Two visas that do two different jobs
Panama gives a remote worker two routes worth knowing, and the trap is treating them as interchangeable. They are not. The Short-Stay Visa for Remote Workers, Panama's digital nomad visa, is the fast, cheap way to live and telework legally for up to a year and a half, and it leads nowhere permanent on purpose. The Friendly Nations Visa is the settlement route: slower and more expensive to start, but a real ladder to permanent residency and eventually citizenship. Pick based on what you actually want, a trial run or a base.
Everything else is a supporting act. The Pensionado visa is excellent but only if you hold a qualifying pension, which most working-age nomads do not. Tourist entry is for scoping the country or launching a Friendly Nations application from inside Panama. Get the choice between the two main visas right and the rest falls into place.
The remote-worker visa, in detail
Panama created its digital nomad visa through Executive Decree 198 on 7 May 2021, and the design is straightforward. You prove foreign income of at least 36,000 dollars a year, roughly 3,000 a month, coming from employers or clients outside Panama. Salaried workers supply an employer letter and authenticated bank statements; the self-employed show a company registered abroad and a sworn statement about the business. Add private international health insurance valid in Panama and you have the core of the application.
What you get is permission to live in Panama and work remotely for 9 months, extendable once for another 9, with the work authorization built in so you need no separate permit. The hard limits are two. You cannot work for Panamanian companies or take on local clients, since the visa is strictly for foreign-earned income. And it does not count toward residency, so when the second nine months run out, that route is finished. For trying Panama on for size, or for a focused stint of up to about eighteen months, it is clean and quick. For staying, it is the wrong tool.
The Friendly Nations Visa, the route that actually settles you
If Panama wins you over, the Friendly Nations Visa is the path most nomads take, and it is genuinely strong. It is open to nationals of more than 50 countries that Panama considers friendly, a list that includes the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, every EU member state, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, Brazil, and Mexico, among many others. Eligibility by passport is the easy part.
The substance is the economic tie. Since a 2021 reform tightened the rules, you qualify through one of three routes: a fixed-term bank deposit of 200,000 dollars held for three years at a Panamanian bank, the purchase of property worth at least 200,000 dollars, or employment with a Panamanian company on a work permit. The deposit and the property routes are what self-funded nomads use, and the deposit has the advantage that the money stays yours and earns interest, recently in the range of roughly 4 to 5 percent a year, throughout the term. The visa grants two years of provisional residency, which converts to permanent residency once you have shown continued compliance, and from permanent residency the clock to citizenship by naturalization starts, reachable after five years. There is no annual minimum stay, but you must set foot in Panama at least once every two years to keep the status alive, which suits a nomad who bases in Panama but travels heavily.
The Pensionado visa, if you have a pension
Panama's Pensionado is one of the best-known retirement visas in the world, and it deserves a mention even on a nomad site because some readers will qualify. It asks for a lifetime pension of at least 1,000 dollars a month from a government or recognized private source, dropping to 750 dollars if you also buy property worth 100,000 dollars or more, and it is open to any nationality rather than just the Friendly Nations list. It famously comes bundled with deep discounts for residents on flights, medical care, entertainment, and everyday services. Most working-age remote workers will not have a qualifying pension, so for them it is academic, but for anyone drawing a pension while still working remotely, it is a cheaper and simpler residency than the Friendly Nations deposit.
Tourist entry and the in-country application
Most Western nationals can enter Panama visa-free for up to 90 days, sometimes 180, on a valid passport with proof of onward travel. That window is the natural way to scope the country before committing, and it is also how many people start a Friendly Nations Visa application: enter as a tourist, engage a Panamanian immigration lawyer, and file the residency application from inside the country. As elsewhere, leaning on repeated border runs to live in Panama indefinitely as a perpetual tourist is increasingly scrutinized and is not a substitute for a proper visa.
How to choose, in practice
Start by deciding whether this is a trial or a move. If you want to spend a few months to a year and a half in Panama and keep your options open, the remote-worker visa is fast, dollar-priced, and low-commitment, and you can always upgrade later. If you already know you want a base, with a path to permanent residency and a possible passport, go straight for the Friendly Nations Visa and budget for the 200,000 dollar deposit or property purchase plus a good local lawyer, because the in-country process rewards professional help. If you happen to hold a qualifying pension, compare the Pensionado route, which can be cheaper than the deposit. Whichever you choose, the tax picture is the same and unusually friendly, so read the tax page next to understand why foreign income stays untaxed, and the residency page for how provisional status becomes permanent and, in time, citizenship.