One sentence up front: Turkey passport family coverage reaches only your spouse and children under 18. Parents are not included. If your top reason for getting a passport is to bring your parents along, Turkey is probably the wrong tool.

Why does Turkey passport family coverage exclude parents?

Turkey's citizenship law defines accompanying family members narrowly: the main applicant, the spouse, and children under 18. Parents, adult children and siblings are not in the package. As of May 2026, the route from 400,000 dollars in real estate, issued in four to eight months, is competitive for a tight nuclear family. For a household that wants three generations to move together, Turkey passport family coverage is the hard limit.

By contrast, several Caribbean programs define family much more broadly. Saint Kitts, Grenada and Antigua generally support three-generation coverage, and qualifying parents over 55 can apply alongside you. The same money covers a very different number of heads. Whether you are bringing a household of three or counting in your parents and your in-laws decides which kind of program you should even be looking at.

So choosing Turkey or the Caribbean starts with who you need to bring, not with which one sounds like the bigger country. Turkey is a G20 passport with a possible second route toward the US E-2, which sounds attractive, but E-2 also requires you to relocate and run a real local business; it is not something the passport alone delivers, so do not get led by that side benefit. Where Turkey genuinely fits is a nuclear family configuring identity and assets.

To bring parents, go back to the Caribbean three-generation options. Which specific passport depends on whether you weight travel, education or budget, but at the directional level, the parents question is one Turkey cannot answer.

A second passport can change which document your immediate family travels on and give your core household another identity option. It cannot change a program's legal definition of who can be packaged in. Do not use Turkey to solve a parents problem.

One more line worth flagging: it is not only parents. Adult children over 18 generally fall outside Turkey's accompanying-family definition too. If your child is already grown and you want them on the same application, Turkey is another question mark, and that again points you back to the Caribbean programs that have explicit clauses for adult unmarried children.

Work out exactly which family members this passport has to cover, then send me the names and ages on WhatsApp +15595666666 and I will check which route fits.