🇱🇹 Move to Lithuania: The Complete 2026 Expat Guide
Visas · Cost of Living · Taxes · Healthcare · Startup Ecosystem · Step-by-Step Relocation
✅ Is Lithuania Right for You?
Lithuania is likely a strong fit if you answer yes to most of these:
☐ You want an affordable EU base with world-class internet and a growing tech/fintech scene
☐ You work in tech, fintech, or a startup — or run a business you could base in Europe
☐ You’re looking for costs 30–50% below Germany, France, or the Nordics
☐ You can handle cold, dark winters (November through March)
☐ You’re comfortable in a smaller expat community where friendships take time to form
☐ As a U.S. citizen: you understand Lithuania has no Social Security totalization agreement with the US, meaning potential dual SODRA/Social Security contributions
☐ You want EU and Schengen access — a Lithuanian residence permit gives you both
Lithuania has quietly emerged as one of Europe’s most compelling destinations for tech workers, digital entrepreneurs, and cost-conscious expats. The country that gave the world Revolut and Vinted now hosts a genuine fintech and startup ecosystem, paired with medieval old towns, fiber-optic speeds virtually everywhere, and a cost of living that makes Western Europe look extravagant. Vilnius was named European Green Capital 2025 and Lonely Planet’s #2 city destination — the world is starting to notice. This guide covers everything North Americans need to know before making the move.
🏷️ Quick Facts: Lithuania at a Glance
| Capital | Vilnius |
| Currency | Euro (€) |
| Language | Lithuanian (English widely spoken by under-40s and in business) |
| Population | ~2.8 million |
| EU & Schengen | Yes (EU since 2004, Schengen since 2007) |
| Top expat cities | Vilnius, Kaunas, Klaipėda |
| Visa-free entry (US/CA) | Up to 90 days (Schengen rules) |
| Path to permanent residency | 5 years continuous legal residence |
| Path to citizenship | 10 years continuous residence + language test (or Lithuanian heritage) |
| Cost of living vs. NYC | ~50–60% lower (Vilnius); more in smaller cities |
| Internet speed | Among the fastest in Europe — fiber widely available from ~€15/mo |
| Notable exports | Revolut (EU HQ), Vinted, Nord Security (NordVPN), Kevin. |
📋 Visa and Immigration Routes
Lithuania is part of the Schengen Area, so U.S. and Canadian citizens can enter visa-free for up to 90 days within any 180-day period. For longer stays, you’ll need a formal permit. All applications are processed through MIGRIS — Lithuania’s fully digital migration portal.
| Visa / Route | Who It’s For | Key Requirements | Duration / Path |
|---|---|---|---|
| National Visa (Type D) | Those needing more than 90 days for work, study, or family; bridge to TRP | €140 fee; proof of income (€1,038/mo); health insurance; housing proof | Up to 12 months; 180-day wait before reapplying — most use it to transition to TRP |
| Temporary Residence Permit (TRP) — Work | Employees with a job offer from a Lithuanian company | Valid employment contract; proof of income; health insurance; clean criminal record; €160 fee. Labour market test may apply. | 1–2 years, renewable; path to permanent residency after 5 years |
| EU Blue Card | Highly qualified professionals (degree or 5+ years experience) | Contract of min. 1 year; salary ≥ 1.5× national average (~€2,670/mo in 2026); reduced to 1.2× for shortage occupations like IT/engineering (~€2,532/mo) | Up to 3 years; EU mobility rights after 12 months; fast-track to PR |
| Startup Visa | Founders with an innovative, scalable business idea | Business plan evaluated by Startup Lithuania for innovation and market potential; company registration required; renewals require proof of activity | TRP issued after approval; one of Europe’s most accessible startup visa programmes |
| Business / Investor TRP | Company shareholders or directors of an active Lithuanian company | Company capital ≥ €28,000; applicant holds ≥ 1/3 shares with ≥ €14,000 contribution; company active for 6+ months; must employ at least 1 local/EU worker | 1–2 years renewable; path to PR after 5 years |
| Study TRP | Students enrolled full-time at an accredited Lithuanian university | Admission letter; tuition confirmation; proof of funds; housing; health insurance | Duration of programme; limited work rights; academic progress confirmed each cycle |
| Family Reunification | Spouse/family of a TRP or Blue Card holder, or Lithuanian citizen | Proof of relationship; sponsor’s permit; income and housing proof | TRP duration tied to sponsor; right to work typically granted |
| Citizenship by Heritage | Those who can prove Lithuanian ancestry (particularly those whose relatives lost citizenship during Soviet occupation) | Document heritage through birth/marriage records; may require official restoration process | Lithuanian passport — full EU rights without needing to live there first |
Lithuania does not currently offer a dedicated digital nomad visa. Remote workers employed by foreign companies have two main options: apply for a Type D visa (if staying up to 12 months) or explore the Startup Visa if they’re running their own business. Some nomads cycle in and out on the 90-day Schengen allowance, but this is legally risky and doesn’t provide a path to residency. The Startup Visa is often the cleanest route for location-independent founders.
💰 Financial Scenarios: What It Actually Costs to Live in Lithuania
Five realistic expat scenarios with full monthly breakdowns. All figures in USD for easy comparison with North American benchmarks. Lithuania’s affordability is genuinely striking — but local salaries are also low, so the value depends heavily on whether you’re earning a foreign income.
🏘️ Cost of Living: Lithuanian Cities Compared
| Expense | Vilnius | Kaunas | Klaipėda |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1BR apartment (city centre) | €650–€820 | €500–€650 | €480–€620 |
| 2BR apartment (city centre) | €900–€1,200 | €700–€950 | €650–€900 |
| Meal at mid-range restaurant | €10–€18 | €8–€15 | €8–€14 |
| Monthly public transport pass | €30 | €28 | €25 |
| Craft beer (local pub) | €3.50–€5 | €3–€4.50 | €3–€4.50 |
| Fiber internet | ~€15–€20/mo | ~€15–€20/mo | ~€15–€20/mo |
| Utilities (incl. heating — varies seasonally) | €80–€200 | €75–€180 | €70–€170 |
| Overall cost vs. NYC | ~55% lower | ~62% lower | ~63% lower |
Lithuanian winters are cold — temperatures regularly drop to -10°C to -15°C in January and February. Heating bills can spike significantly from November to March, especially in older Soviet-era buildings. When renting, ask specifically about the building’s heating system and average monthly heating bills in winter. District heating (centrinis šildymas) is common and can run €100–€180/month in peak winter months for a 2-bedroom apartment.
🏦 Lithuanian Tax System for Expats (2026)
Lithuania overhauled its personal income tax system in January 2026, replacing the previous flat rate with a progressive structure. This is the most significant tax change in a generation and directly affects financial planning for expats.
| Tax | Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Personal Income Tax (lower bracket) | 20% | Applied to the majority of employment income |
| Personal Income Tax (mid bracket) | 25% | New in 2026; applies to higher earners |
| Personal Income Tax (top bracket) | 32% | New in 2026; replaces previous favourable flat rate for higher earners |
| SODRA (social insurance — employee) | ~12.5% | Funds state pension, sickness pay, healthcare; also covers employer contribution |
| Corporate Tax (standard) | 17% | Slightly raised from 16% in 2026; 7% for SMEs under €300K revenue with <10 employees |
| Corporate Tax (new companies, years 1–2) | 0% | Significant incentive for new business formation |
| VAT (standard) | 21% | Included in retail prices; reduced rates for food, medicine, books |
Unlike Ireland, France, or Germany, Lithuania does not have a totalization agreement with the United States. This means U.S. citizens working in Lithuania on a local contract may face dual social insurance contributions — paying SODRA in Lithuania and potentially still owing Social Security contributions in the US on self-employment income. U.S. employees of Lithuanian companies may be partially exempted depending on the employer structure, but the rules are complex. This is a significant financial consideration that requires specialist advice from a CPA who understands both US and Lithuanian obligations before you sign any employment contract.
The usual FEIE and Foreign Tax Credit rules still apply to reduce US income tax liability — but the social insurance gap is a unique Lithuania-specific issue.
Canada and Lithuania do have a tax treaty, which helps avoid full double taxation on income. However, when you establish tax residency in Lithuania, Canada may impose departure taxes on certain assets, and RRSP/TFSA accounts are treated differently under Lithuanian rules. Get cross-border tax advice before you leave — the CRA has specific requirements for non-resident reporting that don’t disappear when you move.
🏥 Healthcare in Lithuania
Lithuania has a universal public healthcare system funded through SODRA. Legal residents registered with SODRA — either via employment or voluntary contribution — are entitled to GP care, specialist visits, and hospitalisation with modest co-payments. In practice, most English-speaking expats use a hybrid of public and private care.
| Type | Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Public healthcare (SODRA) | Small co-payments | Available once registered via employment or voluntary SODRA contribution; GP care, specialists, hospitalisation covered |
| Private clinic visit | €20–€60 | Very affordable by Western standards; English-speaking doctors at Northway Hospital and Mediprama (Vilnius); short waits |
| Private health insurance | €40–€100/mo (single) | Strongly recommended for the first year; required for visa applications; covers private clinics, specialist access, and some dental |
| Dental | €30–€80 per visit | Significantly cheaper than North America; many expats fly home less often for dental once they discover local quality and prices |
| Minimum insurance for visa | €30,000 coverage required | Mandatory for Type D visa and TRP applications; Schengen-wide coverage needed |
🏙️ Choosing Where to Live: Lithuania’s Main Expat Cities
| City | Best For | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🏙️ Vilnius | Tech workers, founders, fintech professionals, young expats | Best job market, large expat community, UNESCO old town, most English-friendly, direct flights to major EU hubs | Most expensive (by local standards), fastest-rising rents, some tourist crowds in old town |
| 🎓 Kaunas | Families, budget-conscious expats, academics, retirees | 20–25% cheaper than Vilnius, strong university city, excellent interwar architecture, less touristy, more authentically Lithuanian | Fewer international jobs, smaller expat scene, less English spoken than Vilnius |
| ⛵ Klaipėda | Remote workers, nature lovers, those wanting coastal access | Baltic coast access, Curonian Spit (UNESCO), port city feel, slightly cheaper than Vilnius | Seasonal economy, smaller job market, rents can vary sharply summer vs. winter, fewer international amenities |
🏠 Housing in Lithuania
Lithuania’s rental market is genuinely affordable by EU standards — Vilnius 1-bedroom apartments average €650–€820/month in the city centre, roughly half what you’d pay in Berlin or Helsinki. That said, the market has tightened in recent years due to tech sector growth, and good apartments move quickly.
- Main platforms: Aruodas.lt and NT.lt — most listings are in Lithuanian but Google Translate handles them well. Agents typically charge a one-month commission fee.
- Lease terms: Typically 12 months with a 1–2 month deposit. Month-to-month is possible but less common.
- What landlords want: Proof of income, passport/ID, and your residence permit or visa. References from previous landlords are a plus but not always required.
- Soviet-era vs. modern: Many affordable apartments are in Soviet-era residential blocks (known as daugiabučiai) — often renovated inside but with higher heating costs. Newer buildings cost more but are far more energy-efficient.
- Plan for a buffer: Arrive with at least 4–6 weeks of temporary accommodation booked while you search for a long-term place in person.
🛂 Path to Permanent Residency and Citizenship
| Stage | Timeline | Key Details |
|---|---|---|
| Temporary Residence Permit (TRP) | Year 0 | 1–2 years; tied to employment, study, startup, or family |
| TRP Renewal | Ongoing | Renew 60 days before expiry via MIGRIS; apply early as appointment slots fill up |
| Permanent Residence Permit (PRP) | After 5 years | 5 continuous years of legal residence; grants EU long-term resident status and near-citizen rights |
| EU Blue Card accelerated track | After 2 years in Lithuania (5 total in EU) | EU Blue Card holders with 5 years total EU residence (min. 2 in Lithuania) can apply for PRP |
| Citizenship (naturalisation) | After 10 years | 10 years continuous residence; Lithuanian language test required; proof of integration |
| Citizenship by heritage | Any time | Available if ancestors lost Lithuanian citizenship during Soviet/Nazi occupation; process involves document tracing and official restoration |
❌ 8 Common Mistakes When Moving to Lithuania
1. Underestimating winter
Lithuanian winters are long, dark, and genuinely cold — not the mild grey drizzle of Western Europe. From November through March, temperatures regularly hit -10°C to -20°C, daylight can drop to 8 hours, and energy costs spike. Many expats who didn’t research this leave before spring. Visit in January before committing to a long-term move.
2. Ignoring the SODRA/Social Security dual contribution issue (US citizens)
The absence of a US–Lithuania totalization agreement is a serious financial blind spot for Americans. If you’re working locally, you may owe SODRA contributions in Lithuania and Social Security contributions in the US simultaneously. Get specialist advice before accepting any employment contract.
3. Applying for MIGRIS without an appointment booked
Lithuania’s migration system is digital but appointment slots at migration offices fill up weeks in advance. Do not arrive assuming you can walk in. Book your biometrics appointment on MIGRIS the moment you submit your online application — delays here ripple into your entire setup timeline.
4. Not getting documents translated into Lithuanian before applying
All non-Lithuanian documents submitted to migration authorities must have certified translations into Lithuanian. This includes birth certificates, police clearances, degree certificates, and marriage documents. Untranslated documents are the single most common cause of rejected or delayed applications.
5. Expecting the same social speed as home
Lithuanians are famously reserved with strangers. First encounters can feel cold or indifferent to North Americans used to surface-level warmth. Don’t mistake this for unfriendliness — Lithuanians form deep, loyal friendships, but it takes time. Join a sports club, tech community, or expat group; the connections will come.
6. Renting in an unheated Soviet-era building without checking winter bills
Some older apartment buildings have notoriously poor insulation. The listed rent can look excellent until you add winter heating costs, which can double or triple your monthly housing expense. Always ask the landlord or previous tenant for average heating bills in January before signing a lease.
7. Choosing Startup Visa without a real business plan
The Lithuanian Startup Visa is well-designed but not a rubber stamp. Startup Lithuania evaluates applications for genuine innovation and market potential. Vague or generic business plans are rejected. Renewals require documented proof of activity — contracts, invoices, or turnover. If your business idea isn’t genuinely scalable or innovative, the Business/Investor TRP route may be more appropriate.
8. Forgetting to register your residence address
Once you have your TRP, you’re required to register your residential address with the municipality. This is separate from your MIGRIS immigration registration. Failing to do this can cause problems with banking, healthcare registration, and eventually your PR application — which requires proof of continuous, registered residence.
✅ Lithuania Relocation Checklist
Phase 1: Preparation (3–6 months before)
☐ Check Lithuanian heritage eligibility — if ancestors lost citizenship during occupation, citizenship restoration may be possible
☐ Secure a job offer or have your startup plan evaluated by Startup Lithuania
☐ Get all personal documents apostilled and arrange certified Lithuanian translations
☐ Hire a dual-jurisdiction CPA if American — address SODRA/Social Security issue before arrival
☐ Research Vilnius vs. Kaunas for your lifestyle, budget, and job market
☐ Open a Wise or Revolut multi-currency account for initial transfers
☐ Get health insurance with €30,000+ Schengen-wide coverage for your visa application
Phase 2: Application and Logistics (1–3 months before)
☐ Book biometrics appointment immediately — slots fill weeks in advance
☐ Apply for a Type D visa if crossing the 90-day Schengen limit before your TRP is approved
☐ Book 4–6 weeks of temporary accommodation on arrival
☐ Research schools if moving with children (American International School of Vilnius: $12,500–$20,000/year; Vilnius International School also available)
☐ Research apartments on Aruodas.lt and NT.lt — ask landlords for winter heating cost estimates
☐ If registering a company (UAB): prepare registration documents and arrange the €2,500 minimum capital (€625 required at registration)
Phase 3: Arrival (First month)
☐ Register your residential address with your local municipality
☐ Register with SODRA (State Social Insurance Fund) if employed locally
☐ Register with VMI (State Tax Inspectorate) as a taxpayer
☐ Open a Lithuanian bank account (Swedbank, SEB, or Revolut/Wise as interim)
☐ Register with a GP (family doctor) at your local polyclinic
☐ Begin searching for long-term apartment rental
Phase 4: Settling In (Months 2–12)
☐ File US tax return (FEIE / foreign tax credit) — June 15 deadline for expats, October with extension
☐ File FBAR if applicable (FinCEN 114) — April 15, auto-extended to October
☐ Canadians: file non-resident return with CRA; confirm RRSP/TFSA status under Lithuania tax treaty
☐ Start basic Lithuanian — even a few phrases go a long way with locals
☐ Build your residency evidence folder: TRP cards, lease, utility bills, payslips (needed for PRP in year 5)
☐ Set TRP renewal reminder 60 days before expiry
☐ Explore: Vilnius old town, the Curonian Spit, Trakai Island Castle, Kaunas interwar architecture — Lithuania rewards those who look beyond the city centre
📖 Glossary: Key Lithuanian Immigration Terms
| MIGRIS | Lithuania’s online migration portal — all visa, TRP, and appointment submissions go through here |
| TRP | Temporary Residence Permit — the standard long-term residence document for non-EU nationals; issued for 1–2 years |
| PRP | Permanent Residence Permit — available after 5 years of continuous legal stay; grants EU long-term resident status |
| EU Blue Card | Residence permit for highly qualified professionals meeting salary thresholds (~€2,532–€2,670/mo in 2026); grants EU mobility rights after 12 months |
| Startup Visa | Streamlined residence route for founders with an innovative, scalable business evaluated by Startup Lithuania |
| SODRA | State Social Insurance Fund — Lithuania’s social security system; funds healthcare, pension, sickness pay; registration required for employed and self-employed residents |
| VMI | State Tax Inspectorate (Valstybinė mokesčių inspekcija) — Lithuania’s tax authority; handles income tax registration and compliance |
| UAB | Uždaroji akcinė bendrovė — Lithuanian private limited company; minimum capital €2,500 (€625 at registration); most popular company form for foreign founders |
| Type D Visa | National long-stay visa valid up to 12 months; €140 fee; used as a bridge before TRP is issued or for stays under 12 months |
| Daugiabučiai | Soviet-era residential apartment blocks — often affordable and sometimes renovated inside; check heating insulation before renting |
| Totalization Agreement | A bilateral treaty preventing dual social security taxation — Lithuania does NOT have one with the US; important for American expats in employment |
| FEIE | Foreign Earned Income Exclusion — IRS provision allowing US citizens abroad to exclude up to ~$126,500 of foreign earned income from US federal tax |
| FBAR | Foreign Bank Account Report (FinCEN 114) — required for US citizens with foreign accounts exceeding $10,000 at any point in the year |


