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Sunlit coastal cityscape where the waterfront skyline meets the River Plate in Montevideo, Uruguay
Uruguay · Nómada Digital permit

🇺🇾 Uruguay Digital nomad visa

Uruguay Nómada Digital permit requirements: income, duration, taxes, health insurance — from official sources.

Photo: Sebastián Velásquez / Unsplash

Minimum income
No fixed floor
Proof required
Initial duration
6 months
Renewable
Health insurance
Not required
Full visa period
Tax treatment
Territorial taxation
Sistema de fuente territorial (IRPF/IRNR); optional new-resident tax holiday for those who become tax residents
Path to residence
Indirect (switch required)
No family inclusion
Government fee
≈ €8
Plus processing time
Partially verified Last verified June 15, 2026 Reviewed by Henry van de Vorming
10 official sources cited →

All requirements in detail

Official name
Hoja de Identidad Provisoria - Nómada Digital (permiso especial de residencia legal para nómadas digitales)
Visa type
Digital nomad visa
Status
Active
Income basis
Savings accepted
Legal basis
There is no statutory income or salary minimum. Uruguay XXI and the Direccion Nacional de Migracion require only a sworn declaration (declaracion jurada) that the applicant has sufficient economic means ('medios para mantenerse economicamente') to support themselves during the stay. Uruguay XXI's launch communication and El Observador stated explicitly that there are currently no salary requirements, though this may change. No proof-of-funds figure is published, so no official monthly minimum applies. Third-party guides commonly suggest budgeting around 1,500-2,000 USD per month, but that is advisory, not an official threshold.
Family surcharges
The permit is issued to the individual applicant only; family members (spouse, children) are not included and must each file a separate application under the relevant residence category. No family income surcharge is published.
Working for local clients
Not allowed
Path to citizenship
Via permanent residence
Where to apply
Online, In country
Processing time
2–4 weeks
Tax residency trigger
183 days

Insurance requirement, verbatim intent: Health insurance is NOT listed as a requirement on the official gub.uy procedure ('Hoja de identidad provisoria'). The official requirements are an identity-document copy, a sworn declaration of means, and (for the renewal/extension) a clean criminal-record certificate and a vaccination certificate (esquema de vacunacion, per Decreto 136/2018). There is no published minimum coverage amount or mandatory insurance type. Practically, holders should arrange private/international health cover because temporary permit holders are not enrolled in the public SNIS/FONASA system and tourists/temporary visitors only get emergency care at public (ASSE) hospitals; most third-party guides recommend (but do not document an official mandate for) private health insurance for the duration of the stay.

Tax notes: Uruguay applies a (semi-)territorial system: foreign-source income, including remote salary or freelance fees paid from abroad, is generally outside the scope of Uruguayan income tax. A digital nomad on this permit (max ~12 months) usually does not become a tax resident, so foreign earnings are typically not taxed in Uruguay. Tax residency is triggered mainly by 183+ days of physical presence in a calendar year, or by locating one's centre of vital/economic interests in Uruguay (the DGI applies a substance test). If someone does become a tax resident, foreign passive (capital) income can fall under an optional holiday or, since the 2026 reform (Rendicion de Cuentas/Budget, Law 20.446, effective 2026-01-01), a 12% rate where the exemption does not apply; the investor/real-estate tax-holiday threshold was raised to ~USD 2 million (~12.5 million U.I.). These rules concern long-term residents, not the temporary nomad permit itself. Not tax advice.

Beyond the visa

Uruguay — 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