Tax & Legal By Gregor Spielmann

The Remote Tech Professional's Tax Guide: What You Need to Know in 2026

Working from Lisbon one month and Bogota the next sounds great until tax season arrives. If you're a tech professional working across borders, the tax rules are more complex than most people realize -- and the penalties for getting them wrong are real. This guide covers the key tax traps, the rules that actually matter, and when to stop Googling and hire a professional.

Common Tax Traps for Location-Independent Tech Workers

The biggest misconception I see among remote tech professionals is the belief that if you're not "employed" in a country, you don't owe taxes there. That's dangerously wrong. Most countries tax based on where the work is physically performed, not where your employer or clients are located.

Here are the traps that catch people:

The common thread: ignorance is not a defense, and the rules apply whether you know about them or not.

The 183-Day Rule: What It Actually Means

You'll hear "183 days" thrown around constantly in digital nomad circles, usually with the implication that you can work in any country for up to 183 days without tax consequences. That's a dangerous oversimplification.

The 183-day rule appears in most bilateral tax treaties as one factor in determining tax residency. In the OECD model treaty, if you spend fewer than 183 days in a country during a 12-month period, and your employer isn't based there, and your salary isn't paid by a local entity, you may be exempt from income tax in that country under the treaty. All three conditions typically need to be met -- not just the day count.

Critical nuances most people miss:

Bottom line: track your days meticulously, but don't treat 183 days as a magic number that makes you tax-invisible.

Documenting Business Purpose of Travel

This is where most remote professionals completely drop the ball. Even if your travel has genuine business reasons, if you can't prove it with documentation, tax authorities will treat it as personal travel. And if it's personal travel, any tax deductions or business expense claims evaporate.

What constitutes adequate documentation:

I use a combination of a simple Google Sheet for day-tracking and a folder in Google Drive for receipt photos. Takes about 2 minutes per day. The article on documenting business travel for tax purposes goes deeper on the practical setup.

Country-Specific Considerations: EU and the Americas

European Union: The EU has no unified income tax system -- each member state sets its own rules. However, EU/EEA social security coordination (the A1 certificate system) means you generally pay social security in only one country at a time. If you're EU-based and traveling within the EU, getting an A1 certificate from your home country prevents double social security contributions. Portugal's NHR (Non-Habitual Resident) regime was popular for years, but the rules changed significantly in 2024-2025 -- don't rely on outdated blog posts. Spain has its Beckham Law for certain inbound workers. Germany is strict about taxing any work performed on German soil. The Netherlands has the 30% ruling for qualifying expats.

United States: US citizens and green card holders are taxed on worldwide income regardless of where they live. The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) and Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) help reduce double taxation, but the filing obligations never go away. Non-US persons working briefly in the US may trigger state-level tax obligations even if they're under the federal threshold.

Latin America: Countries like Colombia, Mexico, and Costa Rica are popular with remote workers. Colombia considers you a tax resident after 183 days in any 365-day period. Mexico is stricter in practice than many people assume, and its tax authority (SAT) has become more aggressive about enforcement. Costa Rica technically only taxes Costa Rican-sourced income, making it attractive, but the rules around what constitutes "local source" are evolving. Many Latin American countries now offer specific digital nomad visas -- these sometimes include tax benefits, but read the fine print carefully.

Every country is different. The common mistake is assuming that because a place is "nomad-friendly" culturally, it's also friendly from a tax perspective.

When to Stop Googling and Get Professional Advice

I'll be direct: if you're earning a meaningful income and working from multiple countries, you need a tax professional who specializes in international tax for individuals or small businesses. Not your uncle's accountant. Not a generic online tax filing service. Someone who understands cross-border tax treaty application.

You need professional advice when:

The cost of a good international tax advisor -- typically EUR 1,500-5,000 for an initial structuring consultation -- is a fraction of the potential tax liability, penalties, and interest from getting it wrong. I learned this the hard way in my second year of working across borders.

What to look for: someone who's worked with small consultancies or freelancers (not just multinationals), who understands the specific countries you operate in, and who can explain the trade-offs of different structures in plain language. Ask for references from other independent professionals, not just corporate clients.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do digital nomad visas solve the tax problem?

Not automatically. Digital nomad visas grant legal residence and work permission, but their tax treatment varies widely. Some (like Croatia's) explicitly exempt foreign-sourced income from local tax. Others simply give you the right to be there without clarifying the tax position. Always check the tax implications of a specific visa -- don't assume the visa itself creates a tax benefit.

Can I just pay taxes in my home country and ignore everywhere else?

This is common practice but not necessarily legal. If you're performing work on the soil of another country, that country may have a right to tax your income regardless of where you 'officially' live. The risk of enforcement varies, but tax authorities are increasingly sharing data across borders through frameworks like CRS (Common Reporting Standard). The trend is toward more enforcement, not less.

How do I track my days across countries accurately?

Use a simple spreadsheet or a dedicated app like Nomad Tax or TaxTracker. Log the country you sleep in each night -- that's generally what counts as a 'day present.' Back this up with flight bookings, passport stamps, and location data from Google Timeline or similar. Start tracking from January 1, not when you think it becomes relevant.