The 183-Day Rule, Compared Across 10 Nomad Destinations
The 183-day threshold is a shorthand, not a universal law. Here is how it actually works in ten popular nomad countries — and where the surprises hide.
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- 2026-04-14
CONTENTS7
"If you spend more than 183 days in a country, you become a tax resident." You'll hear it in every nomad chat room. It's true in spirit for most jurisdictions — but the specifics matter a lot, and the rule has important exceptions that can trigger residency in under 183 days.
Why 183 isn't magic
Half of 365 rounds to 183 (or 182, depending on leap year math). That's the whole origin story. Most tax codes therefore use 183 as a baseline threshold, but layer on additional tests:
- Center of vital interests — where your home, family, and economic ties are
- Permanent abode — whether you maintain a residence available year-round
- Tiebreaker clauses — in double-taxation treaties, for dual-residence cases
A country can declare you a resident even under 183 days if you check enough secondary boxes.
10 countries, side by side
| Country | Threshold | Window | Secondary tests trigger? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Portugal | 183 days | Any 12 months | Yes (permanent home available) |
| Spain | 183 days | Calendar year | Yes (vital interests) |
| Germany | 183 days | Calendar year | Yes (permanent abode) |
| Japan | 183 days (non-permanent) | 1-year rolling | Yes (intent to stay > 1 year) |
| Thailand | 180 days | Calendar year | Only for tax residency flag |
| Mexico | Center of vital interests | N/A | Triggers first, days are secondary |
| UAE | 183 days (new 2023 rule) | Calendar year | Or 90 days + residence permit + business |
| Georgia | 183 days | Any 12 months | No — pure day count |
| USA | Substantial Presence Test | 3-year weighted | Very different math; see below |
| UK | Statutory Residence Test | Tax year | Five separate tests; 183 is just one |
The USA is its own thing
US Substantial Presence Test: days in current year + 1/3 of prior year + 1/6 of two years back. If that weighted sum ≥ 183, you're a US tax resident for that year. In practice this means ~122 days per year averaged is the real threshold, not 183.
Add to that: US citizens are always taxed on worldwide income, regardless of residence. The SPT is for non-citizens. Americans abroad should look at the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE, ~$130,000 for 2026) and the bona-fide residence vs. physical presence tests instead.
What nomads actually need to worry about
- Don't trigger accidental residency. Keep a spreadsheet of entry/exit dates per country.
- Watch tiebreaker clauses. If two countries both think you're resident, the relevant tax treaty has a cascade: permanent home → vital interests → habitual abode → nationality.
- "No residency anywhere" is risky. Some countries deem you resident if you can't prove residency elsewhere. Having a clean base jurisdiction matters.
Practical tools
- 183-Day Tax Residency Tracker — track all your country day counts in one place (Pro tier).
- Multi-currency accounts reduce friction when your bank looks at "foreign residence" markers.
Internal Links
Open a Wise multi-currency account →
Disclaimer
This comparison is informational only and not tax advice. Tax law is jurisdiction-specific, fact-specific, and changes often. Consult a qualified tax professional in each relevant country before making residency decisions.