NomadVisaGuide

Digital nomad visa eligibility checker

Enter your monthly income in USD and this free tool shows which of our 49 digital-nomad visas you meet the income threshold for. For example, with $2,000/month you'd clear the income bar for places like Brazil, Colombia, Mauritius, Kenya, the Philippines and every no-income-requirement country, but not the higher-bar visas (UAE $3,500, Spain ~$3,075, Japan ~$5,580). It runs entirely in your browser. Income is only one requirement — check each country page for documents, insurance and nationality rules.

Data as of June 2026.

Your monthly income (USD)
You qualify for 0 visas on income.

How it works

The tool compares your monthly income to each visa's published income threshold (converted to an approximate USD/month figure). Visas with no income requirement always appear. Where a country only requires a lump-sum bank balance rather than monthly income, it is treated as having no monthly floor and is shown too — check the country page for the savings figure. Nothing is sent to a server; the maths runs in your browser. Figures are a snapshot as of June 2026.

Frequently asked questions

How does the digital nomad visa eligibility checker work?

Enter your monthly income in USD and the tool filters our dataset of 49 digital-nomad visas to those whose published income threshold you meet. It runs entirely in your browser — nothing is sent to a server. Income is only one requirement; each visa also has document, insurance and nationality rules shown on its country page.

Which digital nomad visas have no income requirement?

9 visas in our data set no fixed monthly income floor: Anguilla, Argentina, Bahamas, Curacao, Czechia, Germany, Seychelles, Thailand, Uruguay. Some ask only for a lump-sum bank balance (e.g. Thailand THB 500,000) or a sworn declaration of sufficient means (Argentina, Uruguay) instead.

Is meeting the income requirement enough to be approved?

No. Income is a necessary minimum, not a guarantee. You also generally need proof of remote work for a foreign employer or clients, health insurance, a clean criminal record, and sometimes a degree or minimum experience. Approval is at the discretion of the immigration authority — always read the official requirements.

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Last updated: 2026-06-20