Home country is not a well defined term*, and I doubt any digital nomad visa explicitly requires the holder to pay tax in a "home country".None. All digital nomad visas require you to pay taxes in your home country and don't offer tax residency.
BVI and Bahamas sell temporary 1 year residence permits for 1-2k per year on some conditions, then I believe you can become officially their tax resident.
Try Albania.I am non usa passport holder...
Which country offer the year long tax free Digital Nomad visa ?
Which is the best country to get Tax free Digital Nomad visa ?
Thanks
Why - what was it like 15 years ago? I only discovered Albania 9 years ago and it's going off as far as the fastest growing country in Europe. I just spent 3 months on the beach there in an apartment under $250 a month. Nice place to over-winter in Europe.15 years ago I would laugh, but now they are in NATO and in accession negotiations with EU.
Let's just say in 2000s it wasn't a place where you would want to spend 3 months in a row.Why - what was it like 15 years ago? I only discovered Albania 9 years ago and it's going off as far as the fastest growing country in Europe. I just spent 3 months on the beach there in an apartment under $250 a month. Nice place to over-winter in Europe.
Americans have had 12 month visa's for a long time but last week the Albanian government extended that to many countries.
Wrong. A visa has nothing to do with taxes.All digital nomad visas require you to pay taxes in your home country and don't offer tax residency.
Yes, the EU taxman will be happy to tax you, but that's unrelated to the digital nomad visa. EU taxman will tax you if you are in their tax net, and rules vary from country to country. In some countries you can have a permanent residence, in others that would mean you are still in the tax net.I was talking about so called tax free digital nomad visas. Certainly a local EU taxman will be happy to tax you there with a nomad visa (but they usually say that you are expected to pay taxes in your home country where you have permanent residence when you apply for a visa).
Got an example of such condition for a digital nomad visa of an EU country? Id like to look at the exact wording. Like if you have say dual Dutch-Mexican citizenship, but have lived in Panama the last three years - where do they want you to show proof of taxes paid?Some EU countries offer tax free nomad visas with a condition that you show proof of taxes paid in your home country.
All the countries that offer digital nomad visas including tax free islands don't allow you to become their tax resident, you are supposed to pay taxes in your home country, that's why I wrote that there are no tax free digital nomad visas.