World Watch/Turkey/Digital Nomad & Residency

Digital Nomad & Residency · Turkey

Digital Nomad & Residency - Turkey

Dedicated visaTurkish Ministry of Culture and Tourism / GoTürkiye Digital Nomad Visa Programme (launched April 2024); Presidency of Migration Management (Law No. 6458 on Foreigners and International Protection) for short-term residence permits; Ministry of Environment and Urbanisation for citizenship-by-investment

Turkey launched a dedicated Digital Nomad Visa in April 2024, administered via the GoTürkiye platform, available to nationals of 32 specific countries aged 21–55 who earn at least USD 3,000/month and hold a university degree. The visa grants a one-year residence permit (renewable once) and covers both remote employees of foreign companies and self-employed freelancers. Applicants who do not qualify for the DNV may alternatively apply for a standard Short-Term Residence Permit, which allows up to two years of stay without formal work authorisation.

Dedicated Digital Nomad Visa (April 2024)

The Turkish Ministry of Culture and Tourism officially launched the Digital Nomad Visa on 15 April 2024. It provides a one-year residence permit (renewable for a second year) to remote workers employed by or contracting with companies based outside Turkey. Applications begin at digitalnomads.goturkiye.com, where applicants receive a Digital Nomad Identification Certificate before proceeding to a Turkish consulate.

Eligibility — nationality, age & income

Only nationals of 32 countries qualify: all EU member states, USA, Canada, UK, Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus. Applicants must be aged 21–55, hold a university degree, show proof of minimum income of USD 3,000/month (USD 36,000/year), and have valid health insurance. Both remote employees and self-employed freelancers are eligible, with differing documentation (employment contract vs. business contract).

Short-Term Residence Permit (alternative route)

Foreign nationals who fall outside DNV eligibility (wrong nationality, age, or income bracket) may apply for a Short-Term Residence Permit under Law No. 6458, valid for up to two years. This route does not grant work authorisation but is widely used by remote workers living off foreign-sourced income. It requires proof of financial sufficiency (typically ~USD 10,000 in liquid assets) and a stated purpose (tourism, property ownership, research, etc.).

Closed neighbourhoods restriction

Districts where foreign nationals already comprise 25% or more of the registered population (including several popular Istanbul and Antalya neighbourhoods) are closed to new residence permit applications. Prospective applicants must check the current closed-areas list via the Presidency of Migration Management before selecting an address.

Citizenship by Investment (Golden Visa)

Turkey's Citizenship by Investment programme grants Turkish citizenship (not merely residency) in exchange for a minimum USD 400,000 real estate purchase held for at least three years, or USD 500,000 placed in government bonds, bank deposits, or investment funds. No minimum physical residency is required. Processing typically takes 3–6 months and includes the applicant's spouse and dependent children.

Tax residency implications

Under Turkish tax law, a foreign national who stays 183 days or more in a calendar year becomes a Turkish tax resident and is liable for income tax on worldwide earnings. DNV holders who remain under this threshold are generally taxed only on Turkish-sourced income. Self-employed IT professionals may benefit from a 50–80% tax discount on Turkey-source income under applicable incentive provisions.

Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/24/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →