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Belgium: visas, tax & cost of living

Belgium: honest, sourced estimates on entry rules, the digital nomad visa, tax residency and the cost of living, tailored to your passport.

Belgium: visas, tax & cost of living
Your passport

United KingdomBelgium

Your move to Belgium on a United Kingdom passport

  • VisitEasyVisa-free entry
  • NomadHardDifficult, indirect route
  • RelocateHardLimited residence routes

Visiting

Visa-free for up to 90 days. Travel on a passport valid for your whole stay, with a return or onward ticket and proof you can support yourself.

Passport validity:Passport should be valid for at least 3 months beyond your planned departure from the Schengen area and issued within the last 10 years.

Heads-up:The EU Entry/Exit System (EES) became fully operational on 10 April 2026, recording biometrics at the border; ETIAS travel authorisation for visa-exempt visitors is expected to launch in the last quarter of 2026.

At the border:Valid passport, proof of accommodation or purpose, sufficient funds and onward/return travel may be requested.

Working remotely

No dedicated nomad visa; the usual route is a standard residence permit.

Tax and residency

You are generally a Belgian tax resident if your home or centre of economic interests is in Belgium, and registration in a commune plus spending more than 183 days here usually triggers it; residents must declare worldwide income, though tax treaties may exempt foreign income while still counting it toward the rate.(estimate)

The UK decides residence with its Statutory Residence Test (days in the UK plus your ties). As a non-resident you are usually taxed only on UK income; where one exists, a double-tax treaty with the destination decides who taxes what.

Practical

Currency:EUR. Cost of living:high.

Healthcare:Legal residents must register with a health insurance fund (mutualite/ziekenfonds) to access the compulsory reimbursement system, so plan on private cover until that is set up.

Driving:Non-EU/EEA licence holders may drive on their home licence for about 185 days after registering with their commune, after which they must exchange it; an IDP or official translation is recommended if your licence is not in a Roman-alphabet language.

Sources: FPS Foreign Affairs - National visa (D-visa) · FPS Finance - Coming to Belgium tax return · FPS Finance - Foreign income · EU - Entry/Exit System and ETIAS · GOV.UK: tax on foreign income · HMRC: double-taxation treaties

Estimates, not advice. Confirm with the official sources before you act.

Frequently asked questions

Belgium: is there a digital nomad visa?
No dedicated digital nomad visa; most people use a standard residence permit instead.
Belgium: when do you become a tax resident?
You are generally a Belgian tax resident if your home or centre of economic interests is in Belgium, and registration in a commune plus spending more than 183 days here usually triggers it; residents must declare worldwide income, though tax treaties may exempt foreign income while still counting it toward the rate.
Belgium: what is the cost of living?
The cost of living is high and the local currency is the EUR. Treat any figures as estimates.
Belgium: do you need health insurance?
Legal residents must register with a health insurance fund (mutualite/ziekenfonds) to access the compulsory reimbursement system, so plan on private cover until that is set up.
Belgium: can you drive on a foreign licence?
Non-EU/EEA licence holders may drive on their home licence for about 185 days after registering with their commune, after which they must exchange it; an IDP or official translation is recommended if your licence is not in a Roman-alphabet language.

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Last verified: 2026-06-26

Voymo gives general information to help you organise your move. It is not legal, tax, or immigration advice, always confirm with an official source or a qualified professional before you act.

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