Long-Term Visa for Remote Workers
Official nomad visaWhat this visa gets you
Visa
Entry document
Temporary residency
6 months, not renewable
Permanent residency
Not via this programme
Citizenship
Not via this programme
- Income requirement
- ISK 1,000,000/month (single); ISK 1,300,000/month with spouse/partner and/or children under 18
- Application fee
- €85
- Family allowed
- Yes
How do British citizens apply for the Iceland Long-Term Visa for Remote Workers?
Can British citizens apply from inside Iceland?
It depends: we haven't verified this for Iceland yet.
Some European permits allow in-country application, and if you already hold legal residence in Iceland on another permit the rules can differ from a fresh consular application. The "fly in on a tourist stamp and convert" route, by contrast, usually does not work. Confirm your case with the official Iceland source before relying on it.
How long does the Iceland Long-Term Visa for Remote Workers really take for British citizens?
12–20 weeks (≈ 3–5 months)
- Police clearance (typical)2w
- Apostille (typical)2w
- Consular appointment (typical)4w
- Processing 6–14w official6w
- Post-arrival registration (typical)2w
Official processing: 6–14 weeks. The rest is doc gathering + waiting in a queue, none of which the consulate counts.
Avoid these
What do people get wrong about the Iceland Long-Term Visa for Remote Workers?
- Assuming you can convert a tourist stay. For most European residence visas you can't fly in on a tourist stamp and convert it from inside the country. You apply before you travel. A few permits and people who already hold legal residence on another permit are exceptions, so confirm Iceland's rule rather than assuming either way.
- Underestimating timing by a factor of 2–3. The "60-day processing" line is real, but it's only the consulate's processing window. The door-to-door reality includes police clearance, apostille, consular appointment lead, and post-arrival registration, so most applicants land between 4 and 7 months.
- Income proof in the wrong currency. Bank statements showing income in your local currency are routinely rejected if the equivalent in EUR isn't clearly stated and consistent across the qualifying period (usually 3 or 6 months).
Documents
What British applicants typically submit
Indicative: we haven't verified Iceland's exact checklist for British applicants. Confirm the current list with the official source before you start gathering.
Documents needing an apostille (British authorities):
- ACRO certificate
- Birth certificate
Worth knowing: ACRO certificate (~10 business days). No FEIE equivalent — UK Statutory Residence Test applies.
Tax
How is Long-Term Visa for Remote Workers income taxed for British citizens?
Holders generally do not become Icelandic tax residents because the stay is capped at up to 180 days, and Icelandic tax residency normally triggers only at 183+ days of presence within a 12-month period. Foreign-source remote-work income is therefore typically not taxed in Iceland during the short stay; holders keep paying income tax in their home country. No special expat tax regime applies to this route.
Money, roughly (indicative)
Regime: Short stay — not Icelandic tax-resident, about 0% effective tax on €60k/yr.
180-day max, non-renewable. Under 183 days you generally aren't an Icelandic tax resident and the visa doesn't enrol you in local social security, so no Icelandic income tax or social contributions are due.
Living comfortably to well in Reykjavík runs about €2,800–€3,900/mo for one person, incl. rent. Roughly 30% less than the same living in London, which runs about £3,400/mo (≈ €4,000).
Estimate your take-home in the tax calculator →Worth a specialist's time. A short call before you commit usually pays for itself, especially for US citizens (FEIE/FATCA), existing UK ties, or unwinding SA tax residency.
Recommended for your move
- SafetyWingFlexible monthly cover
Health insurance built for nomads. Monthly subscription.
Get a quote - GenkiEU-regulated, long-term
EU-regulated health insurance for nomads and expats; long-term and resident cover.
See plans - WiseGetting paid abroad
Multi-currency account and low-cost transfers at the mid-market rate.
Open an account - RevolutEveryday spending
Multi-currency card with budgeting and fee-free transfers.
Open an account
FAQ
Iceland Long-Term Visa for Remote Workers: common questions
Can British citizens get the Iceland Long-Term Visa for Remote Workers?
Yes. The Long-Term Visa for Remote Workers is open to British passport holders as non-EU nationals. The main requirement is proof of income of at least €6,954 per month.
Can I apply for the Iceland Long-Term Visa for Remote Workers from inside Iceland?
It depends. Some European nomad permits let you apply from inside the country (especially if you already hold legal residence on another permit), while others require you to apply at a Iceland consulate before you travel. We haven't verified Iceland's rule for British applicants yet, so confirm it with the official Iceland source before relying on it.
How long does the Iceland Long-Term Visa for Remote Workers take for British applicants?
As a rough guide, European nomad permits run about 6–14 weeks door-to-door once you add police clearance, any apostille, the appointment lead time, and post-arrival registration on top of the official processing window. We haven't verified Iceland's figures for British applicants, so treat this as indicative.
Do I need an apostille for the Iceland Long-Term Visa for Remote Workers?
Most European permits require documents issued in United Kingdom (such as a police clearance) to be apostilled, but the exact list varies by country and permit. We haven't verified Iceland's requirement for British documents, so confirm it with the consulate or official source.
How much does the Iceland Long-Term Visa for Remote Workers cost?
The government application fee is about €85. Budget separately for police clearance, apostille (if required), translations, and required health insurance.
Can I bring my family on the Iceland Long-Term Visa for Remote Workers?
Yes. Spouses and dependent children can generally be included as dependants, usually with a higher combined income requirement and their own supporting documents.
What's next
Keep going
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Different answers may surface a programme you didn't consider.
Every dated change we've logged for Iceland: income thresholds, fees, consular policy.
Expatlas provides information for orientation only and is not legal advice. Always verify current requirements with official government sources and consult an immigration lawyer for your specific case.