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Azores in 2026: Which Island, What It Costs, and How to Get There

The TikTok videos look like they've been edited. Two lakes sitting inside a volcanic crater, one deep blue and one green, separated by a narrow strip of land. They haven't been edited. That's what Sete Cidades actually looks like, and you can drive to the rim and stand there for free.Search interest in the Azores is up roughly 200% in 2026, driven mostly by those crater lake videos and clips of people sitting in thermal waterfalls. The prices haven't caught up yet.## Table of contents## Getting ThereThe Azores are a Portuguese archipelago sitting in the middle of the Atlantic, about 1,500 km west of Lisbon. For most visitors, the entry point is João Paulo II Airport in Ponta Delgada (PDL) on São Miguel.**From Lisbon:** [TAP Air Portugal](https://www.flytap.com) and [Ryanair](https://www.ryanair.com) both fly the route. The flight is about 1 hour 40 minutes. Book 6-8 weeks out and one-way fares run €40-80 on Ryanair or TAP economy. Last-minute TAP fares hit €120-180.**From London:** [Ryanair](https://www.ryanair.com) flies direct from Stansted to Ponta Delgada in around 3 hours. British Airways connects through Lisbon. Budget roughly £70-150 one way depending on how far out you book; round trips start around £150-200 for off-season travel.**From the US East Coast:** [Azores Airlines](https://www.azoresairlines.pt) (formerly SATA International) runs the most nonstops — roughly 6 per week from Boston, fewer from New York. United and TAP codeshare. The direct flight from Boston is about 4 hours, which makes this one of the shortest transatlantic routes from the East Coast. Round-trip fares from Boston typically run $400-700 in summer; off-season drops to $300-450. From New York prices are similar or slightly higher.**From the airport:** The airport sits about 2 km from the city center. A taxi costs €8-12. If you're picking up a rental car — which you should be — most agencies have desks at or near arrivals.## Which Island to Visit FirstNine islands spread across 600 km of Atlantic. Most first-timers should go to São Miguel and not overthink it.**São Miguel** is the largest island and concentrates the most compelling stuff: Sete Cidades, Furnas geothermal valley, Caldeira Velha thermal waterfall, Lagoa do Fogo crater lake, and the coastal scenery around Nordeste. Ponta Delgada has decent restaurants, a walkable old town, and a range of accommodation. Four to five days here is enough to cover the main things without rushing.**Faial** is better for a second visit. The marina at Horta is famous among sailors who've crossed the Atlantic, and Faial has its own caldera worth hiking.**Flores** is remote, very green, and has waterfalls that photograph absurdly well. It's also harder to reach and has less infrastructure. Right traveler, wrong starting point.**Terceira** has a UNESCO-listed city in Angra do Heroísmo and is a solid choice if São Miguel feels overdone — though that's not a real concern yet.The honest advice: book São Miguel, rent a car, and do it properly. The other islands will be there when you come back.## Where to StayPonta Delgada is the right base. It puts you 20-40 minutes from Sete Cidades and about 45 minutes from Furnas. Staying in the city gives you walkable restaurants and the waterfront.| Accommodation type | Price per night | |---|---| | Hostel dorm bed | €20-35 | | Guesthouse or B&B, private room | €40-65 | | 3-star hotel (city center) | €60-90 (~$67-100) | | 4-star hotel | €95-130 (~$106-141) | | 5-star hotel | €145-160 (~$161-177) | | Self-catering apartment (Airbnb) | €60-110 (from ~$68) |Guesthouses and B&Bs are the best value. Many are family-run, include breakfast, and come out significantly cheaper than hotels for comparable comfort. Book in advance for summer; the island has limited inventory and quality places fill up.If you're spending two nights in the Furnas area on the eastern side, there are small guesthouses in the village. Staying there one night instead of driving back to Ponta Delgada saves time and gives you the thermal pools in the evening without the day-trip crowd.## Car RentalA car is not optional if you want to see the island's main attractions. The public bus network on São Miguel serves local commuters and students, not tourists. Buses to Furnas run only 3-4 times a day from Ponta Delgada; to Sete Cidades, 2-3 times a day. Last buses back tend to leave by 4-5pm. That's not workable for a full day trip.Rent at the airport and book well in advance, especially for summer. The island has a finite number of rental cars and they sell out.| Car type | Price per day | |---|---| | Economy car (booked in advance, shoulder season) | €25-40 | | Economy car (peak season, July-August) | €45-65 | | Larger or automatic vehicle | €40-60 |Local agencies ([Ilha Verde](https://www.ilhaverde.com), [Autatlantis](https://www.autatlantis.com)) are often cheaper than the international chains. If you need an automatic, specify it when booking — the Azores supply skews toward manual.Roads on São Miguel are mostly good but often narrow in the interior. Getting down into the Sete Cidades crater involves hairpin bends. Nothing technically demanding, but worth knowing if you're used to motorways. Fuel runs €1.70-1.95 per liter; a full day of driving costs roughly €15-25.## What the Azores CostsPer-person daily estimates based on real spending, assuming you're sharing car costs with a travel partner.| Category | Budget traveler | Mid-range traveler | |---|---|---| | Accommodation (per person, sharing) | €20-35 | €45-75 | | Car rental (split 2 ways) | €13-20 | €13-20 | | Food and drink | €20-30 | €35-55 | | Paid attractions and activities | €5-15 | €15-40 | | Fuel (split 2 ways) | €8-12 | €8-12 | | **Daily total** | **€66-112** | **€116-202** |The car rental is the floor that doesn't compress much. Whale watching at €50-70 per person is the biggest single discretionary expense. A 7-day package (6 nights accommodation, guided tours, whale watching, most meals) benchmarks at around €980 per person — useful for calibrating whether you're on track.## The Main Attractions### Sete CidadesA volcanic caldera about 30 km west of Ponta Delgada containing two lakes, a village, and what is currently the most photographed view in Portugal. The crater rim sits at around 800 meters. Two lakes — Lagoa Azul (blue) and Lagoa de Santiago (green) — sit side by side, separated by a narrow bridge. On a clear day, the color difference between them is exactly as visible as it looks in photographs.The classic viewpoint is **Vista do Rei**. Free to access. The walk from the car park to the railing takes about five minutes. Note: there is a 20-minute parking limit enforced at Vista do Rei. Arrive, look, then move the car before the fine shows up.For the other angle on the color difference, **Miradouro do Cerrado das Freiras** gives you a slightly different perspective and often has fewer people. Both are worth doing if you have time.After the rim, drive down into the crater. Walk the lake edge, swim in Lagoa de Santiago if you want to (it's cold), and have a coffee in the village. The drive along the crater floor takes 20-30 minutes and is worth the detour.Go at sunrise. The tour groups from Ponta Delgada don't arrive until mid-morning. An early start gets you the viewpoint to yourself.**Cost:** Free. Fuel to get there from Ponta Delgada is the only expense.### FurnasThe geothermal valley on the eastern side of São Miguel is unlike anything in continental Europe. The ground steams. Calderas bubble with sulfurous mud. Locals cook food in pots buried in the volcanic earth — a dish called cozido das Furnas — and you can eat it at restaurants around the lake. The sulfurous smell when you arrive is noticeable. This is fine; it fades quickly.**Caldeira Velha** is about 20 minutes north of Furnas village: a small thermal waterfall flowing into a green pool, surrounded by tree ferns that make the place look like something from a different era. You can sit in the water under the warm waterfall. Admission is €10 for adults with bathing access (€3 for a visit without bathing). It operates in timed 1.5-hour slots capped at 100 people; book online in advance through the [official Azores Natural Parks reservations site](https://reservas.parquesnaturais.azores.gov.pt). Arrive early or late to avoid the peak crowd. Note: Caldeira Velha was temporarily closed as of early 2026 — verify current status before building your itinerary around it.**[Parque Terra Nostra](https://www.terranostragarden.com)** in Furnas village is a 200-year-old botanical garden built around a large thermal pool. The water is yellowish-orange from iron content and genuinely warm. Admission runs around €17 per person. The garden itself, not just the pool, is worth the time. Book ahead.The volcanic area around the lake — the fumaroles and the spots where restaurants lower their cozido pots into the ground — is free to walk through and worth a wander before lunch.**Poça da Dona Beija** is a set of outdoor thermal pools in the village, open until 11pm, admission €6-8. At night with steam rising, it's one of the better things on the island.**Cost summary for Furnas:**| Activity | Cost | |---|---| | Caldeira Velha (with bathing) | €10 | | Caldeira Velha (without bathing) | €3 | | Terra Nostra park and pool | ~€17 | | Cozido das Furnas lunch | €15-25 per person | | Poça da Dona Beija | €6-8 |### Whale WatchingThe Azores sits on migratory routes for sperm whales, blue whales, and several dolphin species. This is among the best whale watching in the Atlantic. A land-based spotter called a vigia watches from clifftops with binoculars, radios coordinates to the boats, and meaningfully improves sighting rates. It's not a tourist-trap boat trip where you're guaranteed a distant fin.Tours run from Ponta Delgada and Vila Franca do Campo. Standard trips are 2.5-3 hours.| Tour type | Price | |---|---| | Standard whale watching (2.5-3 hours) | €50-65 per person | | Combined whale + dolphin tour | €55-70 per person | | Swimming with dolphins (separate tour) | €65-80 per person |Sperm whales are resident year-round. Blue whales and fin whales pass through mostly March-May. If whale watching is your main reason for visiting, spring is the right target. Book in advance — tours fill in summer.### Lagoa do FogoA crater lake in the center of the island with no village, no café, and no buildings. Just water, cloud, and green hills. The main hike (PRC02 SMI from Praia) is 10.9 km, rated medium difficulty, takes 4-4.5 hours. Free to hike.One practical note for summer visitors: from June through September, private vehicles are restricted from driving directly to the main viewpoint between 9am and 7pm. Shuttle buses run from designated parking areas including Caldeira Velha and Ribeira Grande, or you hike in. Plan accordingly.Lagoa do Fogo photographs slightly less dramatically than Sete Cidades, which means it gets fewer visitors. That's a reason to go, not a reason to skip it.## Food CostsPortuguese food at Azorean prices. The local beef is excellent — São Miguel's green pastures show in the quality. Fresh fish is on every menu. The cozido das Furnas is the one dish specific to this island that you should eat at least once.| Meal | Cost | |---|---| | Coffee and pastel de nata | €1.50-2.50 | | Lunch at a local café (prato do dia) | €6-12 | | Grilled fish dinner at a local restaurant | €12-18 per person | | Cozido das Furnas | €15-25 per person | | Casual dinner (pizza, burgers) | €10-15 per person | | Beer (local Melo Abreu) | €1.50-2.50 | | Glass of wine at dinner | €3-5 |The **prato do dia** is the budget move. For €8-10 you get a full plate — often soup, a main, and coffee. This is how locals eat lunch.The tourist trap version of eating in the Azores is anywhere along the main waterfront strip in Ponta Delgada where the menus are translated into four languages and the tables face the port. The food is the same Portuguese fish and meat as everywhere else, but the markup is real. Walk one street back.For breakfast or a mid-afternoon snack, Ponta Delgada has a covered market (Mercado da Graça) where you can pick up local cheese, smoked sausage (linguiça), and bread cheaply. Good for assembling picnic food before a day of driving. Local cheeses — including queijo São Jorge from the neighboring island — are excellent and inexpensive.One cultural note: many restaurants in the Azores still bring bread, butter, and small starters to the table automatically. You will be charged for them even if you didn't ask. It's called couvert and is common across Portugal. Ask what the couvert costs if you want to avoid the surprise on the bill, or simply wave it off when it arrives.## A 4-Day São Miguel Itinerary### Day 1: Ponta Delgada + Caldeira VelhaArrive, pick up the car, and spend the afternoon in Ponta Delgada. Walk the waterfront and through the Portas da Cidade (the triple arch that features on every postcard of the city). The old town is compact and takes an hour to walk properly.Late afternoon: drive to Caldeira Velha, about 40 minutes from the city. Arrive after 4pm when the day-trip crowd has thinned. Sit in the thermal pool for an hour, drive back, and have dinner in Ponta Delgada.| Day 1 costs | | |---|---| | Caldeira Velha (with bathing) | €10 | | Dinner in Ponta Delgada | €15-20 per person | | Fuel | €8-10 |### Day 2: Sete CidadesLeave Ponta Delgada by 7:30-8am. The drive to Vista do Rei takes about 30 minutes. Being there early means you'll have the viewpoint largely to yourself for the first hour before the tour groups arrive.After the viewpoint, move to Miradouro do Cerrado das Freiras for the other angle on the lakes. Then drive down into the crater: walk the lake edge, swim in Lagoa de Santiago if you want to, have a coffee at one of the small spots in the village. Drive back along the crater rim for more viewpoints if visibility holds.| Day 2 costs | | |---|---| | Sete Cidades (viewpoints + crater) | Free | | Café in the village | €3-5 | | Lunch (packed or café) | €8-12 | | Fuel | €10-12 |### Day 3: Furnas Full DayDrive east to Furnas (about 45 minutes from Ponta Delgada). Start at the lake to see the fumaroles and the spots where restaurants cook the cozido underground. Have lunch there — Tony's is consistently recommended for value; Restaurante Terra Nostra is the upscale option. Expect €15-25 per person.Afternoon: Terra Nostra park. Spend an hour or two in the iron-yellow thermal pool inside the botanical garden. The park closes at 4:30pm for entry.Before heading back, stop at Poça da Dona Beija in the village. Open until 11pm; sitting in the outdoor pools in the evening with steam rising is the right way to end a day in Furnas.| Day 3 costs | | |---|---| | Cozido das Furnas lunch | €15-25 per person | | Terra Nostra park and pool | ~€17 | | Poça da Dona Beija | €6-8 | | Fuel | €10-12 |### Day 4: Whale Watching + NordesteMorning: whale watching departure. Most tours leave 8-10am from Ponta Delgada. Book at least a few days in advance; in summer, book a week or two out.Afternoon: drive the northeast coast through Nordeste. This part of the island gets far fewer visitors. The scenery — steep green hillsides dropping into the Atlantic, small fishing villages, viewpoints with no other cars parked at them — is worth a few hours of slow driving. The miradouros along the northeast coast are free and mostly empty.| Day 4 costs | | |---|---| | Whale watching | €50-65 per person | | Nordeste drive fuel | €8-10 | | Final dinner | €20-30 per person |**4-day total estimate (two people sharing a car):**| Category | Total (per person) | |---|---| | Accommodation (4 nights, guesthouse, shared) | €100-130 | | Car rental (4 days, split) | €50-70 | | Fuel (split) | €22-30 | | Food and drink | €150-200 | | Paid attractions | €55-80 | | Whale watching | €50-65 | | **Total per person** | **€427-575** |Excluding flights.## What's Overrated**The hot spring seep at the Furnas lake edge.** This gets written up in some guides as a highlight. It's warm water seeping into the lake through volcanic sediment, not a thermal pool. Worth two minutes of curiosity if you're already there; not a destination.**Staying in a thermal spa hotel in Furnas.** Comfortable and convenient if you want to slow down on the eastern side, but you're paying a significant premium and you're 45 minutes from Ponta Delgada. The commute from the city works fine for a day trip.## Best Time to Go**May and June** are the best months. Temperatures run 18-23°C, the island is green from spring rain, whale migration is active with blue and fin whales passing through, and the summer crowds haven't arrived. Accommodation prices are lower than July-August.**September and October** are nearly as good. Temperatures stay comfortable (up to 24°C in September), the sea is warmer than in spring for swimming, and the island quiets down after the August peak.**July and August** bring the crowds. Sete Cidades and Caldeira Velha feel the pressure. Accommodation prices peak. The rental car market gets tight — book months out if you're going in summer.**November through March** is cooler, wetter, and windier. Viewpoints can be socked in for days. Whale watching picks up again from March. Off-season prices are low if you're willing to gamble on visibility.One consistent caveat regardless of month: the Azores generates its own weather. A clear morning can be completely fogged in by 10am. Build flexibility into your day order and don't schedule Sete Cidades on your first morning with no backup day.## VisaThe Azores are Portuguese territory and part of the European Union and the Schengen Area. The same rules that apply to Lisbon apply here.**EU and EEA citizens:** No visa needed. A national ID card is sufficient.**US, UK, Canadian, and Australian passport holders:** 90 days visa-free within any 180-day period under Schengen rules. The UK's post-Brexit short-stay access is still in place as of 2026.**Everyone else:** Standard Schengen visa requirements apply. Apply through the Portuguese consulate in your country.Check the current status of ETIAS (the EU's planned pre-travel authorization system for visa-exempt non-EU nationals) before you travel. It has been expected to launch but requirements change.## FAQ**Which Azores island should I visit first?** São Miguel. It has the most to do, the most direct flights, and the most developed tourism infrastructure. Sete Cidades, Furnas, and Caldeira Velha are all here. You can fill four or five days without taking a ferry to another island.**How much does a trip to the Azores cost?** A realistic budget for one week on São Miguel, excluding flights: €600-900 per person if you're splitting car costs and staying in guesthouses. A 7-day package with accommodation, guided tours, whale watching, and most meals runs around €980 per person as a benchmark. Mid-range travelers spending freely will land closer to €1,200-1,500 for the week.**Do you need a car in the Azores?** On São Miguel, yes. You can wander Ponta Delgada on foot, but Sete Cidades, Furnas, and Caldeira Velha all require a car unless you're booking organized tours, which run €40-60 per person per day and offer less flexibility. The car is the better option for almost everyone.**Can you swim at Sete Cidades?** Swimming is allowed in Lagoa de Santiago (the green lake). The blue lake, Lagoa Azul, is more restricted. Most visitors come for the crater rim views and don't swim. The water is cold.**When is the best time to visit?** May-June and September-October. Good weather, manageable crowds, prices below their summer peak. July-August works but you'll feel the crowds at the main viewpoints and pay more for everything.**Do I need a visa?** EU/EEA citizens: no visa, national ID card is enough. US, UK, Canadian, and Australian citizens: 90 days visa-free under Schengen rules. Everyone else: check the Schengen requirements for your nationality.**Is São Miguel enough, or should I try to see multiple islands?** For a first trip of a week or less, São Miguel is enough. The island has more than most people cover in five days. If you're going for two weeks, adding Faial or Flores makes sense. Trying to see three or four islands in a week means a lot of time at airports and not much time anywhere.**How far in advance should I book?** Car rental: book as early as possible, especially for summer. The island has a finite supply. Flights: 6-10 weeks out for decent prices, earlier for summer. Accommodation: a few weeks is usually fine outside peak season.

Digital Nomad Visas in 2026: What the Blogs Don't Tell You

There are two kinds of digital nomad visa content. The first kind is written by immigration lawyers and consultants who want you to hire them. The second kind is written by influencers who want you to follow them. Neither has much incentive to tell you the part where it gets complicated.Here's what the numbers actually look like.## Table of contents## The Income Requirement Nobody Puts in the HeadlineThe fantasy version of a digital nomad visa: earn $1,500/month from your laptop, apply online, move to Bali. The actual version: most of these visas require you to earn more than the median full-time salary in the country you're applying from.| Country | Monthly Income Requirement | Notes | |---|---|---| | Portugal (D8) | €3,480/month | Plus €9,840–€11,040 in savings | | Spain | €2,762/month | €3,797 if bringing a partner; add €346 per child | | Bali / Indonesia (E33G) | $5,000/month ($60,000/year) | Must be income from a foreign employer | | Thailand (DTV) | ~$14,500–$17,000 in savings | Or proof of regular foreign income |Portugal's €3,480 is four times the Portuguese minimum wage. Spain's threshold is pegged to 200% of the national minimum wage and adjusts as wages rise. Bali's $60,000/year requirement is the one that never makes it into the headline pieces, because those pieces are targeting the $1,500/month crowd.The Thailand DTV, launched in July 2024, doesn't set an income floor in the same way but requires you to show $14,500–$17,000 sitting in a bank account, maintained for at least three months before applying. If your savings aren't that liquid, you don't qualify.## The Tax TrapA digital nomad visa is an immigration document. It is not a tax document. Most of the content you'll find about nomad visas glosses over this entirely.In most countries, spending 183 or more days in a calendar year makes you a tax resident. Tax residency means the country can tax your worldwide income, regardless of where you earned it or where your employer is based. You could be a remote developer working entirely for a US company, never setting foot in a Spanish office, and after 183 days in Barcelona you owe Spanish income tax on every euro you made.Spain's top marginal rate is 47%. Portugal's runs from 12.5% to 48%. Neither of these numbers appears in the average "move to Europe on a nomad visa" Instagram post.It gets more complicated. The 183-day threshold isn't the only trigger. Most countries also apply a "center of vital interests" test: if you have a home, a partner, children, or significant clients in a country, authorities can deem you a tax resident even if you're under 183 days. This is rarely explained in nomad visa explainers because it's hard to make into a clean listicle.**Spain's Beckham Law** gets cited constantly as the solution: a flat 24% income tax rate for people who move to Spain. What the summaries leave out: it only applies to people moving as employees under an employment contract. Freelancers and the self-employed don't qualify. A significant portion of digital nomads are freelancers.## Country by Country### PortugalThe D8 visa gets you a temporary entry document valid for four months while your full residence permit is processed. The residence permit itself is valid for two years, then renewable for three-year periods.The income requirement is €3,480/month, and you need to actually live in Portugal for at least six consecutive months (or eight non-consecutive) per year to maintain it. You can't collect the visa and then disappear.Portugal's non-habitual resident (NHR) tax regime has been a major selling point for years. The original version offered a flat tax rate and significant exemptions on foreign income for ten years. The regime was restructured in 2024 and the terms have changed. If your research relies on anything published before 2024, check whether the NHR details still apply, because a lot of them don't.### SpainSpain's requirement is tied to twice the national minimum wage, which adjusts. At the time of writing that's approximately €2,762/month for a single applicant. Processing at a consulate takes about 20 business days if you apply from abroad.If you apply from within Spain, you can get a three-year permit directly. If you apply at a consulate, you get an initial one-year visa and convert it later. The difference matters for planning.183 days triggers full Spanish tax residency and with it, an obligation to declare worldwide assets over €50,000 via the Modelo 720 form. Failing to file it correctly carries significant penalties. This is not mentioned in nomad visa marketing.### ThailandThe Digital Nomad Visa (DTV) launched in July 2024. It's a five-year, multiple-entry visa. Each entry allows 180 days, extendable to 360 days per year.The savings requirement: 500,000 Thai baht (roughly $14,500–$17,000 USD depending on exchange rate), held in your bank account for at least three months. You'll also need documentation of remote employment, pay stubs, invoices, or bank deposit records going back six months.You cannot work for Thai companies or clients on this visa. Remote work must be for employers or clients based outside Thailand.Thailand doesn't have a simple 183-day income tax rule in the same way European countries do, but the situation is not clean. Tax advice for Thailand is complicated and depends on whether you remit income to a Thai bank account and in which tax year. Get specific advice for your situation.### Bali (Indonesia)The E33G remote worker visa requires a minimum annual income of $60,000 from a foreign employer or client. It gives you up to one year of legal residence including a proper KITAS (residence permit). You cannot work for Indonesian companies or earn from Indonesian sources.That $60,000 floor eliminates most of the audience that Bali nomad content is aimed at. A significant number of people working from Bali are doing so on tourist visas. Tourist visas don't authorize work. Working on a tourist visa is illegal in Indonesia. This is not a technicality; it has led to deportations.## Who These Visas Actually Work ForPeople with stable, documented income well above the thresholds and a clean employment contract rather than a portfolio of freelance clients. They get something real: legal residence, no overstay anxiety, the ability to open a bank account, a clear answer if anyone asks why they're there. For them, the paperwork is worth it.The problem is that this isn't who the content is aimed at. Nomad visa explainers target the person earning $2,000/month on Upwork, eyeing a $600/month apartment in Bali, who just wants a visa that makes it official. That person doesn't qualify for any of the visas in the table above. They're the audience for the content. They're not the audience for the visas.Portugal and Spain want €2,700–€3,500/month in documented income. Bali wants $60k/year from a foreign employer. Thailand is the most accessible: $14,500 in savings, five-year validity, no annual renewal — but that $14,500 has to actually be sitting in your account for three months before you apply.Most content ranking for these searches exists to generate consulting inquiries. It is built to make you feel almost qualified. The income requirements are where you find out whether you are.Georgia doesn't have a nomad visa and doesn't need one. Most Western passport holders enter visa-free and can stay a full year without applying for anything. No income check, no application fee, no accountant required. For the person who wanted the Bali dream on a Bali budget, [Tbilisi](/blog/tbilisi-georgia-budget-guide-costs/) is a more honest answer than most of what ranks on page one.## FAQ**Is a digital nomad visa worth it?** If you qualify and plan to stay more than a few months, yes. Legal residence is better than tourist visa overstays. But run the tax numbers before you apply.**What happens if I work remotely on a tourist visa?** Technically illegal in most countries. Enforcement varies. Indonesia has deported people for it. Whether it happens to you is a risk calculation, not a guarantee either way.**Do digital nomad visas make you a tax resident?** The visa itself doesn't, but your physical presence does. 183 days in most countries triggers tax residency. Consult a tax professional in your home country and the destination country before you stay past six months anywhere.**Which is the easiest digital nomad visa to get?** Thailand's DTV has the lowest bureaucratic friction for people with the savings to qualify. Portugal and Spain involve more paperwork and longer processing. If you're American and your income is solid, Portugal's D8 is well-established at this point (over 2,600 issued as of 2024).**Can freelancers use Spain's Beckham Law?** No. The Beckham Law (flat 24% tax rate) applies only to employed workers under an employment contract. Self-employed and freelance workers don't qualify.**Is the Bali digital nomad visa actually $60k/year?** Yes. The E33G requires a minimum annual income of $60,000 from a foreign source. A lot of the Bali nomad content doesn't mention this because it targets a different income bracket.