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Slovenia

1 programme · EUR · Slovenian

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Lake Bled · island church beneath the Julian Alps
Lake Bled · island church beneath the Julian Alps
Showing Slovenia's requirements for Indian citizens. Other passports:🇺🇸 US🇬🇧 UK🇿🇦 ZA🇨🇦 CA🇦🇺 AU🇨🇳 CN🇧🇷 BRAll passports

Digital Nomad Permit

Official nomad visa

What this visa gets you

  1. Visa

    Entry document

  2. Temporary residency

    1 year, not renewable

  3. Permanent residency

    Not via this programme

  4. Citizenship

    Not via this programme

Income requirement
Najmanj dvakratnik povprečne mesečne neto plače v Sloveniji (twice the average monthly net wage; approx EUR 3,200/month in 2026)
Application fee
€102
Family allowed
Yes

How do Indian citizens apply for the Slovenia Digital Nomad Permit?

Can Indian citizens apply from inside Slovenia?

Generally no: most applicants apply from outside Slovenia before they travel.

The "fly in on a tourist stamp and convert" route is a widespread misconception and does not work for this visa. If you already hold legal residence in Slovenia on another permit, different rules may apply, so confirm with the authorities.

How long does the Slovenia Digital Nomad Permit really take for Indian citizens?

14–18 weeks (≈ 3–4 months)

  • Police clearance (verified)2w
  • Apostille (typical)1w
  • Consular appointment (typical)4w
  • Processing 8–12w (typical)8w
  • Post-arrival registration (typical)2w

Typical processing: 8–12 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 Slovenia Digital Nomad Permit?

  • The tourist-stamp convert myth. Flying to Slovenia on a tourist stamp and converting it into the residence visa from inside the country is not possible for Digital Nomad Permit. Almost every application story that goes badly starts with this misconception.
  • 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.
  • Skipping or mis-formatting the apostille. Apostille is the single most cited rejection reason. Every supporting document from your home country needs an apostille from the right authority, and they expire. Don't apostille more than 4 months before submission.

Documents

What Indian applicants typically submit

Documents needing an apostille (Indian authorities):

  • Police Clearance Certificate. Both gov.si and slovenia.info list a certificate of no criminal record among the digital nomad documents, and Slovenian practice is that a foreign public document is apostilled and then translated by a court interpreter. A PCC issued by a Regional Passport Office is a central government document; a PCC issued by a state police commissionerate needs State Home Department or SDM pre-authentication before MEA will apostille it.
  • Criminal record certificate from any other country you have lived in for more than a year in the recent past, apostilled in that country rather than in India.
  • Birth certificate, where children are included. The digital nomad permit allows family reunification immediately with no waiting period, so these are live documents from the first filing rather than a later step.
  • Marriage certificate, where a spouse is included. Same reasoning.

Worth knowing: Indian passport holders are visa nationals for Schengen: India is listed in Annex I of Regulation (EU) 2018/1806, the list of third countries whose nationals must hold a visa at the external border. That rules out the arrive-first route that most digital nomad guides describe. The gov.si digital nomad page offers two filing points, a Slovenian diplomatic or consular post abroad, or any administrative unit in Slovenia for people already legally residing there, and the May 2025 Aliens Act amendment widened the second option to all foreigners legally residing in Slovenia rather than a narrower set. A short-stay Schengen visa does not make you legally resident, and the New Delhi embassy states the position plainly on its own visa page: the first residence permit is issued as a temporary residence permit and must be obtained by a foreigner before entering the country. Where India then departs from the pattern is the embassy's own preference. Beijing tells Chinese applicants to book an appointment at the embassy counter; New Delhi does the opposite and urges permit applications to be filed by an employer or other authorised person in Slovenia, straight to the Administrative Unit, keeping only the card collection for itself. For a digital nomad with no Slovenian employer, that means finding an authorised representative in Slovenia, and it means the deciding authority never meets you. India and Slovenia have had a double tax treaty in force since 17 February 2005, signed at Ljubljana on 13 January 2003 and amended by a protocol in force since 21 December 2016. There is no social security agreement: Slovenia is absent from India's list of 18 signed and operational SSAs, so Slovenian self-employed contributions carry no Indian offset and no EPFO certificate of coverage can exempt you.

Tax

How is Digital Nomad Permit income taxed for Indian citizens?

No special tax regime for digital nomads. The residence permit itself does not automatically trigger Slovenian tax residency. Tax liability depends on tax residency: a holder who stays under 183 days/year and lacks a permanent home or centre of personal and economic interests in Slovenia is generally treated as a non-resident and not taxed in Slovenia on foreign remote income. Those who become Slovenian tax residents (183+ days in a calendar year, or a permanent home or centre of vital interests in Slovenia) are taxed on worldwide income, subject to applicable double-taxation treaties; treaty tie-breaker rules can keep a person non-resident even where domestic conditions are met. Each case is assessed individually.

Tax treaty with IndianYes
Social-security totalisationNo

Money, roughly (sourced)

Regime: Ordinary progressive PIT (16-50%, worldwide income, no special nomad regime), about 67.1% effective tax on €60k/yr.

The Slovenian Digital Nomad Permit (effective 21 Nov 2025) grants NO special tax break; if you exceed 183 days or center your life there you become tax-resident on worldwide income at ordinary 16-50% progressive rates. The permit is max 1 year, non-renewable, so many nomads stay non-resident and avoid worldwide taxation entirely.

Capital gains: 25%. Flat 25% on disposal of financial instruments; for securities the rate steps down with holding period. As a resident, gains on a foreign brokerage are in scope.

Living comfortably to well in Ljubljana runs about €1,700–€2,400/mo for one person, incl. rent. Roughly 139% more than the same living in Mumbai, which runs about 78,000/mo (≈ €710).

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.

FAQ

Slovenia Digital Nomad Permit: common questions

Can Indian citizens get the Slovenia Digital Nomad Permit?

Yes. The Digital Nomad Permit is open to Indian passport holders as non-EU nationals. The main requirement is proof of income of at least €3,200 per month.

Can I apply for the Slovenia Digital Nomad Permit from inside Slovenia?

Generally no. Indian applicants normally apply at the Slovenia consulate responsible for their region before travelling. Note this is about converting a short tourist stay; if you already hold legal residence in Slovenia on another permit, different rules may apply, so confirm with the authorities.

Do I need an apostille for the Slovenia Digital Nomad Permit?

Yes. Supporting documents issued in India (such as your police clearance) must be apostilled by the competent India authority before submission. Apostilles can expire, so don't obtain them more than a few months ahead of applying.

How much does the Slovenia Digital Nomad Permit cost?

The government application fee is about €102. The consular fee paid in India is approximately 102 EUR. Budget separately for police clearance, apostille (if required), translations, and required health insurance.

Can I bring my family on the Slovenia Digital Nomad Permit?

Yes. Spouses and dependent children can generally be included as dependants, usually with a higher combined income requirement and their own supporting documents.

Fees, income thresholds, and consular policy for Slovenia, emailed when they move. About once a month.

What's next

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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.

Slovenia digital nomad visa for Indian citizens | Expatlas