Long-time nomad here. I see a lot of churn — people deciding to travel and work remotely who don’t have a solid income. They burn through savings, try to build a business and get customers from abroad, then give up. You can stretch the money better living in a cheaper country, but if you don’t have a steady income you will go broke and burn out spending all your time hustling.
Younger nomads especially struggle with visas. Most countries have income or savings requirements for granting long-stay visas. If you travel on tourist visas you have to move every few months, less than ideal and expensive for building a stable income.
I don’t know the “failure rate” for digital nomads. My anecdotal experience says that’s a high percentage.
hopefully they're also invoicing and not just being forced to bridge time between contracts by moving to a cheaper country? very much cheering for them!!
Good point - if it's just a cost-savings, it less awesome. Not knocking it, I mean you gotta do what you can. But I love the idea of carving out your own balance of work and life.
I was thinking it would be great for a company to incentivize a family nomadic trip (during a school break or something) to a timezone that might need better coverage for whatever the remote worker does. You know, here's extra funds to spend some time in APAC or EMEA for someone who specializes in a needed topic. Bring the family, make memories for a week. Would be a wonderful perk.
Younger nomads especially struggle with visas. Most countries have income or savings requirements for granting long-stay visas. If you travel on tourist visas you have to move every few months, less than ideal and expensive for building a stable income.
I don’t know the “failure rate” for digital nomads. My anecdotal experience says that’s a high percentage.