slowmadly

tax

Tax Residency for Digital Nomads Explained

The 183-day rule, ties tests, and how to legally pay 0% or 9% as a nomad. No legal advice, just the framework.

Tools we actually use for this

Sponsored
  • Wise logo

    Invoice clients in their currency, get paid into a Wise account, convert when the rate is good. Removes one whole layer of tax-residency headache. Wise

  • Qonto logo

    For EU freelancers/SAS, Qonto gives you a proper business IBAN and clean invoicing — the kind of paper trail tax administrations actually want. Qonto

  • Mercor logo

    Side income from AI labs (Mercor) is paid in USD — pair with a multi-currency account so you do not bleed 3% on every transfer. Mercor

Frequently asked

Can I be a tax resident of no country?
Technically yes, if you spend <183 days in any country and have no permanent ties anywhere. In practice, most banks and brokers require a tax residency declaration.
What is the 183-day rule?
Most countries consider you a tax resident if you spend 183 days or more in their territory in any 12-month period. Some (UK, US) have additional ties-based tests.

Related countries

More on tax

Sister site

Have the visa, need the job?

Remote tech jobs from across the web, refreshed daily.

Browse on slateremote.com

Sister site · Slate Remote

The remote job, wherever you are

Useful for this trip

Multi-currency banking

Get paid in any currency and stop bleeding on FX.

A Wise multi-currency account gives you EUR, USD, GBP and 40+ other receiving details, real-rate conversion when you choose, and one card that spends abroad without a markup. The default nomad money pipe.

Open a Wise account

Affiliate link, see disclosure