Digital nomad visas: how they work and how countries compare
Last reviewed 12 July 2026A digital nomad visa lets you live in a country for months or years while working remotely for clients or an employer outside that country. It fills the gap between a short tourist stay — where local work isn’t allowed — and full immigration. Dozens of countries now offer one. This guide explains the common requirements, the trade-offs (including tax), and how to compare programmes.
What these visas have in common
Programmes differ, but most share a similar shape:
- Proof of remote income — a monthly or annual income threshold, evidenced by payslips, contracts or bank statements.
- Foreign source of income — your clients or employer must be outside the host country; you’re not taking a local job.
- Health insurance — valid coverage for the stay is typically required. See travel insurance for visas.
- Clean record — often a background check.
- Duration — commonly one year, frequently renewable, sometimes up to a few years.
What varies most
| Factor | Range you’ll see | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Income requirement | Modest to high monthly minimums | Determines who qualifies |
| Duration & renewal | 6 months to multiple years | How long you can settle |
| Tax treatment | Exempt, reduced, or normal resident tax | Big effect on take-home |
| Path to residency | None, or counts toward it | Long-term plans |
| Family inclusion | Dependants allowed or not | Travelling with family |
| Fee | Low to several hundred USD | Upfront cost |
The tax question
Tax is the most misunderstood part. Some nomad visas offer a tax exemption or reduced rate on foreign income; others make you a tax resident once you pass a threshold (often 183 days in a year). Your home country’s rules matter too — some tax citizens on worldwide income regardless of where they live. Double-taxation treaties can help, but this is genuinely complex.
Where to look
Nomad-visa options span Europe (several southern and eastern European countries), the Caribbean and Latin America, parts of Asia, the Middle East and Africa. Some destinations we cover for short stays — such as the UAE, Thailand and Indonesia — have introduced or expanded longer-stay remote-work options alongside their tourist entry. Because these programmes launch and change frequently, treat any list as a starting point and verify current terms on the official immigration portal.
How to apply (typical flow)
- Confirm you meet the income threshold and gather proof (contracts, statements).
- Buy compliant health insurance for the full stay.
- Obtain any required background check and document translations.
- Apply through the official immigration portal or consulate and pay the fee.
- On approval, register locally if required and understand your tax position from day one.
Common questions
Can’t I just work remotely on a tourist visa?
Increasingly risky. Many countries restrict or prohibit it. A nomad visa makes your remote work explicitly lawful.
Do I have to pay tax there?
It depends on the programme and how long you stay — often the 183-day residency threshold is key. Seek professional advice.
Can my family come?
Many programmes allow dependants for an additional fee and higher income proof. Check the specific visa.
How long do they last?
Commonly one year, often renewable, and some run to several years.
Do they lead to permanent residency?
Some count toward residency, others don’t. Confirm before making long-term plans.
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