Last updated: March 2026
Short answer: In most countries, working remotely on a tourist visa is technically illegal โ even if your employer and clients are all based abroad. But enforcement varies wildly, and the practical reality is more nuanced than a simple yes or no.
Here's what you actually need to know.
Why Is It Technically Illegal?
Quick answer: Tourist visas authorize tourism, not work. Most immigration laws define "work" broadly enough to include any productive activity โ even answering emails for a foreign employer.
The legal framework is straightforward: a tourist visa permits tourism, family visits, and sometimes business meetings. "Work" โ defined as performing services in exchange for compensation โ typically requires a work permit or employment visa, regardless of where your employer is based.
The argument "but I'm not taking a local job" doesn't hold up legally in most jurisdictions. You're consuming local resources (housing, healthcare, infrastructure) while earning income, which most governments consider work.
Country-by-Country Reality Check
Quick answer: Thailand and Indonesia are cracking down. Mexico and Georgia look the other way. Portugal and Spain created legal alternatives.
Here's how 10 popular expat countries actually handle remote work on tourist visas in 2026:
| Country | Official Rules | Actual Enforcement | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thailand | Illegal | Increasing enforcement | Medium-High |
| Indonesia/Bali | Illegal | Active crackdowns | High |
| Mexico | Gray area | Rarely enforced | Low |
| Portugal | Illegal without D8 | Moderate enforcement | Medium |
| Spain | Illegal | Low enforcement | Low-Medium |
| Colombia | Illegal | Rarely enforced | Low |
| Georgia | Legal (365-day visa-free) | N/A โ it's legal | None |
| Croatia | Illegal without DNV | Low enforcement | Low |
| Japan | Strictly illegal | Moderate enforcement | Medium-High |
| UAE | Illegal without permit | Active enforcement | High |
High-risk countries where enforcement is real: Indonesia has been conducting raids on cafรฉs and coworking spaces in Bali since 2024, checking visa status. The UAE requires a specific remote work visa. Japan immigration has been known to question tourists carrying laptops at entry.
Low-risk countries where it's functionally tolerated: Mexico's 180-day visa-free entry is used by thousands of remote workers. Colombia doesn't actively enforce it. Georgia explicitly allows it with their generous 365-day visa-free policy.
The Risks You're Actually Taking
Quick answer: Deportation, entry bans, and tax complications โ the first two are rare, but the third catches people off guard.
Immigration Risks
- Deportation: Rare but real. Indonesia has deported remote workers caught on tourist visas.
- Entry ban: Getting caught can result in a 1-5 year ban from the country.
- Entry denial: Frequent "visa runs" (leaving and re-entering to reset your tourist visa) raise red flags. Thai immigration now tracks patterns.
Tax Risks
This is where it gets genuinely complicated. If you spend more than 183 days in most countries, you may become a tax resident โ even on a tourist visa. This means:
- Potential double taxation (home country + host country)
- Obligation to file local tax returns
- Penalties for non-compliance
According to Greenback Tax Services, Americans working abroad are still required to file US taxes regardless of where they work. Adding a second country's tax obligations compounds the complexity.
When You Absolutely Need a Proper Visa
Quick answer: If you're staying more than 90 days, if you're earning significant income, or if you're in a country that actively enforces โ get the right visa.
Get a digital nomad visa or work permit if:
- You plan to stay longer than 90 days
- Your income exceeds $2,000/month
- You're in Indonesia, Thailand, UAE, or Japan
- You want to open a local bank account or sign a lease
- You value sleeping soundly without immigration anxiety
The Best Legal Alternatives in 2026
Over 55 countries now offer digital nomad visas. The most practical options:
- Portugal D8 Visa โ โฌ3,510/month income, path to EU citizenship
- Spain Digital Nomad Visa โ โฌ2,520/month, up to 5 years
- Thailand DTV โ 500,000 THB savings, 5-year multi-entry
- Colombia Digital Nomad Visa โ $750/month (cheapest major option)
- Philippines DNV โ $2,000/month, 12-month renewable
- Croatia Digital Nomad Permit โ โฌ2,540/month, 1 year, no local tax
FAQ
Can immigration see that I'm working? Not usually. But if you mention "work" at passport control, declare a laptop as a "work tool," or get caught in a cafรฉ raid (Bali), you're exposed.
What if I only work a few hours a day? Legally irrelevant. One email for compensation technically constitutes work. Enforcement is about patterns, not hours.
Do coworking spaces report to immigration? No, but their existence in tourist areas draws attention. Indonesian authorities specifically targeted coworking spaces in Canggu.
Can I get travel insurance while working remotely on a tourist visa? Standard travel insurance typically excludes "work activities." You need specific digital nomad insurance from providers like SafetyWing or World Nomads.
Key Takeaways
- Working remotely on a tourist visa is technically illegal in most countries, regardless of where your employer is based
- Enforcement ranges from zero (Mexico, Georgia) to active raids (Indonesia, UAE)
- Tax residency triggers at 183 days in most countries โ this is the hidden risk most nomads ignore
- 55+ countries now offer legal digital nomad visas, many with low income thresholds
- If staying 90+ days anywhere, get the proper visa โ the peace of mind alone is worth it
Sources
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