World Watch/Uganda/Digital Nomad & Residency

Digital Nomad & Residency · Uganda

Digital Nomad & Residency - Uganda

Via other routeUganda Citizenship and Immigration Control Act (Cap. 66), administered by the Directorate of Citizenship and Immigration Control (DCIC) under the Ministry of Internal Affairs

Uganda has no dedicated digital nomad or remote-work visa. Remote workers may enter on a tourist visa (up to 90 days) but that visa explicitly prohibits any form of work; the previously used Special Pass has been informally discontinued and applicants are redirected to the employer-sponsored Entry Permit Class G2. Independent remote workers have no clearly designated, sponsored-free legal pathway; a Retirement Permit offers a route for those aged 60 and above with sufficient offshore income.

No dedicated digital-nomad visa

As of 2026, the Ugandan government has not launched, announced, or legislated a dedicated digital-nomad or remote-work visa. Uganda does not appear in any inter-governmental or official list of countries offering such a scheme.

Tourist visa — work prohibited

Single-entry and multiple-entry tourist visas allow stays up to 90 days but explicitly prohibit employment or any form of work, including remote work for foreign clients. Multiple-entry visas are available for 6, 12, or 24 months for frequent visitors.

Special Pass discontinued

The short-term Special Pass (formerly used by some self-sponsored individuals) has been informally phased out; the DCIC now redirects applicants to the employer-sponsored Entry Permit Class G2 instead.

Work permits require employer sponsorship

Entry Permit Class G2 (for employed expatriates including NGO staff) requires sponsorship by a registered Ugandan organisation. Costs range from USD 1,250 (6 months) to USD 7,500 (36 months). No self-employed or freelancer permit category exists.

Retirement Permit — best available route for 60+

Foreign nationals aged 60 or above with documented annual income of at least USD 36,000 from sources outside Uganda (or from an approved Ugandan pension) may obtain a Retirement Permit, providing a legal long-stay pathway without requiring a local employer.

Certificate of Residence — long-stay or marriage route

A Certificate of Residence can be granted to persons continuously resident in Uganda for 10 years who have contributed to socio-economic development (fees: USD 3,000 for life, USD 3,500 for 10 years, USD 4,000 for 5 years), or to spouses of Ugandan citizens after at least 3 years of legal residence. No golden-visa or residency-by-investment programme exists.

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