Iceland · Visas & Residency

No retirement visa.
Here's what's real.

Iceland issues residence permits for work, study, and family — not for passive income, savings, or property. If you're 50–70 and not planning to work, your realistic options are a 180-day remote-work stay or family ties. We'd rather tell you now than after you've sold the house.

Figures verified 9 July 2026

The 2026 comparison — every route that exists

RouteWho it's forMoney requirement (2026)Leads to
Long-term remote-work visa
Full guide →
Remote employees of foreign companies (US/CA payroll), visa-exempt nationals ISK 1,000,000/month income (≈ $7,975); ISK 1,300,000 with spouse/partner or children; ISK 12,200 fee Nothing. Max 180 days, non-renewable, then 12 months before you can reapply. Not a residence permit
Work permit
(qualified professional)
People with university-level or recognised technical qualifications and an Icelandic job offer No personal wealth test — the employer applies and must show no EEA candidate could fill the role Residence permit → permanent residency at 4 yrs → citizenship at 7 yrs
Parents 67+
family permit
A parent aged 67 or older of an adult child legally living in Iceland Secure means of support required: ISK 259,951/month for an individual (2026), halved to ISK 129,976 if you're dependent on your child; private health insurance (min. ISK 2M cover) for the first 6 months. Fee ISK 110,000 Residence permit on the family track — the realistic long-stay route for retirees, if your child lives there
Study / other University students, au pairs, volunteers, people with special ties to Iceland Varies by permit; students must show means of support Student permits have limited paths toward settlement; "special ties" is narrow and discretionary
What does not work: buying property, showing a pension, parking savings in an Icelandic bank, or "investor" routes — none of these confer any right to reside. Iceland has no golden visa, no digital-nomad residence permit, and no passive-income permit. Anyone selling you one is selling smoke. Read the full explanation →
Visiting is easy; staying is hard. Americans and Canadians get 90 days visa-free in any rolling 180 across the whole Schengen area — Iceland is in Schengen. That's plenty for scouting trips and summer stays. The remote-work visa roughly doubles it, once.

If you do qualify: the residency timeline

Step 1 · Before travel

Permit application

Non-EEA nationals apply to the Directorate of Immigration (Útlendingastofnun) before moving. Non-EEA permits require private health insurance from an authorised Icelandic insurer for the first 6 months.

Step 2 · On arrival

Kennitala + domicile

Your kennitala (national ID number) and legal domicile are registered via the Directorate of Immigration with Registers Iceland (skra.is). The kennitala unlocks everything: banking, healthcare, tax.

Step 3 · Year 4

Permanent residency

After 4 years' continuous residence on a permit that can be the basis for it. Time on the remote-work visa does not count — it's a visa, not a permit.

★ Step 4 · Year 7

Citizenship

7 years' domicile for the general case (4 years if married to an Icelander who's been a citizen 5+ years). Icelandic language requirement applies.

Reality check. Applications to Útlendingastofnun are paper-based for several permit types, and processing runs weeks to months depending on category. The remote-work visa is the fast lane at 3–4 weeks from a complete file; work and family permits take longer. Build slack into your plans.
In this section

Guides

★ Start here

Iceland has no retirement visa

Why the route doesn't exist, why "EEA but not EU" matters, and an honest map of the four legal alternatives.

Read the guide →
Guide

The 180-day remote-work visa

ISK 1,000,000/month, form L-802, the 12-month re-entry rule, and what the visa does and doesn't get you.

Read the guide →
Coming soon

The parents-67+ permit, step by step

Documents, the means-of-support rules, and how the family track actually plays out for US/CA parents.

Coming soon

Work permits after 50

What "qualified professional" means in practice, the labour-market test, and sectors that actually sponsor.

Coming soon

Scouting trips & the 90/180 rule

How Schengen counting works for Iceland, the EES biometric border, and stretching legal summer stays.

Coming soon

Citizenship at year 7

The domicile rule, the 90-days-abroad limit, and the Icelandic language test.

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