Expat & Tax Residency

Digital Nomad

A digital nomad is a person who earns a living through remote work — typically online — while travelling and living in different locations rather than from a single fixed base. Because their physical location and their employer or clients can be in different countries, digital nomads face particular questions around tax residency, visas and social security, since each country they spend time in may have its own day-count and residency tests.

Worked example

Over one year a nomad splits time across three countries: 100 days in Country A, 150 days in Country B and 115 days in Country C. Total = 100 + 150 + 115 = 365 days. No single country reaches a 183-day threshold (150 < 183), but several countries' lower thresholds or other tests could still apply — so being under 183 days everywhere does not guarantee being tax-resident nowhere.

Why it matters

Digital nomadism matters financially because crossing borders does not pause your tax obligations: you may remain tax-resident in your home country, become resident elsewhere, or owe tax in more than one place at once. The pitfall is assuming a tourist visa or a "digital nomad visa" settles your tax position — immigration status and tax residency are separate, and the latter usually turns on days present and where your life is based.

Frequently asked questions

Generally yes. Earning income usually creates a tax obligation somewhere — often in your country of tax residency, and sometimes also where the income is sourced. Travelling does not by itself remove that obligation. This is general information, not personal tax advice.

Not automatically. A digital nomad visa governs your right to stay and work, while tax residency is decided by separate tests such as days present and your centre of vital interests. The two can, but need not, point to the same country.


Built & maintained by Worthmap · Last updated June 7, 2026
Educational use only. This tool provides estimates for informational purposes and does not constitute financial, investment, tax, or legal advice. Results are based on inputs you provide and mathematical models — they do not guarantee future performance. Always consult a qualified financial adviser before making investment decisions.