Home Visas & Entry US Visa Options for Digital Nomads 2026
Visas & Entry Updated April 2026

US Visa Options for Digital Nomads 2026

The USA has no digital nomad visa — but there are multiple existing categories nomads use to live legally in America.

InfoUnitedStates.org · Independent guide · Not affiliated with any government

No DNV Exists

The USA has not created a digital nomad visa. Congress has discussed the idea but never passed legislation. Nomads must use existing categories, each with its own requirements, costs and restrictions.

ESTA / B1-B2 (Tourism)

The most common nomad approach. Legally you can only visit for tourism or business meetings. Working for a foreign employer is a gray area most CBP officers ignore, but any work that competes with US workers or receives US payment is prohibited.

  • Duration: 90 days (ESTA) or 180 days (B1/B2)
  • Cost: $21 (ESTA) or $185 (B1/B2)
  • Restrictions: Cannot work for US clients or receive US income
  • Exit required: Must leave between visits

E-2 Investor Visa

Best option for serious nomads with capital. Requires a substantial investment ($100,000+ generally, though no statutory minimum) in a US business that you actively manage. Available to citizens of 80+ treaty countries.

  • Duration: 2-5 years, renewable indefinitely
  • Investment: ~$100,000 minimum realistic
  • Family: Spouse and kids included; spouse can work
  • Downside: Must run a real business, not passive investment

O-1 Extraordinary Ability

For people with "extraordinary ability" in science, arts, education, business or athletics. Requires major awards, publications, press coverage, high salary or similar proof. About 20,000 issued annually.

  • Duration: Up to 3 years, renewable
  • Employer-sponsored or agent-petitioned
  • Cost: $460 filing + legal fees ($5,000-15,000)
  • Best for: Published authors, VC-funded founders, recognized tech experts

L-1 Intra-Company Transfer

For employees of multinational companies transferring to a US branch. Requires at least 1 year of employment at a foreign office. L-1A (managers) = up to 7 years; L-1B (specialized knowledge) = up to 5 years. One of the easier paths if your employer has a US office.

H-1B Specialty Worker

The classic tech visa. Requires a US employer sponsor, a "specialty occupation" (bachelor's degree or equivalent), and winning the annual lottery (90,000 applicants for 65,000 slots typically). Takes 6-12 months to process. Not practical for independent nomads but excellent if sponsored.

TN (Canada & Mexico Only)

Under USMCA, Canadian and Mexican citizens can apply for TN status at the border to work for US employers in certain professions (engineer, accountant, lawyer, scientist, etc.). Fast — approved at the port of entry. 3 years, renewable indefinitely.

Which Path

SituationBest Option
Short-term visit (under 6 mo)ESTA or B1/B2
Have $100k+ to investE-2 Investor
High-profile / award-winningO-1 Extraordinary Ability
Your company has US officeL-1 Intra-Company
Canadian/Mexican professionalTN
Tech worker, employer-sponsoredH-1B lottery
None of the aboveStay under 6 mo on B1/B2

Most digital nomads end up using B1/B2 and rotating stays. For permanent solutions, an immigration attorney consultation ($200-500) will tell you which paths actually fit your situation.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is there a US digital nomad visa?

No. As of 2026 the US has no dedicated DNV. Multiple bills have been proposed but none have passed Congress.

Can I live in the USA full-time as a digital nomad?

Only with a real work visa (E-2, O-1, L-1, H-1B, TN) or by rotating ESTA/B1-B2 stays while avoiding overstay.