World Watch/Yemen/Digital Nomad & Residency

Digital Nomad & Residency · Yemen

Yemen digital nomad visa & residency (2026)

No pathwayYemeni Immigration, Passports and Nationality Authority under the Ministry of Interior; entry governed by Yemen's visa regime administered through diplomatic missions. No remote-work or digital-nomad statute exists.Country index 50 · C

Yemen shaded by its digital nomad & residency status

Yemen has no digital-nomad or remote-work visa and no residency-by-investment ('golden visa') program. Amid ongoing civil war, routine entry-visa issuance is largely on hold and limited to narrow categories (people of Yemeni origin, international-organization staff, journalists, diplomats), and the country carries a Level 4 'Do Not Travel' advisory, so there is no realistic pathway for relocating remote workers.

Key points

No dedicated nomad visa

Yemen does not appear in any 2026 listing of countries offering digital-nomad or remote-work residence permits, and no Yemeni law establishes such a category. Yemenis are themselves excluded from some other states' nomad permits (e.g., Malta).

Entry visas largely on hold

Yemeni diplomatic missions state that entry-visa requests are currently suspended, with visas issued only for foreigners of Yemeni origin, international-organization workers, journalists/media, and diplomats. Standard single-entry visas, when issued, are valid only ~3 months — a visitor category, not residency.

No residency-by-investment / golden visa

There is no published Yemeni residency-by-investment or golden-visa program; foreign long-stay status is tied to employment with recognized organizations rather than a relocation or investment pathway.

Active conflict blocks relocation

The U.S. Department of State maintains a Level 4 'Do Not Travel' advisory (reissued 19 December 2025) citing terrorism, armed conflict, kidnapping and landmines; the U.S. Embassy in Sana'a suspended operations in February 2015 and provides no consular services.

Health entry conditions

Where visas are issued, applicants must present a medical certificate confirming freedom from infectious diseases, and Yemen maintains HIV-related entry restrictions — additional barriers beyond the general suspension.

Practical infrastructure unsuitable for remote work

Beyond the legal absence of a pathway, the security situation, suspended commercial air links and lack of functioning consular services make Yemen non-viable as a remote-work base today.

Yemen - other topics

Last verified 5/24/2026 · Orientation, not legal advice - verify against the primary sources linked above. Explore the full world map →