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- By Wei Landgraf
Sint Maarten Residency for Retirees: The Step-by-Step Permit Path
I’ve watched too many retirees show up with a return ticket “to figure it out from here” and end up scrambling. The Sint Maarten residence-permit process is doable, but it rewards preparation and punishes improvisation. This is the path I walk my retired clients through.
Real estate is my craft, but I’ve sat with enough clients through the immigration counter that I can outline the road. Hire a SXM immigration attorney for the actual filing. They cost less than the time you’ll lose without one.
Key Takeaways
- Three main residency pathways for retirees: Penshonado-linked permit, DAFT (US citizens only, work-based), and traditional means-of-support permit.
- The full process takes 6–12 months from arrival to permit-in-hand. Plan for 9.
- Critical documents include FBI background check (US) or RCMP check (Canada), authenticated birth certificate, marriage certificate, proof of health insurance, and proof of means of support.
- Apostille / authentication of US/Canadian documents is the most common bottleneck. Start it 60–90 days before you submit.
- The Census Office (Civil Registry) registration in Philipsburg is what triggers the 2-month tax-authority filing window for the Penshonado.
The three retiree residency pathways
Path 1: Means-of-support residency (the most common retiree path)
You demonstrate that you have sufficient stable income from outside Sint Maarten. A pension, Social Security, RRSP/RRIF, investments. To support yourself without local employment. The threshold isn’t published as a fixed number, but in practice immigration looks for stable monthly income comfortably above SXM’s minimum-wage equivalent for a couple, plus health insurance, plus accommodation evidence.
Best for: retirees who don’t want to work, have stable foreign income, want the simplest path.
Path 2: Penshonado-linked residency
The Penshonado tax regime has its own population-registry and tax-authority registration. The residency permit is processed in parallel, typically as a means-of-support permit with the Penshonado tax election layered on top.
Best for: any retiree planning to use the Penshonado tax regime (~10% on foreign income with property purchase). Almost always combined with Path
Path 3: DAFT (Dutch-American Friendship Treaty). US citizens only
US citizens have an additional path through the Dutch-American Friendship Treaty that lets them establish residency through self-employment. Requires registering a Sint Maarten business, depositing capital (typically reported around USD $7,500–$10,000 minimum, but verify the current threshold), and filing as a self-employed entrepreneur.
Best for: US retirees who want to keep doing some consulting, freelance work, or run a small business on the side. Doesn’t require giving up full-retirement status. Not available to Canadians (no equivalent treaty).
There’s also the business license / investor path for retirees who plan to operate larger businesses. Separate from DAFT, with higher thresholds. Less common for retirees.
The document checklist (start 90 days before)
The single biggest delay in residency applications is document authentication. Plan it.
From your home country
- FBI Identity History Summary (US). Apostilled at the State Department. Allow 8–12 weeks.
- RCMP Criminal Record Check (Canada). Authenticated by Global Affairs Canada (Authentication Services Section). Allow 6–10 weeks.
- State-level criminal background check (US. Varies by state). Apostilled at your state's Secretary of State. Some immigration cases require both federal and state.
- Birth certificate. Apostilled. Allow 4–8 weeks depending on state/province.
- Marriage certificate (if applicable). Apostilled.
- Divorce decree (if applicable). Apostilled.
- Passport copies. Multiple sets.
- Proof of health insurance. International plan certificate or SZV registration (the latter requires you to already be registered locally. Chicken/egg).
- Proof of means of support. Last 3 years tax returns, bank statements, pension award letters, Social Security letter, brokerage statements.
- Proof of address abroad. US driver's license or utility bill.
- Sponsor / accommodation letter. Proof of where you'll live in SXM. Lease agreement, property deed, or signed letter from a property owner.
Generated in Sint Maarten
- Police report from SXM (after 6 months on island for some application types).
- Local accommodation registration.
- SXM bank account confirmation (sometimes required for proof-of-funds).
The step-by-step timeline
Months 0–3: Pre-arrival prep
- Pick a SXM immigration attorney. Get a referral; the small SXM bar means reputation matters.
- Order FBI/RCMP background checks.
- Apostille birth, marriage, and other vital records.
- Compile financial documentation.
- Secure your SXM accommodation (rental lease for at least 12 months, or property purchase contract).
- Obtain international health insurance valid in SXM (you can switch to SZV later once locally enrolled).
Months 3–4: Arrival and initial filing
- Enter SXM on your visa-free 90-day stamp.
- Register with the Census Office (Civil Registry) in Philipsburg. This is the population-registry registration that starts the Penshonado clock.
- Open a SXM bank account (WIB, RBC, Maduro & Curiel's Bank, or Republic Bank).
- If using Penshonado: file the tax election with the Tax Authority within 2 months of Census Office registration. Set the calendar.
- Submit residency application via your immigration attorney.
Months 4–9: Application processing
- Provide additional documents as requested (immigration tends to ask for clarifications).
- Maintain your status by leaving and re-entering on the 90-day visa-free if processing extends past 90 days. Some applicants get a temporary residence sticker pending decision; some don't. Your attorney will guide.
- Get fingerprinted at the SXM police station if requested.
Months 9–12: Permit issuance and registration
- Receive residence permit decision.
- Pick up the residence card at the immigration office.
- Register the residence card with the Census Office (sometimes already on file, sometimes a separate update).
- Register with SZV (mandatory for residents). See SZV explained.
- Apply for SXM driver's license conversion (your home country license is valid for 6 months from arrival).
What it costs
Realistic budget for a couple, including professional fees:
| ITEM | ESTIMATED COST (USD) |
|---|---|
| Immigration attorney (filing + follow-up) | $3,500–$6,000 per person |
| Document authentications + apostilles | $400–$800 per person |
| FBI / RCMP checks | $50–$150 per person |
| Translations (if any documents not in English) | $200–$600 |
| Government filing fees | $300–$700 per person |
| Health insurance during processing | $1,500–$4,000/year |
| Total per person | $5,950–$12,250 |
Couples often realize a discount on attorney fees ($6,000–$10,000 combined is common). Build a $15,000 budget for two-person residency processing and you’ll have headroom.
Renewal and permanent residency
| Line | Range |
|---|---|
| HOA | $250–$700/month |
| Power | $200–$500/month |
| Property insurance | 1.5–2.5% of value/year |
A $400K 2BR carries roughly $900–$1,400/month in fixed costs.
Mistakes I see retirees make
- Showing up with no plan. "I'll figure it out when I get there." Don't.
- Old apostilles. Some documents need to be recently apostilled (typically within 6 months); a 5-year-old apostille often gets rejected.
- No accommodation evidence. A hotel reservation isn't accommodation. Get a 12-month lease or close on a property.
- Ignoring the 2-month tax-authority filing for Penshonado. Easy to forget in the chaos of arrival.
- Trying to DIY the application. Possible. There's a DIY post on Wei's blog. But most retirees value time over the $5K savings.
Common questions
Can I apply from outside Sint Maarten?
Some applications can begin from outside SXM, but most require local presence at certain stages. Plan to be on the island for the bulk of processing.
Will I lose my home-country citizenship?
No. Sint Maarten residence has no effect on US or Canadian citizenship. Only naturalization to Dutch citizenship after ~10 years would intersect with that question, and even then dual citizenship is possible in many cases.
Does buying a property automatically grant residency?
No. Property ownership is a strong supporting factor. And is required for the Penshonado tax regime. But residency is a separate immigration process.
What’s the difference between “residency” and “Penshonado”?
Residency is your immigration status (right to live in SXM). Penshonado is a tax regime (how your foreign income is taxed). They’re typically pursued together but they’re legally distinct.
Can my adult children join me on my retiree residency?
No. Adult children must qualify on their own. Spouses and minor dependents can be sponsored as family members.
Do I need to speak Dutch?
No. English is the working language across SXM government services for the residence permit process.
Can I start the process before I sell my home in the US/Canada?
Yes, and many do. You can be a SXM resident and a US/Canadian property owner simultaneously.
What to do next
01
Pick an immigration attorney. Get two referrals; pick one. Schedule a 30-minute discovery call.
02
Order your FBI / RCMP background check now. It’s the long-pole document.
03
Lock in your SXM accommodation. Lease or purchase contract.
04
Read the Penshonado page if you haven’t. Most retiree applications include it.
05
Build a 9-month timeline with your attorney before you fly down.

