Is working remotely on a tourist visa illegal? The 2026 reality for employees
Is working remotely on a tourist visa illegal? The 2026 reality for employees
Stop trying to fly under the radar. In 2026, border agents have linked tax and immigration databases. If you log into your company VPN from Lisbon while on a tourist stamp, you aren't "hacking the system." You are creating a tax liability for your employer and risking a ten-year entry ban for yourself.
The days of the "grey area" are over.
But you don’t need to quit your job to move. You need a Digital Nomad Visa (DNV). These permits process your presence legally, allowing you to keep your home-country salary while living abroad. Here is strictly the legal infrastructure you need to make the move this year.
TL;DR
- Tourist visas strictness: Working remotely on a tourist waiver is illegal in 95% of jurisdictions.
- The Solution: Digital Nomad Visas (DNVs) waive local work sponsorship requirements if you have foreign income.
- Top 2026 Picks: Spain (path to permanent residency), Portugal (income focused), Japan (short-term).
- The Boss Conversation: Use an "Employer of Record" (EOR) to solve their tax fear.
The "Boss Problem": Why HR Says No
Your boss doesn't care if you work from a beach. They care about Permanent Establishment (PE) risk. If you work in France for a US company, France might claim your company now has a taxable branch in Paris. That is a corporate nightmare.
The Fix: Do not ask them to just "let you go." Propose a switch to an Employer of Record (EOR) like Deel or Remote.com. These services hire you locally in the destination country and lease you back to your US/UK employer. Your company gets a single invoice; you get a compliant local contract.
Spain: The "Startups Law" Route
Spain remains the gold standard in 2026 because unlike many others, it counts toward permanent citizenship.
- The Requirement: You must prove you are an employee of a company outside Spain. You need a university degree or 3 years of experience.
- The Income: As of 2026, pegged to 200% of the SMI (Minimum Interprofessional Wage), you must show approximately €2,650 per month.
- The Tax: You qualify for the special "Beckham Law" tax rate—flat 24% on income up to €600,000 for roughly five years.
Portugal: The D8 Visa
Portugal offers two tracks: a temporary stay (under 1 year) and a residency visa (over 1 year, renewable).
- The Requirement: Remote work contract and a NIF (tax number). You must have a savings account funded in Portugal.
- The Income: Indexed to the current minimum wage. In 2026, authorities require 4x the minimum wage, totaling roughly €3,280 per month.
- Reality Check: Housing in Lisbon is tight. Look to Porto or the Algarve to meet the lease requirements for the application.
Japan: The 6-Month Sprint
Introduced in 2024 and fully mature now, this is for high-earners who don't want to immigrate permanently.
- The Requirement: Income of ¥10 Million JPY (approx. $68,000 USD) annually.
- The Catch: It is non-renewable. You get six months, then you must leave. No path to residency. It strictly bypasses the tourist visa work ban.
- Insurance: You must hold private health insurance worth ¥10M coverage.
Next Steps
- Audit your income: Ensure your gross monthly salary meets the 2026 thresholds (use current exchange rates, they fluctuate).
- Pitch the EOR: Send your HR department a proposal, not a request. Show them it costs them $599/month in fees but saves them zero tax risk.
- Apply from home: Do not enter the country as a tourist and try to swap status (except in Spain, where you can apply from within during your tourist stay).
