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Relocation Guide

Forex Trader Visa & Residency Guide for Europe 2026

10 European visa and residency programmes accessible to forex traders, compared by tax rate, income requirement, cost, Schengen access, and path to citizenship. From 0% CGT in Cyprus to 50% income exemption in Greece.

Published 2026-06-1410 programmes compared29 jurisdictions referenced

Quick Answer

The best visa programme depends on your priorities. For unconditional 0% CGT, relocate to Cyprus (Category F permit). For 0% for one year with Schengen access, Croatia's digital nomad visa. For long-term low tax with EU lifestyle, Greece (7.5% effective for 7 years). For tax-free compounding through a corporate structure, Estonia (OUe with 0% on retained profits). Use the Relocation Calculator to model the exact savings for your trading volume and current jurisdiction.

Programme Comparison at a Glance

Sorted by effective CGT rate, lowest first. Income requirements and costs are approximate and exclude living expenses.

CountryProgrammeEffective CGTIncome Req.Min CostSchengenEurozonePR PathBest For
CyprusCategory F0%EUR 9,000/yrEUR 570+NoYes5 yearsFull-time traders; unconditional 0%
CroatiaDigital Nomad0% (1 year)EUR 2,539/moEUR 280+YesYesN/A from DNShort-term tax-free trading + travel
MaltaGRP (non-dom)0% (non-remitted)Property req.EUR 6,000+YesYes5 yearsHigh-net-worth; 0% if gains stay offshore
Estoniae-Residency + OUe0% retainedEUR 2,500 cap.EUR 790+NoYesN/ARemote corporate structure; compound gains tax-free
NetherlandsZelfstandig~2.2% on assetsScoredEUR 2,446+YesYes5 yearsTraders with small accounts relative to gains
GreeceDigital Nomad (Art. 5C)7.5% effectiveEUR 3,500/moEUR 375+YesYes7 years7-year 50% exemption; low cost of living
BulgariaSelf-Employment10% flat~EUR 3–5k savingsEUR 850+NoNo5 yearsLowest flat CGT in the EU; very low costs
SpainNon-Lucrative19–28%EUR 28,800/yrEUR 596+YesYes5 yearsLifestyle + low-tier CGT on small gains
ItalyElective Residence26% or EUR 100k flatEUR 31,000/yrEUR 1,116+YesYes5 yearsVery high earners (EUR 100k flat uncaps)
PortugalD7 Passive Income28%EUR 9,870/yrEUR 373+YesYes5 yearsFast citizenship (5 yr); low income bar

Programme-by-Programme Analysis

Each programme is assessed from a forex trader's perspective: what tax rate applies to trading gains, what the visa costs and requires, and what the practical path to long-term residency looks like.

Portugal: D7 Passive Income Visa

Passive Income

Duration

2 years (initial)

Renewability

3-year renewals; indefinite after 5 years

Income Requirement

EUR 9,870/year (100% of Portuguese minimum wage); higher for dependants

Trading Tax Rate

28% autonomous or 14.5–48% englobamento

Application Cost

EUR 90 (visa) + EUR 83 (SEF residence permit) + ~EUR 200–500 legal fees

Processing Time

2–4 months (consulate) + 1–2 months (SEF appointment)

Path to PR

5 years of legal residence

Path to Citizenship

5 years (one of the shortest in the EU); requires A2 Portuguese

Schengen Access

Yes

Tax Treatment for Forex Traders

Trading income qualifies as passive income for D7 purposes. Standard 28% flat rate applies to capital gains; englobamento (progressive scale) is optional. The former NHR regime (0% on foreign-source gains) closed to new applicants 31 Dec 2023; its successor IFICI requires a qualifying high-value activity and is not generally available to full-time traders.

Key Advantage

Low income threshold, fast citizenship path, Schengen access, established expat infrastructure

Key Risk

NHR/IFICI no longer available for most traders; standard 28% CGT applies

Greece: Digital Nomad Visa (Art. 5C)

Digital Nomad

Duration

1 year (initial)

Renewability

Renewable for 1 year; up to 2 years total

Income Requirement

EUR 3,500/month (EUR 42,000/year); +20% per spouse, +15% per child

Trading Tax Rate

50% exemption on qualifying income for up to 7 years

Application Cost

EUR 75 (visa) + EUR 150 (residence permit) + ~EUR 300–800 legal fees

Processing Time

1–3 months

Path to PR

7 years of legal residence

Path to Citizenship

7 years; requires Greek language proficiency

Schengen Access

Yes

Tax Treatment for Forex Traders

Under Article 5C of the Greek Income Tax Code, digital nomads who transfer their tax residence to Greece receive a 50% income exemption for up to 7 years. Applied to a 15% flat CGT on financial instruments, the effective rate becomes 7.5%. Condition: must not have been Greek tax-resident in 5 of the previous 6 years. Must derive income from employment or self-employment outside Greece.

Key Advantage

50% tax exemption for 7 years; effective 7.5% CGT on trading gains; low cost of living; Schengen

Key Risk

Income must be from outside Greece; 2-year maximum stay on DN visa (must switch to another permit for longer)

Croatia: Digital Nomad Visa

Digital Nomad

Duration

1 year

Renewability

Must leave for 6 months before reapplying

Income Requirement

EUR 2,539/month (approx. 2.5x Croatian average salary)

Trading Tax Rate

0% (no local tax if income sourced outside Croatia)

Application Cost

EUR 80 (visa) + ~EUR 200–500 legal fees

Processing Time

1–2 months

Path to PR

Not directly from DN visa; must switch to standard residence permit

Path to Citizenship

8 years of continuous residence (not via DN visa)

Schengen Access

Yes

Tax Treatment for Forex Traders

Digital nomad visa holders are explicitly exempt from Croatian income tax provided their income is derived from clients/employers outside Croatia. Trading gains from a non-Croatian broker are not Croatian-source income. However, this only applies during the visa period (max 1 year); after that, standard Croatian tax (10% CGT + prirez municipal surtax) applies if you establish tax residency.

Key Advantage

0% tax for 1 year; eurozone (EUR, no conversion cost); Schengen + EU member; low cost of living on coast

Key Risk

1-year maximum with 6-month gap; no path to permanent residency from DN visa

Spain: Non-Lucrative Visa (Visado de Residencia No Lucrativa)

Independent Means

Duration

1 year (initial)

Renewability

2-year renewals

Income Requirement

EUR 28,800/year (400% of IPREM); +EUR 7,200 per dependant

Trading Tax Rate

19–28% (four-tier progressive)

Application Cost

EUR 80 (visa) + EUR 15.76 (NIE) + ~EUR 500–1,000 legal fees

Processing Time

2–4 months

Path to PR

5 years of continuous legal residence

Path to Citizenship

10 years (2 years for nationals of former Spanish colonies)

Schengen Access

Yes

Tax Treatment for Forex Traders

The non-lucrative visa prohibits employment in Spain but permits passive income and investment activities, including trading. Spain applies a progressive savings tax: 19% on the first EUR 6,000, 21% on EUR 6,001–50,000, 23% on EUR 50,001–200,000, 27% on EUR 200,001–300,000, and 28% above. The Beckham Law (Ley Beckham) flat 24% rate applies only to employment income and is not available for trading gains.

Key Advantage

Established expat infrastructure; good climate; Schengen; lower-tier CGT (19%) on gains under EUR 6,000

Key Risk

No work permitted; relatively high CGT on large gains (28%); Modelo 720 foreign asset declaration (EUR 50,000 threshold)

Estonia: e-Residency + OUe (corporate structure)

Corporate

Duration

Indefinite (e-Residency is a digital identity, not a visa)

Renewability

e-Residency card renewed every 5 years

Income Requirement

None for e-Residency; OUe requires EUR 2,500 share capital

Trading Tax Rate

0% on retained profits; 20/80 on distribution

Application Cost

EUR 100–130 (e-Residency) + EUR 190 (company registration) + ~EUR 500–1,000 annual accounting

Processing Time

3–6 weeks (e-Residency); 1 day (company registration online)

Path to PR

e-Residency does not lead to physical residence; separate visa required

Path to Citizenship

N/A via e-Residency alone

Schengen Access

No

Tax Treatment for Forex Traders

Estonia’s unique CIT regime taxes corporate profits only upon distribution. An OUe (osaühing) retaining all trading profits pays 0% tax indefinitely. Upon distribution, the rate is 20/80 (standard) or 14/86 (regular dividends after 3 years). Critical caveat: e-Residency does not grant physical residency or tax residency in Estonia. If you remain tax-resident elsewhere, CFC rules in your home country may attribute OUe income to your personal tax return. Genuine substance (Estonian director, office, activity) is strongly recommended.

Key Advantage

0% retained profits indefinitely; fully remote company formation; EU-based corporate entity; digital-first administration

Key Risk

CFC risk if trader remains tax-resident elsewhere; no physical residency; substance requirements for credibility; accounting costs

Cyprus: Category F Permit (Self-Sufficient Person)

Self-Employment

Duration

1 year (initial)

Renewability

Annual renewals; indefinite after PR granted

Income Requirement

EUR 9,000/year from abroad (+EUR 4,613 per dependant); evidence of stable foreign income

Trading Tax Rate

0% on financial instruments

Application Cost

EUR 70 (application) + ~EUR 500–1,000 legal fees

Processing Time

1–2 months (Civil Registry and Migration)

Path to PR

5 years of legal residence (or fast-track investment PR at EUR 300,000)

Path to Citizenship

7 years of residence; Greek language requirement

Schengen Access

No

Tax Treatment for Forex Traders

Cyprus imposes 0% CGT on profits from financial instruments (forex, CFDs, shares on recognised exchanges). This exemption is unconditional: no holding period, no income threshold, no remittance requirement. The 183-day rule (or 60-day rule for non-domiciled individuals) establishes tax residency. Non-domiciled residents are also exempt from Special Defence Contribution (SDC) at 17% on dividends and 30% on interest. Category F is the standard permit for self-sufficient non-EU nationals.

Key Advantage

0% CGT unconditionally; no wealth tax; non-dom SDC exemption; Limassol broker capital; English widely spoken

Key Risk

Not Schengen (yet); 7-year citizenship path; summer heat; small domestic market

Malta: Global Residence Programme (GRP)

Investor

Duration

Indefinite (as long as conditions met)

Renewability

Annual compliance check

Income Requirement

No formal income threshold; must own/rent qualifying property (purchase EUR 275,000+ or rent EUR 9,600+/year)

Trading Tax Rate

0% on non-remitted foreign-source gains (non-dom)

Application Cost

EUR 6,000 (GRP application) + property investment + ~EUR 2,000–4,000 legal fees

Processing Time

3–6 months

Path to PR

GRP itself is a form of residence; PR after 5 years

Path to Citizenship

Not available through GRP; citizenship requires 18 years of residence or exceptional merit

Schengen Access

Yes

Tax Treatment for Forex Traders

Under the remittance basis, non-domiciled individuals pay 0% on foreign-source capital gains that are not remitted to Malta. Trading gains kept in a non-Maltese bank account are not taxable. If you remit gains to Malta, they are taxed at 15% (minimum EUR 15,000/year under GRP). The GRP requires a minimum tax of EUR 15,000 per year, which covers any remitted income. Local-source income is taxed at a flat 15%. Non-dom status is available to anyone who is not born in Malta and has not been domiciled in Malta.

Key Advantage

0% on non-remitted gains; EU + Schengen + eurozone; English-speaking; 15% flat rate on remitted income

Key Risk

Minimum EUR 15,000/year tax (regardless of income); property investment required; EUR 6,000 application fee; small island

Italy: Elective Residence Visa (Residenza Elettiva)

Independent Means

Duration

1 year (initial)

Renewability

2-year renewals

Income Requirement

~EUR 31,000/year (demonstrated passive income or substantial savings)

Trading Tax Rate

26% flat (imposta sostitutiva) or EUR 100,000/year flat tax (lump-sum regime)

Application Cost

EUR 116 (visa) + ~EUR 1,000–2,000 legal fees

Processing Time

2–4 months

Path to PR

5 years of legal residence (EU Long-Term Residence Permit)

Path to Citizenship

10 years (4 years for EU citizens)

Schengen Access

Yes

Tax Treatment for Forex Traders

Italy’s lump-sum tax regime (Art. 24-bis TUIR) allows new residents to pay a flat EUR 100,000/year on all foreign-source income, regardless of amount. For a trader earning EUR 500,000+ from foreign brokers, the effective rate drops below 20%. The standard regime imposes 26% imposta sostitutiva on capital gains. The regime amministrato (Italian broker withholding) simplifies compliance. The lump-sum regime lasts 15 years (extended from 10 in 2024) and requires not having been Italian tax-resident in 9 of the previous 10 years.

Key Advantage

EUR 100,000 flat tax uncaps foreign income; Schengen; strong expat communities; quality of life

Key Risk

EUR 100,000 minimum is high for smaller traders; standard 26% CGT if not on lump-sum; IVAFE 0.2% on foreign accounts

Netherlands: Orientation Year Visa / Self-Employment (Zelfstandig)

Self-Employment

Duration

2 years (self-employment)

Renewability

5-year renewal

Income Requirement

Scored on Dutch national interest, experience, business plan (no fixed income threshold)

Trading Tax Rate

~2.17% effective (Box 3 deemed return)

Application Cost

EUR 1,446 (residence permit) + ~EUR 1,000–2,000 legal/advisory fees

Processing Time

3–6 months

Path to PR

5 years of continuous legal residence

Path to Citizenship

5 years; requires integration exam and Dutch language (B1)

Schengen Access

Yes

Tax Treatment for Forex Traders

The Netherlands does not tax actual capital gains on personal investment assets. Instead, Box 3 applies a deemed return (6.04% for 2026 on assets above the EUR 57,000 threshold) taxed at 36%, producing an effective rate of ~2.17% on asset value per year. Losses are irrelevant. For a trader with EUR 200,000 in a broker account, Box 3 costs ~EUR 4,340/year regardless of performance. The self-employed visa is difficult to obtain for pure trading activities; the IND (immigration authority) requires demonstrated added value to the Dutch economy.

Key Advantage

No tax on actual gains; fixed annual cost; strong rule of law; English widely spoken; Schengen

Key Risk

Box 3 tax on asset value even in losing years; self-employed visa hard to get for pure trading; high cost of living

Bulgaria: Freelancer / Self-Employment Permit (Type D Visa)

Self-Employment

Duration

1 year (initial)

Renewability

Annual renewals; PR after 5 years

Income Requirement

Proof of sufficient means (~EUR 3,000–5,000 in bank account); no strict monthly income threshold

Trading Tax Rate

10% flat

Application Cost

EUR 50–100 (visa) + EUR 500–1,000 (residence permit) + ~EUR 300–500 legal fees

Processing Time

1–3 months

Path to PR

5 years of continuous legal residence

Path to Citizenship

5 years after PR (10 years total); language requirement

Schengen Access

No

Tax Treatment for Forex Traders

Bulgaria applies a flat 10% PIT on all income including capital gains—one of the lowest rates in the EU. Unlike Romania, there is no hidden health insurance surcharge (CASS) on trading gains above a threshold. Loss offsetting is permitted within the same year. No wealth tax, no financial transaction tax. The BGN is pegged to EUR at 1.95583 (currency board arrangement since 1997), providing near-zero conversion risk. ERM II member since July 2020; euro adoption expected 2026–2027.

Key Advantage

Lowest CGT in the EU (10%); very low cost of living; BGN/EUR peg; EU member; no CASS trap

Key Risk

Not yet Schengen; weaker infrastructure outside Sofia; language barrier; smaller expat community

Exit Taxes: What You Pay When You Leave

Before relocating, check whether your current country imposes a departure tax on unrealised gains. Most EU exit taxes target substantial shareholdings rather than retail forex positions, but the rules vary significantly. Within the EU/EEA, exit taxes must be deferrable under the Anti-Tax Avoidance Directive (ATAD).

CountryExit Tax MechanismThreshold / ScopeEU/EEA Deferral
GermanyWegzugsbesteuerung (Sec 6 AStG)Qualifying holdings 1%+ in a companyWithin EU/EEA: interest-free installments over 7 years; outside: immediate
FranceExit tax (Art. 167 bis CGI)EUR 800,000 in securities or 50%+ of a companyWithin EU/EEA: automatic deferral; must file annual declarations
NetherlandsConservatoire aanslagSubstantial holdings (5%+ in a company); Box 2 onlyWithin EU: 10-year deferred assessment
AustriaWegzugsbesteuerung (Sec 27 EStG)All financial assets at departureWithin EU/EEA: deferred until actual disposal; outside: immediate
DenmarkFraflytterbeskatningShares valued at DKK 100,000+Within EU/EEA: deferral with security deposit
SpainExit tax (Ley 27/2014, Art. 95 bis)Shares/participations valued at EUR 4M+ or 25%+ of entityWithin EU/EEA: deferred until sale
NorwayUtflyttingsskatt (Skatteloven 10-70)Shares with unrealised gain of NOK 500,000+Within EEA: 12-year deferral (exit after 28 Nov 2022: 7 years)
ItalyImposta di uscita (Art. 166 TUIR)Business assets transferred abroadWithin EU/EEA: 5-year installment plan
SwedenTioarsregeln (10-year rule)Former Swedish resident who held shares while in SwedenSwedish-source gains taxable for 10 years after departure
FinlandMuuttovero (limited)Gains realised within 3 years of departure may be taxable3-year look-back period

Exit tax rules are complex and change frequently. This table covers the most common provisions as of June 2026. Always consult a cross-border tax adviser before relocating. Countries not listed (Cyprus, Malta, Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece, Romania, Czech Republic) generally do not impose exit taxes on individual financial assets.

Relocation Checklist for Forex Traders

A genuine relocation is the non-negotiable prerequisite for any tax residency change. Sham relocations are detected through CRS data matching, GAAR, and substance tests. Follow this checklist to establish defensible tax residency in your new jurisdiction.

1

Assess exit tax exposure

Check if your current country imposes departure tax on unrealised gains. If so, calculate the liability and explore EU/EEA deferral provisions before leaving.

2

Establish genuine residency

Move your centre of vital interests: lease/buy accommodation, register with local authorities, open a local bank account, register for healthcare. The 183-day physical presence test is necessary but may not be sufficient—DTAs use a hierarchy of tiebreaker criteria.

3

Notify home-country tax authority

File a departure declaration (e.g., Abmeldung in Germany, désinscription fiscale in France). Failure to formally deregister may result in continued tax obligations.

4

Open a local bank account

Required for most residence permits and practical daily life. Some brokers require a bank account in the country of residence for withdrawals.

5

Transfer broker accounts

Update your broker account address to your new jurisdiction. The broker’s CRS reporting will switch to your new country of tax residence. Some brokers may require you to re-onboard under a different entity (e.g., CySEC entity instead of FCA entity).

6

Register for local taxation

Obtain a tax identification number (NIF in Portugal, AFM in Greece, NIE in Spain, TIN in Cyprus). File local tax returns from the date of tax residency.

7

Maintain evidence of relocation

Keep flight records, utility bills, rental agreements, local purchases, social memberships, healthcare registrations. In a tax residency dispute, documentation is the deciding factor.

8

Understand CRS reporting timeline

CRS data is exchanged annually (typically September for the prior calendar year). There may be a transition year where both old and new countries receive reports. Ensure your broker has your updated tax residency to report correctly.

Recommendations by Trader Profile

Day Trader (high volume, needs 0% CGT)

Cyprus (Category F). Unconditional 0% on financial instruments, no holding period, eurozone (zero conversion cost), English widely spoken. Not yet Schengen, but the trade-off is worth it for serious volume.

Swing Trader (medium volume, lifestyle priority)

Greece (Digital Nomad Art. 5C). 7.5% effective CGT for 7 years, Schengen access, low cost of living, excellent climate. Income must come from outside Greece.

Budget-Conscious Trader (minimise all costs)

Bulgaria (Self-Employment). 10% flat CGT with no hidden surcharges, lowest living costs in the EU, BGN pegged to EUR, 5-year path to PR. Not yet Schengen.

High-Net-Worth Trader (EUR 500k+ gains)

Malta (GRP) or Italy(lump-sum regime). Malta: 0% on non-remitted gains with EUR 15,000 minimum tax. Italy: EUR 100,000 flat tax on all foreign income (effective <20% at EUR 500k+). Both Schengen and eurozone.

Digital Nomad (1 year, maximum flexibility)

Croatia (DN visa). 0% local tax for 1 year, eurozone, Schengen, stunning coastline. No path to PR from DN visa, but ideal for a tax-free gap year while planning a permanent move.

Corporate Trader (compound gains tax-free)

Estonia (e-Residency + OUe). 0% on retained corporate profits, fully remote administration, EU entity. Combine with physical residency in Cyprus or Bulgaria for the best personal + corporate structure.

Open a Broker Account Before You Move

Some brokers require re-onboarding when you change your country of residence (e.g., switching from an FCA entity to a CySEC entity). Opening your account before relocating ensures continuity. These three brokers serve EU/EEA traders and accept applications from most European jurisdictions:

CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 70–82% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs.

CRS, GAAR, and Substance: The Compliance Boundaries

The Common Reporting Standard (CRS) means your broker automatically reports your account data to the tax authority of your declared country of residence. When you relocate, update your tax residency with your broker immediately. CRS data is exchanged annually (typically September), so there is always a transition period where both the old and new jurisdictions may receive data.

The General Anti-Avoidance Rule (GAAR), mandatory across all EU member states under ATAD, allows tax authorities to disregard arrangements whose primary purpose is obtaining a tax advantage. A genuine relocation (real change of life centre, physical presence, severed ties with the old jurisdiction) is not caught by GAAR. A paper-only address change is.

Substance requirements are tightening across the EU. The proposed Unshell Directive (ATAD III) would require entities to demonstrate genuine economic activity (employees, premises, decision-making) to retain tax benefits. This directly affects Estonian OUe, Cypriot Ltd, and Maltese structures used by traders. Even without the directive, CFC rules in most departure countries already attribute shell-entity income to the beneficial owner.

The safest approach is straightforward: relocate genuinely, live in the new country, declare everything, and maintain documentation. Tax optimisation through legitimate residency choice is explicitly protected under EU law. Tax evasion through sham arrangements is a criminal offence in every EU member state.

Methodology

Programme data is sourced from national immigration authority publications, consular websites, and verified against third-party immigration law firms as of June 2026. Tax rates are based on published national legislation; effective rates account for special regimes (non-dom, lump-sum, digital nomad exemptions) where applicable.

Application costs include government fees only; legal fees are estimated ranges based on market rates. Income requirements are per the primary applicant without dependants unless stated otherwise. Processing times are typical ranges and may vary by consulate and season.

This guide is for informational purposes and does not constitute immigration, tax, or legal advice. Immigration and tax rules change frequently. Engage qualified professionals in both your departure and destination jurisdictions before acting.

Frequently Asked Questions

Related Research

Risk Warning & Disclaimer

CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. Between 70–82% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute immigration, tax, legal, or financial advice. Immigration rules, visa requirements, and tax laws change frequently; individual circumstances vary. Consult qualified immigration and tax professionals in both your departure and destination jurisdictions before making any decisions based on this research. FX-Brokers.eu may receive compensation from the brokers listed on this site.