10 Digital Nomad Visas With the Lowest Income Requirements (2026)
Ten 2026 nomad visas qualifying applicants can actually meet — from Thailand DTV's 500,000 THB savings test through Argentina's $2,500/mo and Malaysia's $24k/year. Real thresholds, not aspirational marketing copy.
Most lists of "easy nomad visas" lead with countries that have published low income thresholds but then add unstated friction — consular discretion, documentation requirements, real-world processing times. This list focuses on visas that are genuinely accessible to applicants earning under $3,000/month, and notes the real friction beneath the headline number.
For each visa, we cite the 2026 published threshold, the typical processing experience, the duration, and whether the destination's cost of living matches the visa-friendly profile.
This is not legal or immigration advice. Visa rules change frequently. Always verify thresholds with the official government source linked from each section before applying.
The 10 visas, ranked by accessibility
| Rank | Country / visa | Threshold (USD equiv) | Duration | Real-world friction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Georgia 1-yr visa-free | None | 1 year | None — just arrive |
| 2 | Thailand DTV | ~$13,800 savings | 5 years | Low; online |
| 3 | Albania 1-yr visa-free | None | 1 year | None |
| 4 | Mexico tourist 180-day | None (discretionary) | 180 days | Low — entry at airport |
| 5 | Malaysia DE Rantau | $24,000/yr income | 1 yr (+1) | Low; online |
| 6 | Indonesia B211A | None (~$2,000 financial proof) | 180 days | Moderate (visa agents) |
| 7 | Colombia DNV | 3× Colombian min wage (~$1,000/mo) | 2 years | Moderate; in-person |
| 8 | Argentina nomad visa | $2,500/mo | 180 days +ext. | High (consulate slow) |
| 9 | Brazil nomad visa | $1,500/mo OR $18k savings | 1 yr (+1) | Moderate |
| 10 | Mauritius Premium Travel | $1,500/mo | 1 yr (renewable) | Moderate |
1. Georgia 1-year visa-free entry
Threshold: None. Duration: 365 days. Cost: Free.
Georgia offers 365-day visa-free entry to citizens of 95+ countries, including all EU/EEA, US, UK, Japan, Canada, Australia, Israel, and more. No application — just arrive at Tbilisi International Airport with a valid passport.
- After 365 days, exit and re-enter (border run) resets the clock
- Tbilisi banking, real estate, and tax registration are all accessible to long-term visitors
- Cost of living: ~$1,050/month in central Tbilisi
Friction: Effectively zero. The most accessible nomad option in Europe.
Best paired with: Tbilisi city page. See also our Georgia 1-year nomad guide (JP).
2. Thailand DTV
Threshold: 500,000 THB (~$13,800) savings, held for 3+ months. Duration: 5 years, multi-entry, 180 days per stay. Cost: 10,000 THB application fee.
Thailand's 2024-introduced Destination Thailand Visa has rapidly become the most popular Southeast Asia nomad visa. The financial proof is a savings test, not monthly income — applicants with variable income but a healthy reserve fund qualify easily.
- 180-day stays per entry, extendable +180 once
- Soft Power category (Muay Thai, cooking schools, Thai medical) is alternative qualification
- Cost of living: ~$950/month in Chiang Mai, ~$1,400/month in Bangkok
Friction: Low. Single online application, 5–15 business day processing typical. Interview possible but not universal.
See: How to Apply for the Thailand DTV
3. Albania 1-year visa-free entry
Threshold: None. Duration: 365 days. Cost: Free.
Albania quietly offers 1-year visa-free entry to citizens of the US, UK, EU, and many other countries. Unlike Georgia, the rule is less well-known but the structure is similar.
- Albania introduced a "Unique Permit" residency in 2024 for longer stays
- Schengen non-member — doesn't burn Schengen days
- Cost of living: ~$1,000/month in Tirana
Friction: None for the 1-year visa-free entry; some for the Unique Permit if you stay beyond.
4. Mexico tourist 180-day stamp
Threshold: None published; discretionary at immigration. Duration: Up to 180 days per entry. Cost: Free (or ~$30 FMM fee for some entries).
Mexico's tourist stamp is technically discretionary — the immigration officer at your port of entry writes a number of days on your FMM (up to 180). Most US/EU/JP/UK arrivals receive 180 days routinely, but post-2022 some airports have started giving 30–90 days more frequently. Land entries trend more conservative.
- Border runs reset the clock; some applicants do this for years
- Long-term residence is available via the Temporal Residency route ($4,300/mo income proof) for those wanting a formal permit
- Cost of living: ~$1,100/month in Mérida, ~$1,400/month in Mexico City
Friction: Low to moderate; depends on the officer.
5. Malaysia DE Rantau Nomad Pass
Threshold: $24,000/yr (~$2,000/mo) for IT/digital nomads. Duration: 1 year, renewable for 1 more. Cost: ~$200 application.
Malaysia's DE Rantau program has one of the lowest income thresholds among Asia-Pacific nomad visas explicitly targeting remote workers.
- Tax-favorable: foreign income generally not taxed for non-resident periods
- Cost of living: ~$1,100/month in George Town (Penang), ~$1,400/month in Kuala Lumpur
- English-speaking environment
Friction: Low. Fully online via the Malaysia Digital Economy Corporation (MDEC) portal.
6. Indonesia B211A
Threshold: None published; embassies require ~$2,000 in financial proof. Duration: 60 days, extendable to 180. Cost: ~$600–900 with visa agents.
The B211A (Sosial Budaya / Business Visit) is the route most Bali nomads use. It's not strictly a "nomad visa" but is widely used as one.
- Visa agents are effectively mandatory due to Indonesia's documentation requirements
- The newer E33G "Remote Worker" visa is available for higher-income applicants ($60k+/yr) wanting longer 1-yr terms
- Cost of living: ~$1,300/month in Canggu, ~$900/month in Ubud
Friction: Moderate — agents handle paperwork but cost adds up. See Chiang Mai vs Bali for visa-cost comparison.
7. Colombia Digital Nomad Visa
Threshold: 3× Colombian minimum wage (~$1,000/mo). Duration: 2 years. Cost: ~$684 application.
Colombia introduced its DNV in 2023. Among Latin American options, it's notable for the lowest income threshold (often under $1,200/mo depending on the year's SMMLV).
- Income proof: 3 months of bank statements or remote work contract
- Cost of living: ~$1,200/month in Medellín, ~$1,400/month in Bogotá
- 2-year validity matches Mexico Temporal
Friction: Moderate. Application is in-person at a Colombian consulate or via the online portal; documentation is more demanding than the threshold suggests.
8. Argentina Digital Nomad Visa
Threshold: $2,500/mo. Duration: 180 days, extendable to 1 year. Cost: ~$200.
Argentina's DNV launched in 2022 with low threshold and high potential, but consulate processing has been slow and inconsistent. Some applicants report 6+ month waits.
- Argentina's currency volatility makes USD cost figures unstable
- Cost of living: variable, but Buenos Aires typically $800–1,400/month for nomads
- Excellent dining, time-zone friendly for US Eastern
Friction: High in practice. Often easier to enter on the 90-day visa-free stamp and renew.
9. Brazil Digital Nomad Visa
Threshold: $1,500/mo OR $18,000 savings. Duration: 1 year, renewable for 1 more. Cost: ~$100.
Brazil's DNV launched in 2022 with one of the lowest income thresholds in the Americas.
- Income or savings test — flexible
- Cost of living: ~$1,400/month in Florianópolis, ~$1,700/month in São Paulo
- Strong English-speaking nomad community in Florianópolis
Friction: Moderate. Application at Brazilian consulates; documentation requirements are real but published thresholds are achievable.
10. Mauritius Premium Travel Visa
Threshold: $1,500/mo. Duration: 1 year, renewable. Cost: Free.
A genuinely underrated option. Mauritius (Indian Ocean, off East Africa) offers a free 1-year nomad visa at a $1,500/month threshold.
- English-speaking, French-influenced, strong fiber infrastructure
- Cost of living: ~$1,400/month (higher than Africa mainland but lower than EU)
- 24-hour flight from Europe; time-zone challenging for the Americas
Friction: Low for paperwork, high for logistics (remote island).
Threshold comparison vs major EU options
For context, here's where these compare with the major EU "high-income" nomad visas:
| Country | Monthly threshold (USD) | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Brazil | $1,500 | 1 yr |
| Mauritius | $1,500 | 1 yr |
| Argentina | $2,500 | 180 days |
| Malaysia DE Rantau | $2,000 | 1+1 yr |
| Spain DNV | ~$3,000 (€2,762) | 3 yr |
| Portugal D8 | ~$3,800 (€3,480) | 1+2+ yr |
| Germany Freelance | ~$3,500 (varies) | 1–3 yr |
| Italy nomad visa | ~$2,800 | 1 yr |
The sub-$2,000/mo threshold is essentially a Southeast Asia / Latin America / smaller-economy phenomenon. EU nomad visas almost all sit at $3,000+ effective.
Hidden costs to factor in
A low income threshold doesn't mean a cheap application:
- Translation and apostille: $200–800 for typical document sets
- Health insurance: $400–1,500/year
- Visa agent fees (Indonesia, occasionally Colombia): $300–900
- Background checks + apostille (US FBI): $50–200
- Lawyer/consultant (Spain, Portugal, Italy): $1,500–4,000 typical
The cheapest visas to apply for end-to-end are typically Georgia (free), Albania (free), Mexico (free), and Thailand DTV (~$300 total). Everything else carries $500–3,000 in true total application cost.
What to do next
- Calibrate your income: which threshold tier do you actually fit?
- Match to cost of living: see Best Nomad Cities Under $1,500/Month
- Consider tax residency separately: every long stay triggers tax-residency analysis. See our Tax Residency Tracker and how to calculate tax residency
- For pre-application Schengen visits: use the Schengen 90/180 calculator
Get the right insurance for low-cost destinations
Most low-threshold nomad visas don't have luxurious public healthcare. SafetyWing Nomad Insurance covers all 10 destinations listed here and works for visa-application requirements where insurance is needed:
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Last updated: 2026-05-17. Income thresholds for nomad visas are subject to change with each country's annual budget or immigration policy. Verify the current threshold and documentation requirements with the issuing government before applying. This article is editorial — not legal or immigration advice.