Tag Archives: Schengen Digital Nomad

Earn €28k, Live In Italy — The Visa Africans Are Not Talking About

The Italy Digital Nomad Visa 2026 is finally a real, written rule rather than a press release. The implementing guidelines published in March 2026 set an income floor of €28,000, a one-year renewable residence permit, and — critically — a route that sits outside the Decreto Flussi quota system that bottlenecks most Italian work permits. For African remote workers in Nairobi, Accra, Lagos, Cape Town, Dakar or Tunis already billing European or US clients, this is the cleanest legal way to live in Italy long-term that has ever existed.

What this rulebook actually changes

Who qualifies under the March 2026 guidelines

Italy’s Digital Nomad Visa is open to non-EU nationals who work remotely as either an employee of a foreign company or as a self-employed professional with clients outside Italy. The applicant must hold a recognised qualification or at least six months of proven professional experience in the activity, must take out private medical insurance valid across Italy, and must show stable accommodation. This is a “highly qualified” visa in Italian terms — you are demonstrating that you bring economic activity into the country rather than consuming labour-market quota.

Adaeze, a Lagos product designer billing two Berlin-based startups, fits the profile perfectly. She has a university degree, a portfolio that proves 4+ years of UX work, two foreign contracts paying in EUR, and €1,200 saved per month after costs. Three years ago her only Italian route was Decreto Flussi click-day chaos. Now she submits at the Consulate-General of Italy in Lagos and waits roughly 30–60 days for her D-visa.

The €28,000 income floor and how it’s tested

The €28,000 number is gross annual income — roughly three times Italy’s minimum income exemption. The consulate accepts twelve months of bank statements, invoices, employment contracts and tax filings as evidence. If you are self-employed, the test looks at gross billing minus business expenses. Couples can stack: a partner with income at the threshold is enough to bring the other in as a dependant. Children are admitted on family cohabitation grounds and unlock free Italian state schooling.

Italian consulates abroad will scrutinise three things harder than the income line: (1) that your work is genuinely remote and not for an Italian client, (2) that your foreign employer or clients are real legal entities, and (3) that the activity is sustainable past one renewal cycle.

Document pack and consular timing

You will need: D-visa application form, valid passport with two blank pages, one biometric photo, proof of accommodation in Italy (rental contract or letter of hospitality), private health insurance covering Italy and Schengen, certified translations of your degree and any professional registrations, twelve months of bank statements, your employment contract or self-employed registration, and a clean criminal-record certificate from every country you have lived in for the past five years.

Once in Italy you have eight days to apply for the permesso di soggiorno at the Questura. The permit is one year, renewable as long as the underlying activity continues. After five continuous years on the permit you become eligible for long-term EU residence.

Application audit by Travel Explore

Most rejected DNV files fail on income classification, not income level. We run a structured audit of your contracts, billing currency and tax residency to make sure the consulate reads your file the way Rome wants it read. Begin here → https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

Tax residence, INPS and the impatriati discount

Once you spend more than 183 days a year in Italy you become Italian tax-resident. That is not punitive — Italy’s regime degli impatriati still offers a 50% income-tax abatement for the first five years if you transfer residence and certain conditions on prior non-residence are met. Self-employed nomads must register with INPS (the social security agency) and pay contributions around 26% of net income up to a cap. Plan this with an Italian commercialista before your first March tax window.

FAQ

Can I work for an Italian client on a DNV?

No. The visa is conditioned on income flowing from outside Italy. One occasional invoice to an Italian client is tolerated, but ongoing Italian engagement breaks the visa basis.

Does the DNV lead to Italian citizenship?

Indirectly. After five years on the permit you can apply for EU long-term residence, and after ten years of legal residence you can apply for Italian citizenship by naturalisation.

Can my partner work in Italy on a dependant permit?

Yes. Family reunification permits attached to a DNV give the spouse unrestricted right to work in Italy.

Is there a quota like Decreto Flussi?

No. The DNV is outside the annual flussi quotas and does not require a Nulla Osta from the Sportello Unico.

How long does the consulate take?

Most African posts are returning DNV D-visa decisions in 30–60 calendar days from the appointment, with Lagos and Nairobi running fastest in spring 2026.

Five-minute checklist before you book the consulate

  • Twelve months of foreign-sourced income at €28,000+ documented.
  • Italian accommodation lined up — a rental contract beats a hotel booking.
  • Private health insurance covering full Schengen, minimum €30,000 cover.
  • Police clearance from every country you have lived in for five years.
  • An Italian tax adviser briefed on your impatriati eligibility.

Move your laptop to Italy the legal way

Travel Explore prepares your full DNV file end-to-end — income narrative, translations, consulate booking and Questura registration. Get started at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

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Sources: Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs digital nomad implementing decree, March 2026; Decreto Flussi Clickdays 2026 official portal; Italian Agenzia delle Entrate impatriati guidance.

Hungary White Card 2026: €3,000 Income, 12-Month Digital Nomad Residence for African Remote Workers

For African remote workers earning at least €3,000 a month, the Hungary White Card 2026 — Hungary’s digital nomad residence permit, locally called Fehér Kártya — is one of Europe’s most affordable Schengen-area work-from-anywhere passes. The permit is valid for 12 months, can be extended once for another 12, and gives African nomads a full Schengen movement card without forcing them to work for a Hungarian employer.

What changed in the Hungary White Card 2026

Hungary’s White Card has been live since 2022 and remains stable in 2026. The income requirement still sits at €3,000 per month — lower than Portugal’s D8 (€3,680) or Malta’s digital nomad permit. Applicants must show a 12-month Hungarian rental or purchase agreement and minimum €30,000 health insurance.

The 2026 update is mostly procedural. Hungary’s Office for Immigration and Asylum (OIF) digitised parts of the application, but renewal still requires an in-person visit. Processing time runs 3 to 4 months from submission, so African applicants should plan for an extended waiting period before flying to Budapest.

Crucially, the White Card forbids working for a Hungarian company. The route is squarely for African remote workers paid by employers or clients outside Hungary. You can hold a separate Hungarian bank account and travel within Schengen, but local employment is off-limits.

Who fits the Hungary White Card 2026

The route is built for mid-career African remote workers with a stable income from a non-Hungarian employer or client base. Think a Nigerian senior marketer for a US SaaS firm, a Ghanaian product manager for a UK fintech, a Kenyan video editor for European clients, an Ivorian content lead for a French media group, an Egyptian data analyst paid by a Singapore startup, or a South African consultant for African and European companies.

It does not fit African applicants who plan to take a Hungarian job, study in Hungary, or run a business locally. For those, Hungary’s standard work permit, student visa or business immigration routes apply.

Key requirements: income, housing and health insurance

Hungary’s OIF publishes the official requirements on its White Card factsheet. African applicants need a passport with at least 12 months validity, two biometric photos, the remote-work employment or freelance contract, employer / company existence proof, address evidence in Hungary, €30,000 health insurance, and a clean criminal record.

Income proof is the centre of gravity. Bank statements showing €3,000-plus per month for the last six months are the cleanest evidence. African applicants paid in USD, GBP or other currencies must convert at applicable rates. Compare with Estonia’s digital nomad route in our Estonia Digital Nomad Visa 2026 explainer.

  • Income: minimum €3,000 per month from a non-Hungarian source
  • Housing: 12-month rental or purchase agreement in Hungary
  • Insurance: minimum €30,000 health coverage
  • Permit: 12 months, extendable once for an additional 12 months
  • Hungarian employment: not permitted (the route is for remote work only)
  • Processing: 3 to 4 months from submission

Need help with your application?

Travel Expore helps African applicants navigate this process end-to-end — from documents to consulate appointments — with consultants serving applicants from Lagos to Nairobi to Johannesburg. Start your free eligibility check at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

Why the Hungary White Card 2026 matters for African nomads

Hungary sits in the heart of Schengen Europe, with cheaper rents than Portugal or the Netherlands and a low cost of living for African remote workers paid in hard currency. Budapest, Debrecen and Szeged offer co-working space, fast internet and direct flights to most European hubs. The White Card unlocks 90-day Schengen visits within any 180-day period, useful for business travel and conferences.

For African applicants thinking long-term, the White Card is not a permanent residence path on its own; you need to switch to another residence category to count time toward Hungarian PR. But as a 24-month base while building a European client portfolio, it is one of the most cost-effective Schengen options. Read our EU Digital Nomad Visas Compared 2026 for a side-by-side comparison.

Frequently asked questions about Hungary White Card 2026

How much income do I need for the Hungary White Card 2026?

A minimum of €3,000 per month, evidenced by six months of bank statements showing inflows from a non-Hungarian employer or client base. African applicants should plan to convert from local currencies via wire transfers from clients to a stable bank account.

Can I work for a Hungarian company on the White Card?

No. The White Card forbids employment with Hungarian companies. The route is designed exclusively for remote work paid by entities outside Hungary. If you want to take a local job, you must apply for a Hungarian work permit instead.

How long does the Hungary White Card last?

12 months on first issue, extendable once for an additional 12 months. After 24 months, you must switch to another residence category if you wish to stay legally in Hungary. The route does not, on its own, lead to permanent residence.

Can my family come with me?

Spouses and minor children can apply for accompanying residence permits under family reunification rules. Each dependant needs their own application, evidence of relationship, and proof of accommodation and insurance.

What is the application timeline?

Plan 3 to 4 months from submission to decision. African applicants in Lagos, Nairobi, Accra, Cairo, Cape Town and Johannesburg apply through the Hungarian consulate in their country or via the OIF online portal where eligible.

Key takeaways

  • The Hungary White Card 2026 income floor remains €3,000 per month from a non-Hungarian source.
  • Permit duration: 12 months on issue, extendable once for another 12.
  • Hungarian employment is not permitted — the route is for remote work only.
  • €30,000 health insurance and a 12-month Hungarian rental or purchase agreement are mandatory.
  • For African remote workers seeking a low-cost Schengen base, the Hungary White Card 2026 is one of Europe’s most accessible digital nomad residences.

Get expert help with your Hungary White Card 2026 application

Travel Explore helps African applicants — from Lagos, Nairobi, Accra, Cape Town, Yaoundé, Dakar and beyond — navigate this process end-to-end. Talk to a consultant at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

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