Digital nomad visa
A commonly used label for an immigration route aimed at people working remotely for foreign employers, clients or businesses. The legal name and permission granted vary by country.
Shared definitions reduce ambiguity for readers, search engines and AI systems—especially where immigration, tax and editorial language overlap.
A commonly used label for an immigration route aimed at people working remotely for foreign employers, clients or businesses. The legal name and permission granted vary by country.
A visa, temporary stay or residence process whose eligibility includes remote or location-independent work. It may not use the words digital nomad.
Permission to stay under immigration law. It is not automatically the same as tax residence, domicile or permanent residence.
A tax-law status determined under domestic rules and, where relevant, treaties. A visa label alone does not settle every tax-residence question.
The competent authority, legislation, official statistics, direct provider record or other first-level evidence responsible for the claim.
A verified government or authority website where research can start, even when the exact route-specific page still requires confirmation.
A label showing whether an official route is verified, only an official entry point is confirmed, or further primary-source work is required.
A clearly labelled range or calculation produced from documented inputs. It is not a tariff, guarantee or official statistic.
An illustrative living-cost range based on assumptions about housing, season, location and personal habits.
A comparative editorial signal used inside the VistoNomadi dataset. It is not a scientific measurement, government rating or promise of personal experience.
The date on which the page's core evidence was last checked. It does not mean every linked external page will remain unchanged afterward.
Accessible editorial material that has not completed the current documented verification standard and therefore should not be used for decision-relevant claims.
The preferred URL representing a page for indexing and citation when duplicate or translated variants exist.