The Digital Nomad Visa is the accessible route, with limits
Colombia built a remote-work visa early, launching the Visa V Nómadas Digitales in 2023 as part of a wider push to attract remote workers, and for most nomads it is the obvious starting point. It is open to people who work remotely for an employer or clients based outside Colombia, it asks for a low income by international standards, and it grants up to two years. What it does not do is lead anywhere permanent, and that distinction shapes how you should think about it: the nomad visa is a clean way to live in Colombia legally for a couple of years, not the first step toward residency or a passport.
The wider system has three buckets, and it helps to know where each fits. The visitor (V) category covers tourism, business, and the nomad visa, all temporary. The migrant (M) category is for people genuinely settling, through family, work, business, or investment, and it is the one that counts toward residency. The resident (R) category is the near-permanent end state. A remote worker without Colombian ties almost always starts on the V nomad visa, and only moves toward M if life in Colombia turns into something longer.
The income bar, and the no-averaging rule
The core financial requirement is three times the Colombian minimum monthly wage. For 2026 the minimum wage is 1,750,905 Colombian pesos, so the bar is 5,252,715 pesos a month, which is roughly 1,300 to 1,400 US dollars depending on the exchange rate. That is far below the thresholds in Spain or the UAE, and it is the single biggest reason Colombia is attractive on visa grounds.
The catch is in how it is checked. The Cancillería looks at the net income that actually lands in your bank account, not the gross figure on a contract, and it applies no averaging: each of the last three months must clear the threshold on its own. If your contract says 1,500 dollars but deductions leave 1,200 hitting your account, you can be refused. You prove the income with apostilled bank statements, backed by a remote work contract or proof of self-employment for foreign clients, and you must carry an all-risk health policy covering the full visa duration across all of Colombia, including repatriation, since plain travel insurance is no longer accepted. The application is online through the Cancillería portal, costs roughly 50 US dollars to file plus an issuance fee of around 170 to 230 dollars on approval, and is processed in up to 30 days on paper, though 45 to 60 is more realistic.
The 2024 to 2025 tightening is real
Anyone reading an older guide should know that Colombia's once very easy reputation has hardened. Through 2024 and 2025 the Cancillería increased visa rejections, leaned more openly on its discretionary power, and tightened scrutiny of the supporting documents. Bank statements without proper apostille, with gaps in the transaction history, or that fail to show stable qualifying income now trigger refusals rather than requests to fix. Health insurance that does not exactly match the visa duration or cover the whole country has become a common stumbling block. And applications lodged from inside Colombia, after entering as a tourist, have seen a particularly sharp rise in rejections.
On top of that, the January 2026 minimum-wage increase of 23 percent pushed the income bar up sharply, and a number of applicants who qualified before suddenly fell below the new floor. None of this makes the visa hard to get for a well-documented applicant earning comfortably above the bar, but it does mean the casual, throw-it-together approach that once worked no longer does. Budget for an immigration lawyer or a reputable visa agency, expect the paperwork to be checked closely, and over-document rather than under-document.
Why the nomad visa does not build toward residency
The most important structural fact about the Digital Nomad Visa is that it leads nowhere permanent. As a visitor visa, it does not accumulate time toward a Resident (R) visa, no matter how many years you spend on it. To start building toward residency you need a Migrant (M) visa, which requires an actual basis for settling: marriage or partnership with a Colombian, being the parent of a Colombian child, a work contract with a Colombian employer, owning a qualifying business, holding a pension, or making a qualifying investment. After five years on an M visa you reach the R visa, and the longer arc to citizenship runs from there, as the residency page explains.
For a nomad, the practical implication is to be honest about your timeline. If Colombia is a place to spend a year or two while you work remotely, the nomad visa is exactly right and the lack of a residency path is irrelevant. If you can see yourself settling, look hard at the M routes from the outset, because the years you spend on the nomad visa will not count when you later try to put down roots.
The Migrant visa, for those putting down roots
The Migrant (M) visa is a broad family of subtypes rather than a single product, united by the idea that the holder intends to establish themselves in Colombia. The common routes for foreigners are marriage or partnership with a Colombian, parenthood of a Colombian child, a local employment contract, business ownership, a pension of sufficient size, and investment, including the real-estate investment route whose threshold rose for 2026. Income and investment thresholds vary by subtype, with the salaried and independent variants generally keyed to multiples of the minimum wage.
The M visa is typically granted for up to three years, counts toward the five years needed for a Resident visa, and requires you to enter Colombia at least once every six months to keep it alive. For a remote worker, the cleanest path into M is usually marriage or a genuine business or investment, since a pure remote income for foreign clients fits the nomad visa rather than the migrant categories. Anyone serious about staying should take Colombian legal advice on which M subtype actually fits their situation.
The tourist clock, and the tax line hidden inside it
Two practical points round this out. First, the visa-free tourist entry is generous: nationals of the US, UK, EU, Canada, Australia, and many other countries enter for 90 days, extendable once to a 180-day annual maximum, which is plenty to scope Colombia or to bridge while a longer visa is prepared. There is no right to work for a Colombian employer, though remote work for foreign clients sits in the grey zone most countries ignore.
Second, and this is the trap, the tourist clock and the tax clock are different clocks. Immigration lets you stay up to 180 days as a tourist, but tax residency triggers at 183 days in any rolling 365-day period, so a long tourist stay can quietly make you a Colombian tax resident on worldwide income without any work visa involved. This is the single most overlooked interaction in the Colombian system, and it is why the tax page matters as much as this one. Decide your day count deliberately, because in Colombia the calendar has tax consequences.
How to approach it in practice
Start by being clear whether Colombia is a stay or a settlement. For a stay, the Digital Nomad Visa is the route: gather apostilled bank statements proving net income above the bar for each of the last three months, a remote work contract or self-employment proof, and an all-risk health policy covering the whole stay and repatriation, then apply online through the Cancillería portal and budget for a lawyer given the tighter scrutiny. For a settlement, look at the Migrant visa subtypes and take local advice on which one fits. Either way, plan your days around the 183-day tax threshold from the beginning, and read the tax page before you commit to a long stretch, because in Colombia the visa is the easy part and the tax is where the real decisions are.