Rentista visa vs student visa in Argentina (2026 full guide): which one is right for you?

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If you’re planning to stay in Argentina legally for more than a few months, you’ll quickly discover that two visas stand out for foreigners who want to live in Buenos Aires without a work contract:

1. The Rentista Visa
2. The Student Visa (Residencia Transitoria por Estudios)

Both allow legal residency.
Both allow you to stay long-term.
Both can even count toward the 2-year requirement for Argentine citizenship.

But they are completely different in requirements, difficulty, cost, and lifestyle.

Here is the most complete, simple and updated comparison for 2025 — written in a way real people can understand.


⭐ 1. The Rentista Visa: what it is and who it’s for

Contents

The Rentista Visa is a type of Temporary Residency for people who can prove a stable passive income from abroad.

Examples include:

  • Property rental income
  • Dividends
  • Trust income
  • Long-term contracts that do NOT require working in Argentina
  • Passive investments

It is meant for foreigners who can support themselves without working in the country.

✔ Requirements (updated 2025)

This visa is paperwork-heavy. To apply you need:

  • Proof of passive income (above immigration’s threshold, usually USD 2,000+/month)
  • Documents apostilled
  • Official translations in Argentina
  • Proof of address
  • Criminal background check (home country + Argentina)
  • Bank statements showing stable income deposit
  • Proof the income is passive (not active work)

Most applicants need a lawyer because the process is strict.

✔ Validity

Usually 1 year, renewable each year.

✔ Difficulty level

High.
Most applications get delayed unless documents are perfect and properly legalized.

✔ best for:

  • People with strong passive income
  • Remote investors
  • Retirees
  • People planning long-term settlement
  • People who want long-term stability from day one

⭐ 2. The Student Visa: simple, flexible and extremely popular

The Student Visa is a Transitory Residency granted to people enrolled in a valid academic program — including Spanish schools registered with immigration.

Unlike the Rentista Visa, it does NOT require:

  • apostilled income documents
  • high monthly income
  • complex financial proof
  • years of paperwork
  • lawyers

This is why it has become the most common legal path for travelers, digital nomads, and people who want to live in Buenos Aires without stress.

✔ Requirements

Much lighter:

  • Passport
  • Enrollment certificate from a valid school
  • Payment confirmation
  • Local background check
  • Optional: background check from home country (depending on nationality)

Schools like Wanderlust Spanish issue the correct documents within 24 hours, which is why more than 150+ students obtained residency through this program in 2024–2025.

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✔ Validity

From 90 days up to 1 full year (+365).

✔ Renewals

This is where the Student Visa becomes powerful:

With Wanderlust Spanish, you can renew the student residency every year for up to 3 years while you continue a valid academic program.

So even if your first residency is classified internally as -365, you can still extend your legal stay for multiple years.

✔ best for:

  • Travelers
  • Digital nomads
  • People testing Buenos Aires before fully committing
  • Long-term visitors who want simplicity
  • Anyone wanting the easiest legal residency in Argentina
  • People curious about citizenship in the future
  • Those wanting to learn Spanish genuinely

⭐ 3. Costs: rentista vs student visa

Rentista Visa

  • Lawyer fees: USD 800–1,500+
  • Apostilles + translations: expensive
  • Monthly income requirement: high
  • Renewal cost: high
  • Time cost: high (appointments + paperwork)

Student Visa

  • Only requires paying your program
  • No lawyer needed
  • No apostilles required
  • Fast appointment times
  • Much cheaper total cost

It’s not even close.
If affordability and simplicity matter, the Student Visa wins.


⭐ 4. The citizenship factor (very important)

Here’s the truth most foreigners don’t know:

👉 Both the Rentista Visa and the Student Visa count toward Argentine citizenship.

Citizenship requires:

  • 2 years of continuous residence
  • Clean criminal record
  • Judge approval

It does not require:

  • a specific visa type
  • a work contract
  • permanent residency first

So a foreigner can, legally, build their 2 years through:

  • Rentista residency
  • Student residency
  • Or a combination

This means:

If you stay 2–3 years with Wanderlust’s renewable student residency, you already meet the legal requirement for citizenship.

This is one reason the Student Visa has become so popular among long-term expats.


⭐ 5. Which visa should YOU choose?

Here’s the honest breakdown:


✔ Choose the Rentista Visa if:

  • You have high passive income
  • You want a classic “temporary residency” status
  • You’re settling in Argentina long-term from day one
  • You don’t mind bureaucracy
  • You can handle apostilles, translations, delays, and lawyers

This is a good path if you’re already financially established.


✔ Choose the Student Visa if:

  • You want the simplest legal residency
  • You don’t have passive income to prove
  • You want to stay in Argentina smoothly
  • You want a flexible, renewable residency
  • You want to learn Spanish
  • You want a fast entry into legal status
  • You’re exploring the city before committing long-term
  • You want the option of applying for citizenship after 2 years
  • You prefer low bureaucracy and fast approval

Most travelers — and even many expats — choose the Student Visa because it’s easy, legal, effective, renewable, and enough for citizenship.


⭐ Final thought

These two visas belong to two different worlds.

The Rentista Visa is a formal, demanding, traditional path for financially established expats.

The Student Visa is the flexible, friendly, accessible path that lets you:

  • stay legally
  • learn Spanish
  • integrate into Buenos Aires
  • renew for up to 3 years
  • and even qualify for citizenship later

And with schools like Wanderlust Spanish, the entire process becomes fast, simple, and human — the opposite of the Rentista experience.

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Wanderlust was my second home during my 5 months living in Buenos Aires. I got to know Argentina through this amazing school and experiences while studying with my professor, Vicky.

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People love us!

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Wanderlust was my second home during my 5 months living in Buenos Aires. I got to know Argentina through this amazing school and experiences while studying with my professor, Vicky.

- Rich