India's outbound-skilled-worker flows are the largest in the world by absolute numbers โ roughly 1.3 million Indians on US H-1B + dependents, 1 million in the UK on skilled-worker routes, 800,000+ in Canada under PR programmes, 6 million+ in the GCC region.\n\nFamily-reunification routes vary sharply. The US has a 2-year-plus backlog for spouse-of-US-citizen petitions and 6-7 years for sibling petitions in the high-demand countries (India, Mexico, Philippines); the UK's spouse-visa minimum income threshold has been raised to GBP 29,000 in 2024 with planned further increases; Australia's partner-visa pathway is two-stage (subclass 309/100 onshore, 820/801 offshore); Canada's family-class pathway is comparatively faster.\n\nInvestor and golden-visa programmes form the tier the wealthy navigate. The Henley Passport Index ranks travel-document strength; the Henley Investment Migration Programmes index ranks the residency-and-citizenship-by-investment options on cost-residency-naturalisation-tax dimensions. Active CBI programmes (citizenship-by-investment): St Kitts and Nevis (USD 250-400K real-estate or contribution), Antigua and Barbuda (USD 230K+), Grenada (USD 220K+ with US E-2 access), Dominica (USD 200K+), Saint Lucia (USD 240K+), Vanuatu (USD 130K+, restricted recognition), Malta (more elaborate, EUR 700K+ with residency steps); Turkey's programme (USD 400K real-estate); Egypt's 2023 programme; Jordan's programme. Active RBI (residency-by-investment) programmes are denser โ the EU-internal ones (Greek Golden Visa with reform, Cyprus Permanent Residency, Malta Residency) plus Portugal's replaced D2 / Tech Visa / D7 / D8 routes (the property-route Golden Visa was closed October 2023), Spain (Golden Visa closed April 2025), Italy's investor visa, Hungary's revived Golden Visa from 2024; the Caribbean RBIs; the Gulf Golden Visas (UAE, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia's premium residency); Singapore's Global Investor Programme reformed 2023 with higher thresholds; Mauritius's Premium Visa and Occupation Permit; Thailand's Elite Visa, Long-Term Resident visa, and emerging Privilege Card.\n\nNaturalisation timelines and conditions: most European countries 5-10 years residence (Germany 5 years from 2024 reform, Italy 10, France 5, Spain 10 except for ex-colonies at 2, Portugal 5 with a Sephardic-and-cultural-link expedited route closed for new applicants 2024). The US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand at 5 years residence approximately. The GCC region with very limited naturalisation paths regardless of residence length. Switzerland with 10 years and significant cantonal-and-language requirements. Japan's naturalisation possible at 5 years residence but practically rigorous and language-tested.\n\nPassport-strength and tax-citizenship matter together โ the US-passport-holder bears citizenship-based-taxation that no other major passport imposes; the UK and Commonwealth give visa-free access to many places but the underlying-tax position depends on UK-non-dom-or-dom status; the Caribbean CBI passports give visa-free Schengen plus UK access in most cases.\n\nAJG models visa-immigration as a graph of who-can-go-where on what conditions, cross-linked to tax-residency, banking-finance, and real-estate-global because in practice every relocation is a five-vertical decision, not a one-vertical one. We never give legal advice; we map the legal landscape so the user can navigate it informed.