Freelance Visa - Compare Countries for Self-Employed Workers

Updated May 2026. Independent, no-affiliation guide - we compare every major freelance visa program.

Elena Müller
European Immigration Correspondent··14 min read
Countries compared
10+
Cheapest
Georgia (free)
Fastest EU citizenship
5 yrs (DE/PT)
Tax range
0% – 47%

What is a freelance visa?

A freelance visa is a residence permit that lets a self-employed individual move to a country, sign contracts with local clients, pay local income tax, register with the local social security system, and integrate as a tax resident. Unlike an employee work visa, you are not sponsored by a single employer; you are your own business. Unlike a tourist or short-stay permit, you can settle, rent long-term, and bring your family.

The freelance visa is often confused with the digital nomad visa, but they are legally and economically different. A digital nomad visa typically forbids local clients - your income must come from abroad - and often offers preferential or capped tax, with no path to citizenship. A freelance visa, by contrast, is designed to plug you into the local economy: you can invoice domestic clients, pay full local tax, build pension contributions, and in most cases qualify for permanent residency and eventually citizenship.

Ten countries currently run dedicated freelance or self-employment visa programmes worth comparing in 2026: Germany (Freiberufler), the UAE (Dubai Freelancer Permit), Spain (Autónomo / cuenta propia), the Czech Republic (Živnostenský list), Portugal (D7 / D2 Independent), the Netherlands (Self-Employment under DAFT for Americans, ZZP for others), France (Profession Libérale), Estonia (e-Residency + Digital Nomad Visa), Georgia (Remotely from Georgia / Individual Entrepreneur status), and Croatia (Digital Nomad Permit). This guide compares each programme on income requirement, tax, duration, PR pathway, cost and best-fit professions.

Freelance visa vs digital nomad visa

Both visas suit independent workers, but they target very different lifestyles and tax outcomes. A freelance visa makes you a tax resident with full integration rights; a digital nomad visa keeps you in a temporary, foreign-income bubble. The table below summarises the practical differences.

FeatureFreelance VisaDigital Nomad Visa
Who it's forSelf-employed serving local + foreign clientsRemote workers serving only foreign clients
Local clients allowedYesUsually no
Local taxYes - full tax residencyOften reduced or capped (varies)
Business registrationRequired (trade licence / autónomo / Freiberufler)Not required
Duration1-3 yrs, renewable1-2 yrs, sometimes non-renewable
Path to PRYes (5 yrs typical)Rarely
Path to citizenshipYes (5-10 yrs)Almost never
ExamplesGermany Freiberufler, Spain Autónomo, Czech ŽivnoSpain DNV, Portugal D8, Croatia DNP
Best forBuilding a life in one countryTravelling while earning from home

Choose a freelance visa if you want to settle, get permanent residency, eventually qualify for citizenship, and serve clients in the local market. Choose a digital nomad visa if your income is already locked in from foreign clients and you want a low-friction, low-tax base for one or two years - see the full comparison.

Compare freelance visas by country

The master table below compares the ten most popular freelance visa programmes side by side. Each row links through to its dedicated country guide.

CountryVisa NameIncome Req.DurationTax RatePR PathCostBest For
🇩🇪 GermanyFreiberufler€9-12K savings3 yrs14-42%5 yrs€100-200IT, consultants, creatives
🇦🇪 UAEFreelancer PermitNone2-3 yrs0%None (Golden Visa 10y)AED 7.5-25KConsultants, top earners
🇪🇸 SpainAutónomo~€3,105/mo1 yr → renewable19-47%5 yrs€80-200Designers, creatives
🇨🇿 CzechŽivnostenský list€5,727/yr1 yr → 2 yr15% flat5 yrs€50-150Developers, low-cost EU
🇵🇹 PortugalD7 / D2 Independent€10,440/yr2 yrs → 3 yrs14.5-48% / NHR 20%5 yrs€80-180Writers, lifestyle migration
🇳🇱 NetherlandsSelf-Employment / DAFT (US)€4,500 capital2 yrs37-49.5%5 yrs€350-1,500US consultants (DAFT)
🇫🇷 FranceProfession LibéraleSMIC equivalent1 yr → renewable11-45%5 yrs€99-269Writers, translators
🇪🇪 Estoniae-Residency + DNV€4,500/mo (DNV)1 yr20% flatLimited€100-300Digital businesses
🇬🇪 GeorgiaRemotely / IE Status$2,000/mo1 yr visa-free1% (IE)10 yrsFreeLowest tax, fast setup
🇭🇷 CroatiaDigital Nomad Permit€2,539/mo1 yr0% (DNs)None€60-100Adriatic lifestyle

Each row links through to a dedicated country detail page below - see the deep-dive guides section for the full Germany, Dubai, Spain, Czech and Portugal walkthroughs.

Best country by profession

IT / Software developers

Germany leads for developers: the Freiberufler track explicitly recognises IT consultants under Section 18 EStG, Berlin and Munich have huge tech client bases, and the Blue Card alternative is also open. Czech Republic is a strong #2 - Prague has a thriving developer scene, a 15% flat tax and one of Europe's lowest income thresholds. Estonia is a great #3 if you prefer running the operation as an Estonian OÜ company through e-Residency. See our developer guide for a detailed ranking.

Designers / Creative professionals

Spain takes the top spot. The Autónomo visa is well-trodden by graphic, UX and product designers, Barcelona is a global design hub, and the social-security flat rate of €294/month in year one keeps overhead low. Portugal is a strong #2, especially Lisbon and Porto, with the NHR-replacement tax incentives still partially available to newcomers in 2026. Berlin is the #3 pick - high client density and the Freiberufler permit recognises designers under the same Section 18 list.

Consultants / Coaches

Dubai wins for high-earning consultants thanks to zero personal income tax, English-language business culture and rapid free-zone licence setup. The Netherlands is #2 specifically for US consultants via the DAFT treaty, which only requires €4,500 of business capital. Germany is #3 - strong client base, but you will be taxed heavily compared with Dubai.

Writers / Journalists / Translators

Germany ranks #1 because writers, journalists and translators are explicit Section 18 freie Berufe - no Gewerbesteuer, straightforward Freiberufler classification. Portugal #2: the D7 is friendly to lifestyle migrants with portfolio income, and the cost of living is the lowest in Western Europe. France #3 - Profession Libérale recognises translators and writers, and the URSSAF micro-entrepreneur regime is generous up to €77,700/year.

Tax comparison

Headline income tax rates only tell part of the story - social security contributions, trade tax, and VAT exemptions matter just as much. The table below shows the effective burden on a self-employed person earning roughly €50,000 net.

CountryIncome TaxSocial SecurityTrade TaxVATEffective Rate
🇦🇪 UAE0%0%0% (9% corp > AED 375K)5%0-9%
🇬🇪 Georgia1% (IE status)0%0%18% (>GEL 100K)~1%
🇭🇷 Croatia0% (DN permit)Optional0%25%0-12%
🇨🇿 Czech15% flat~14%0%21% (>€85K)~25-29%
🇪🇪 Estonia20% flat33% (OÜ only)0%22%~20-33%
🇩🇪 Germany14-42%~15% (voluntary)0% (Freiberufler)19%~30-45%
🇪🇸 Spain19-47%€294-€590/mo0%21%~30-50%
🇵🇹 Portugal14.5-48% / 20% NHR21.4%0%23%~25-48%

Germany and Portugal carry the highest effective tax burdens but offer the fastest paths to EU citizenship (5 years), making them attractive for people thinking in decades, not quarters. The UAE has zero personal income tax but no citizenship path - great for high earners building wealth, less suitable if you want a passport. Czech Republic offers arguably the best balance: a low 15% flat tax, EU residency, and citizenship after 5 years.

Path to permanent residency and citizenship

CountryPR TimelineCitizenshipDual Allowed?Language Req.
🇩🇪 Germany5 yrs (3 with C1)5 yrs (2024 reform)Yes (since 2024)B1 German
🇵🇹 Portugal5 yrs5 yrsYesA2 Portuguese
🇪🇸 Spain5 yrs10 yrs (2 for Latin Americans)LimitedA2 Spanish + CCSE
🇨🇿 Czech5 yrs10 yrsYesB1 Czech
🇳🇱 Netherlands5 yrs5 yrsLimitedA2 Dutch
🇫🇷 France5 yrs5 yrsYesB1 French
🇦🇪 UAEGolden Visa 10y onlyAlmost neverN/ANone
🇬🇪 Georgia6 yrs10 yrsNo (renounce required)Georgian test

Germany's June 2024 citizenship reform was the biggest shift in EU naturalisation in two decades: it cut the residency requirement from 8 years to 5 (or 3 with C1 German and proven integration) and finally allowed dual citizenship. This makes Germany the single most attractive EU country for ambitious freelancers who want a strong passport quickly. Portugal matches the 5-year timeline but with a much lower language bar (A2).

How to choose

  1. What is your primary goal - lowest tax, EU passport, or lifestyle? UAE for tax, Germany/Portugal for passport, Spain/Portugal for lifestyle.
  2. What is your profession - IT, creative, consulting, or writing? Each has a different best-fit country (see profession table above).
  3. What language are you willing to learn to B1+? Germany requires B1 German for citizenship; Portugal only A2 Portuguese.
  4. What is your annual income? Below €30K, prefer Czech, Portugal, or Georgia. Above €100K, prefer UAE for tax efficiency.
  5. Do you have family? Germany, Spain and Portugal have the most generous family-reunification rules; the UAE allows dependants but charges per visa.
  6. What is your time horizon - 2 years or 10? Short stays favour Croatia/Estonia DN routes; long-term integration favours Germany/Spain/Portugal.

If you are unsure, run your profile through our eligibility checker - it scores you across all 10 countries in under 90 seconds based on your profession, income, language and family situation.

Deep dive guides

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Frequently asked questions