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A lone palm tree on a hillside overlooking the turquoise ocean near Bridgetown in Barbados
Barbados · Welcome Stamp

🇧🇧 Barbados Digital nomad visa

Barbados Welcome Stamp requirements: income, duration, taxes, health insurance — from official sources.

Photo: Tom Jur / Unsplash

Minimum income
€3,855/mo
Proof required
Initial duration
1 year
Renewable
Health insurance
Required (explicit)
Full visa period
Tax treatment
Foreign income exempt
Remote Employment Act, 2020-23 (Welcome Stamp non-resident treatment)
Path to residence
No
Family can join
Government fee
≈ €1,850
Plus processing time
Verified data Last verified June 15, 2026 Reviewed by Henry van de Vorming
9 official sources cited →

All requirements in detail

Official name
Barbados 12-Month Welcome Stamp
Visa type
Digital nomad visa
Status
Active
Income requirement (original currency)
4,167 USD / month
Income basis
Savings accepted
Legal basis
Statutory minimum is an expected annual income of USD 50,000 (≈ USD 4,167/month). The official Visit Barbados portal states applicants must "make an annual income of at least USD$50,000 over the 12 months you intend to have the travel stamp" — an income-expectation declaration (salary, freelance or business income qualify), not a frozen-savings/proof-of-funds bank balance. The requirement is given legislative effect by the Remote Employment Act, 2020-23. EUR conversion at roughly USD 1 = EUR 0.925 (mid-2026): USD 50,000/yr ≈ EUR 46,250/yr ≈ EUR 3,855/month. No separate savings figure is published.
Family surcharges
No higher income threshold is published for families; the USD 50,000 income expectation applies to the principal applicant. Families pay a higher flat fee (USD 3,000 vs USD 2,000) rather than a per-dependent income surcharge.
Working for local clients
Not allowed
Path to citizenship
No
Where to apply
Online
Processing time
1–2 weeks

Insurance requirement, verbatim intent: Applicants must hold valid health insurance covering the entire period for which the Stamp is granted (12 months); the Stamp cannot be granted or renewed without it, and cover may be obtained abroad or purchased locally in Barbados. The authorities publish no minimum coverage amount. Short-term travel insurance is not accepted; long-term or residency health insurance is required instead. The public health system does not provide free care to Welcome Stamp holders (see healthcare access), so private international or long-term resident health insurance is required.

Tax notes: Welcome Stamp holders are deemed non-resident in Barbados for income tax purposes under the Remote Employment Act, 2020-23. The official Visit Barbados portal confirms holders "will not be liable to pay Barbados Income Tax" on remote work performed for employers or clients outside Barbados, which avoids double taxation. This does not extinguish tax obligations in the holder's home country or other country of tax residence. Holders are still subject to Barbados' 17.5% VAT on goods and services purchased on the island. No specific tax-residency day-count threshold is published for Stamp holders; time on the Welcome Stamp is generally not counted toward ordinary Barbados tax residency, so the usual residency day-count trigger does not apply to Stamp income, and no official figure for it is published.

Insurance requirement

Insurance that meets the Barbados Welcome Stamp requirements

Required (explicit), for: full visa period. These plans match the published requirement:

Cigna Healthcare (Cigna Global Insurance Company Limited) · International health insurance

Cigna Global is a genuine international health plan (Silver $1M / Gold $2M / Platinum unlimited) sold worldwide with no upper age limit and renewable annually, so it satisfies Barbados's demand for long-term/residency health insurance (not short-term travel cover) for the full 12-month Welcome Stamp; Barbados publishes no minimum, so all tiers clear.

  • Three core tiers with annual maximums of $1M/€800k (Silver), $2M/€1.6M (Gold) and paid-in-full with no overall cap (Platinum)
  • No upper enrollment age (18+); insurer states it does not terminate policies based on age
  • Modular design: outpatient, evacuation & crisis assistance, health & wellbeing, vision & dental can be added; deductibles ($0-$10,000) and cost shares (0-30%) reduce the premium

Foyer Global Health S.A. (Foyer Group, Luxembourg) · International health insurance

Foyer Global Health is a full international health plan with unlimited inpatient cover, worldwide (Region 1) or worldwide-ex-US, running a full year and renewable — the residency-style health insurance Barbados requires; its only exclusion (US permanent residents not insurable) is irrelevant to someone moving to Barbados.

  • No overall annual or lifetime limit on core medical cover in all three plans; unlimited inpatient benefits confirmed on the official plan comparison
  • Insurer FAQ explicitly confirms cover in the home country as well as the country of expatriation; worldwide or worldwide-ex-USA regions
  • Luxembourg-regulated insurer (Foyer Group); 24/7 medical assistance, evacuation, teleconsultation and second medical opinion included in all plans
#3

MyHealth International

Likely qualifying

APRIL International Care France (health risk insured by Groupama Gan Vie; assistance/personal liability by CHUBB European Group SE) · International health insurance

APRIL MyHealth International is a worldwide international health plan ($500k to unlimited) with 100% hospitalisation and evacuation, qualifying as the long-term/residency health cover Barbados mandates for the entire Stamp; only the max-age-74 ceiling could exclude older applicants.

  • Four plan tiers with annual limits from EUR/USD 500,000 (Explore) up to unlimited (Extensive/Elite; capped at EUR/USD 2M-4M for treatment in China, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, USA)
  • Enrollment from age 10 up to 74 in most countries; one-year contract with automatic renewal
  • Hospitalisation, medical evacuation and cancer treatment at 100% on all tiers, with hospital direct billing and free unlimited 24/7 telehealth (Teladoc)

Beyond the visa

Barbados — the rest of the move

The visa is step one. Here is the rest of what it takes to live here — each researched and sourced.

Sources