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Nomads & Communities
14JUN

Greece closes in-country nomad visa route

4 min read
11:49UTC

Greece's Law 5275/2026 abolished in-country switching for the digital nomad visa, leaving applicants with a single legal route: a Type D long-stay visa obtained at a Greek consulate or embassy before arrival.

SocietyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Greece converted its nomad visa to consulate-only one peak season before the application crunch, with no consular processing baseline published.

Greece's Law 5275/2026 abolished in-country switching for the Greece Digital Nomad Visa, leaving applicants with a single legal route: a Type D national long-stay visa obtained at a Greek consulate or embassy before arrival. 1 The income threshold sits at €3,500 per month net, €42,000 annually, with a +20% spouse supplement and +15% for each dependent child. That floor runs roughly 70% above Portugal's D8 figure and roughly triple Italy's, but it now applies without the in-country conversion from a Schengen short-stay that previously distinguished Greece from consulate-only Spain.

An applicant currently in Athens on a tourist stamp must now leave Greece, queue at a Greek mission abroad, and re-enter on the long-stay visa before working. A planned arrival inside the May to June application peak now sits on the wrong side of the rule. The Hellenic Ministry of Migration had not, as of 8 May, published consular processing-time guidance for the new sole route.

Portugal's AIMA cultural-mediator strike cut D8 visa processing capacity above 70% adhesion through the spring, and the agency's pending caseload sits above 300,000 cases in Q1 2026. 2 Athens is now running the same calendar with a tighter rule, no in-country safety valve, and no published consular baseline against which an applicant can plan. That sets up a multi-month wait as the probable outcome rather than the four-week turnaround that ran through 2025.

Law 5275 also fits a wider Iberian-Hellenic convergence. Portugal's ten-year naturalisation rule tightened the long end of the residency curve in April; Athens has now tightened the entry. The Ministry of Migration's next move is the test: a published consular processing-time guideline before the application peak, or applicants priced into an unguided queue.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Greece has a 'digital nomad visa' aimed at people who work remotely for companies or clients outside Greece. Until recently, you could arrive in Greece on a standard tourist visa (which lets EU citizens stay as long as they like, and non-EU citizens stay up to 90 days) and then apply to switch to the nomad visa while already in the country. Law 5275/2026, passed in early 2026, closed that route. Now you must apply at a Greek embassy or consulate in your home country before you travel. You need to show at least €3,500 per month of net income. Only once the consulate approves your application can you enter Greece on the nomad visa. If you were planning to fly to Athens on a tourist visa and sort the paperwork once there, that plan no longer works. You need to queue at a Greek consulate abroad first, and Greece has not yet published how long that queue takes.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Greece's move to consulate-only predates the application pressure and reflects two structural constraints.

First, the AIMA precedent in Portugal gave Athens a specific model of what in-country switching produces at scale: a domestic agency overwhelmed by conversion applications from people who arrived on Schengen tourist stamps. The Hellenic Ministry of Migration designed Law 5275/2026 to push that volume offshore before it reached domestic processing.

Second, Greece's STR enforcement architecture under the same law depends on knowing, before a foreigner arrives, that their income and purpose are compliant. An in-country switching route meant that someone could arrive on a tourist stamp, begin working, and apply to convert status later. The consulate-only requirement eliminates the gap between arrival and legal authorisation.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Applications filed at Greek consulates in London, Paris, Berlin and New York will face processing queues extending into late summer 2026 without published Service Level Agreements, producing a gap in the planned arrival calendar for the May-June peak cohort.

  • Precedent

    Greece's consulate-only requirement, following Spain's 2023 model, confirms that Mediterranean nomad visa destinations are converging on pre-arrival verification as the standard architecture, making in-country conversion a legacy feature rather than a live option across southern Europe.

First Reported In

Update #3 · Twelve days to a split STR framework

GTP Headlines· 8 May 2026
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