Residence, not permanent residence
The first thing to understand about settling in the UAE is that the country does not offer permanent residency at all. There is no status that hands you an indefinite right to remain. Every form of living here is a renewable visa tied to some basis, a job, a company, an investment, a property, or a recognized talent. This sounds restrictive, and in a legal sense it is, but in practice the system works smoothly because the visas are long and renewable. The question is not how to become permanent, because you cannot. The question is which renewable visa fits your life and how little friction it carries.
That reframing matters for planning. In Portugal or Georgia you accrue years toward permanent residency and then citizenship. In the UAE there is no such ladder. You hold a residence visa for as long as its basis holds, and you renew it. For a nomad, this is often perfectly fine, because the goal here is usually a zero-tax base with a comfortable lifestyle, not a passport.
The standard residence visa and its renewal treadmill
The everyday residence visa, the one attached to employment, a free-zone company, the Green Visa, or property ownership, is typically valid for two years and renews as long as the underlying basis remains in place. It comes with an Emirates ID, the right to open bank accounts, sponsor family, and use services as a resident. For most working nomads this is the starting status, and renewing it is routine paperwork rather than a hurdle.
The one constraint to know is the absence rule. A standard residence visa has historically lapsed if the holder stays outside the UAE for more than six months continuously. For someone who genuinely lives in Dubai this never comes up, but for a highly mobile nomad who spends half the year elsewhere, it is a real limit that can quietly invalidate the visa. If your life involves long stretches abroad, this rule is the reason to look hard at the Golden Visa instead.
The Golden Visa, the real long-term answer
The Golden Visa is the UAE's substitute for permanence, and it is genuinely good. It grants a ten-year, self-sponsored, renewable residence, awarded on criteria rather than accumulated time: property worth 2,000,000 AED or more, qualifying investment, specialized talent in fields like medicine, science, and technology, or high income. A 2026 change eased the property route by removing the old requirement to pay a large share of the value upfront, so confirm the current conditions with the Dubai Land Department if you are buying in.
Two features make it the anchor of choice for a mobile resident. First, ten years is long enough to stop thinking about renewals. Second, and decisively, the Golden Visa does not lapse during long absences, unlike the standard visa. You can hold UAE residence, anchor your tax position here, and still spend months at a time traveling without losing your status. For a nomad whose whole life is movement, that is the feature that makes the UAE workable as a long-term base. It lets you sponsor your family as well, which matters for anyone settling with a partner or children.
Citizenship is effectively closed
If permanent residency is absent, citizenship is closed in all but name. For decades naturalization was theoretically possible only after about 30 years of residence, a bar so high it was irrelevant to almost everyone. A 2021 reform changed the framing but not the accessibility: it allows naturalization by official nomination only, reserved for exceptional investors, scientists, doctors, engineers, artists, intellectuals, and their families. There is no application form, no points test, and no residence-time route an ordinary resident can walk. On top of that, the UAE generally does not extend dual citizenship to naturalized foreigners.
The practical conclusion is simple. The UAE is a residence destination, not a path to a passport. Nobody should base a plan on becoming Emirati. The value here is the decade-long, low-friction, zero-tax residence, and that is what to optimize for.
What this means for your plan
Decide early whether you are mobile or settled, because it points to different visas. If you intend to genuinely live in the UAE, a standard two-year residence visa through employment, a free-zone company, or the Green Visa is straightforward and renews without drama. If you travel heavily and want the UAE mainly as a secure, zero-tax anchor you return to, the Golden Visa is worth the higher bar precisely because it survives long absences and runs for a decade.
Either way, set expectations correctly. You are buying an excellent renewable residence, not a road to permanence or citizenship. That is not a flaw so much as the design of the place, and for the nomad who wants comfort, safety, and a tax-free salary rather than a new nationality, it is more than enough. For how to obtain each of these visas in the first place, see the visa page, and for the tax outcome that makes the whole exercise worthwhile, the tax page.