Skip to content
Published on

AI Digital Nomad & Remote Work Tooling 2026 Deep Dive - Nomad List, Deel, Plane, Remote.com, Around, Tandem, gather.town, Rippling Global, Oyster HR, Multiplier, Velocity Global, Workation Korea, Hokkaido Workation, Kamakura Analysis

Authors

Prologue — Digital Nomads Are No Longer a Tribe

In spring 2020 the pandemic closed offices. By autumn 2023 many companies tried to reopen them, but some currents did not flow back. MBO Partners 2024 State of Independence in America estimates about 17.2 million Americans now define themselves as digital nomads — more than double the 7.3 million of 2019.

Behind that number is the wave of 50-plus countries issuing digital nomad visas. Portugal D8 (2022), Spain (2023), Estonia, UAE, Argentina, Indonesia (Bali), Brazil, Croatia, Greece, and Italy launched visas, and in 2024 Korea (Workation Visa J-1) and Japan (Digital Nomad Visa) joined the list.

And the toolchain holding that wave up has grown enormous.

  • Discovery / Community — Nomad List, Remote OK, WiFi Tribe, Hacker Paradise
  • Employment / Payroll — Deel, Remote.com, Oyster HR, Multiplier, Rippling Global
  • Project management — Plane (open source), Linear, Asana, ClickUp, Monday, Notion
  • Async video — Loom, Vidcast (Cisco), Tella, Bubbles
  • Sync video — Zoom, Meet, Teams, Around, Tandem, gather.town
  • Workation hubs — Jeju, Yangyang, Gangwon, Busan + Hokkaido, Kamakura, Okinawa, Nagano, Wakayama
  • eSIM / Banking / Insurance — Airalo, Holafly, Wise, Revolut, SafetyWing

This article walks through those 80-plus tools, services, policies, and cultures in one continuous flow.


1. The 2026 Digital Nomad Industry — In Numbers

First the size of the market. Estimates as of May 2026.

  • Global digital nomad population — about 40 million (A Brother Abroad estimate, 2024). USA 17.2 million, Europe about 8 million, Asia about 6 million.
  • EOR (Employer of Record) market size — about USD 60 billion (Grand View Research, 2024). 12 percent annual growth.
  • Number of countries issuing nomad visas — over 50. Exploded from 5 in 2020.
  • Average nomad income — USD 124,000 (MBO Partners, 2024). Higher than typical remote workers (USD 89,000).
  • Average nomad stay per city — 6.4 months (Nomad List data).
  • Top 5 nomad cities — Lisbon, Bangkok, Mexico City, Bali (Ubud), Medellin (Nomad List 2025).

Major player categories.

  • Discovery / Community: Nomad List, Remote OK, WiFi Tribe, Hacker Paradise, NomadSquad
  • EOR: Deel, Remote.com, Oyster HR, Multiplier, Velocity Global, Globalization Partners (G-P), Papaya Global, Rippling Global
  • Distributed PM: Plane, Linear, Asana, ClickUp, Monday.com, Notion
  • Async video: Loom, Vidcast, Tella, Bubbles, Komodo Decks
  • Sync video: Zoom, Google Meet, Microsoft Teams, Around, Tandem, gather.town, Spatial Chat
  • Distributed work platforms: Slack, Discord, WorkOS Together
  • Coworking: WeWork, Industrious, Regus/IWG
  • Korean workation: Jeju, Yangyang/Gangwon, Busan
  • Japanese workation: Hokkaido, Kamakura, Okinawa, Nagano (Karuizawa), Wakayama
  • eSIM/Bank/Insurance: Airalo, Holafly, Wise, Revolut, Mercury, Toss, Sony Bank, SafetyWing

2. The 6-Layer Digital Nomad Stack — 2026 Standard

The stack the industry has agreed on has six layers.

[Digital Nomad 6-Layer Stack — 2026]
  L1. Visa / Stay      — Nomad visa, workation visa, 30/90-day tourist
  L2. Employment       — EOR, 1099 contractor, global payroll
  L3. Collaboration    — Async docs, PM boards, sync video calls
  L4. Infrastructure   — eSIM internet, VPN, banking, insurance
  L5. Housing / Space  — Coliving, coworking, monthly Airbnb
  L6. Community        — Nomad List chat, local Slack, meetups

Each layer briefly.

  • L1 Visa — 50 countries issue nomad visas. Average 1 year, renewable.
  • L2 Employment — EOR is the default. Deel/Remote/Oyster dominate.
  • L3 Collaboration — Mix of async (Loom, Notion) and sync (Zoom, Around).
  • L4 Infrastructure — eSIM (Airalo) + multi-currency bank (Wise) + nomad insurance (SafetyWing).
  • L5 Housing — Coliving like Outsite or Selina, coworking like WeWork.
  • L6 Community — Nomad List Slack + local Discords.

3. Nomad List — Pieter Levels and the Standard

Nomad List (nomadlist.com) is a site started in 2014 by Dutch developer Pieter Levels (@levelsio). It began simply as a spreadsheet scoring cities on internet speed, weather, cost of living, safety, and community in response to the question "which city is good for nomads?" Ten years later it has become the digital nomad standard.

  • Operator — Pieter Levels alone. About USD 3 million annual revenue (per public tweets).
  • Data — about 1,500 cities, more than 1,000 indicators.
  • Pricing — Lifetime membership USD 199 (not a subscription).
  • Add-ons — Slack community (about 10,000 members), meetup calendar, trip planner.

Several core metrics that Nomad List created.

  • Internet speed — Mbps down/up, mobile and WiFi averaged.
  • Nomad score — 0-5 stars, weighted average of 50 indicators.
  • Cost of living — Monthly USD budget for nomad / local / family separately.
  • Safety — Night walking, theft, nomad self-reviews.
  • Community — Nomad population estimate, meetup frequency.

Pieter Levels has become the symbol of the "build in public" indie hacker. He shares Stripe dashboards on X (Twitter) and produces solo SaaS with AI coding (Photo AI, Interior AI). In 2024 he reported running about 12 SaaS products solo with about USD 5 million in annual revenue.


4. Remote OK, WiFi Tribe, Hacker Paradise — The Community Camp

Remote OK (remoteok.com) is the remote-jobs board also run by Pieter Levels. It lists about 50,000 remote jobs, with USD 299 per posting. One of the biggest revenue sources in his publicly tracked numbers.

WiFi Tribe (wifitribe.co) is a coliving / coworking group travel service. Each month about 30 nomads gather in a city and live and work together for one month. Pricing varies by city and season: USD 1,500-2,800 per month. Started in 2017, now over 5,000 alumni.

Hacker Paradise (hackerparadise.org) is a similar group nomad program but more developer-centric. Each month in one city (typically Bali, Lisbon, Medellin, Kampala). USD 1,800-3,500 per month.

NomadSquad is a Korean-centered nomad community example. Slack/Discord centered on Korean nomads.

Common threads in this camp.

  • Cure for isolation — The number one nomad complaint is loneliness. Group travel solves it immediately.
  • Outsourced infrastructure — Operators pick the WiFi, housing, and coworking; nomads focus on work.
  • Network — Connections to other nomads, sometimes leading to marriage or company founding.

5. EOR (Employer of Record) — The Backbone of Nomad Employment

As remote work went global, the biggest barrier was "legal employment." For a US company to hire a developer living in Vietnam directly, it had to either set up a Vietnamese entity, treat them as a 1099 contractor, or use an EOR.

An EOR is a company with local entities that "employs" your worker on your behalf, handling payroll, taxes, and benefits, then bills you monthly. Pricing is USD 299-699 per employee per month.

Estimated 2026 global EOR market share.

  • Deel — about 35 percent, fastest growth. USD 12 billion valuation (2024).
  • Remote.com — about 20 percent, USD 3 billion valuation.
  • Oyster HR — about 10 percent, UK-based.
  • Multiplier — about 8 percent, Singapore-based.
  • Velocity Global — about 7 percent, US-based, longer-tenured player.
  • Globalization Partners (G-P) — about 6 percent, the oldest EOR.
  • Papaya Global — about 5 percent, Israel.
  • Rippling Global — about 4 percent, Parker Conrad's follow-on company.

Differences among the EORs.

  • Deel — Fastest onboarding (5 minutes), covers 150 countries, supports crypto pay.
  • Remote.com — Owned-entity model, emphasis on stability and data protection.
  • Oyster HR — Impact-focused, B Corp, global impact rating.
  • Multiplier — Asia strength, strong India and Southeast Asia payroll.
  • Rippling Global — Payroll + IT + HR in one SaaS; can even ship a laptop from the same place.

6. Deel — The Rise of EOR #1

Deel (www.deel.com) is a company founded in 2019 by Alex Bouaziz and Shuo Wang. Y Combinator Winter 2019 batch. Within five years it raised at a USD 12 billion valuation (2024 Coatue-led Series E).

  • Customers — about 25,000 companies (2024).
  • Workers managed — about 500,000 globally.
  • Country support — 150-plus countries.
  • Products — Deel EOR, Deel Contractor, Deel Payroll, Deel HRIS, Deel Immigration.

Three secrets of Deel's success.

  1. Speed — Start hiring in a new country in 5 minutes. Auto-generated local contracts.
  2. Contractor payments — Pay 1099 contractors in USD/USDC/EUR all at once. Critical for nomads.
  3. Compliance automation — Auto-updates labor law and tax in 100-plus countries.

In 2024 Deel launched "Deel IT" to ship laptops and monitors globally and automatically. When a nomad joins a company, their setup arrives in a week.

The late-2023 lawsuit in which Rippling sued Deel for "corporate espionage" is famous in the industry — a Rippling employee allegedly leaked internal information to Deel. Both sides settled (undisclosed) in 2024.


7. Remote.com, Oyster HR, Multiplier — The Pursuers

Remote.com (remote.com) was founded in 2019 by Job van der Voort and Marcelo Lebre. Same year as Deel, different path — "owned entities" in every country. While Deel uses partner entities in some countries, Remote owns entities directly in 70-plus.

  • Customers — about 15,000 companies.
  • Valuation — USD 3 billion (2022 Series C).
  • Differentiator — Data protection (privacy-first), GDPR compliance.

Oyster HR (oysterhr.com) is a UK-headquartered EOR. Founded in 2020 by Tony Jamous (former Nexmo CEO). B Corp certified, impact-focused. About USD 400 million Series C (2022).

  • Differentiator — Glassdoor rating 4.7, global impact rating.
  • Weakness — Pricing somewhat high (about USD 599/month average).

Multiplier (usemultiplier.com) is Singapore-headquartered. Founded in 2020 by Sagar Khatri. Strong Asia and Middle East payroll. About USD 80 million Series B (2023).

  • Differentiator — Free Indian and Southeast Asian payroll (USD 0/month for contractors).
  • Customers — Stripe, Coca-Cola, Toyota, and others.

All three are Deel-like EOR models but differentiate differently. Deel: speed. Remote: data. Oyster: impact. Multiplier: Asia.


8. Rippling Global, Velocity Global, Papaya, G-P

Rippling Global (rippling.com) is Parker Conrad's (founder of the former Zenefits) follow-on company, started in 2018. Rippling bundled payroll, HR, and IT (laptop and SaaS management); in 2022 it launched Global EOR. Differentiator: in one workflow, a new hire's payroll, laptop, and SaaS accounts are all provisioned together.

  • Valuation — USD 16.5 billion (2024).
  • Customers — about 20,000.
  • Differentiator — Payroll + IT integration (Rippling Unity platform).

Velocity Global (velocityglobal.com) is a 2014 Colorado-founded older EOR. 185 country coverage. USD 1.1 billion Series B (Eldridge Industries) in 2022. Strong enterprise customers (Goldman Sachs, Cisco, Bose).

Papaya Global (papayaglobal.com) is a 2016 Tel Aviv company. Payroll + EOR + contractor payments. USD 3.6 billion valuation (Series D, 2022). Strong global payroll data analytics.

Globalization Partners (G-P) (globalization-partners.com) was founded in Massachusetts in 2012. The oldest EOR. 187 country coverage. USD 100 million Series A in 2020. Conservative but stable.

These four EORs share strong enterprise positioning. If Deel and Remote captured startups and SMBs, Rippling, Velocity, Papaya, and G-P serve large enterprises and multinationals.


9. Plane — The Rise of an Indian Open-Source PM

Distributed-team project management was dominated by Linear, Asana, ClickUp, and Monday. But Plane (plane.so), started in India in 2022, is shaking the open-source camp.

  • Founded — 2022 in Bangalore, India, by Vamsi Kurama, Vihar Kurama, and others.
  • GitHub stars — about 35,000 (as of 2025).
  • Model — Self-host free (AGPL-3.0), Cloud paid (USD 4/user/month).
  • Features — Issues, Cycles (sprints), Modules (project groups), Pages (docs), Views (filters).

Plane calls itself "the open-source Linear." UI is very Linear-like, but priced at less than half, and you can keep your data on your own server. Popular in Indian and Southeast Asian startups.

In 2024 Plane closed a Series A (about USD 8 million from Caffeinated Capital, Pelion Venture Partners). Plane Cloud has about 5,000 teams using it.

Linear (linear.app) is still the distributed-team PM standard. Founded in San Francisco in 2019 by Karri Saarinen, Tuomas Artman, and Jori Lallo. USD 400 million Series B (Accel) in 2022. Keyboard-shortcut-centric fast UX is its strength.

Asana (asana.com) was founded in 2008 by Dustin Moskovitz (former Facebook cofounder) and Justin Rosenstein. NYSE listed. The biggest PM company.

ClickUp (clickup.com) was founded in San Diego in 2017. "Everything App" strategy — PM + docs + chat + whiteboard integration.

Monday.com (monday.com) was founded in Israel in 2012. NASDAQ listed. Visual-board-centric.

Notion (notion.so) was founded in San Francisco in 2013. A doc-centric platform with PM features on top.

Distributed teams typically use two PM tools — one for engineers (Linear or Plane) and one for the whole team (Asana, Monday, or Notion).


10. Loom, Vidcast, Tella, Bubbles — Async Video

The core challenge of distributed teams is "collaboration across timezones." When a US East Coast company has a team member in Bali, Indonesia, meeting times disappear — someone has to wake up at 3 AM.

The answer is async video. Instead of a meeting, record a short five-minute video and post it to the team channel; teammates in other timezones watch it when they wake up.

Loom (loom.com) created this category. Founded in 2015 in San Francisco. Acquired by Atlassian in 2023 for USD 975 million. About 25 million users.

  • Format — Simultaneous screen + webcam recording. Short videos of 5-15 minutes.
  • Use cases — Code review walkthroughs, design feedback, weekly updates.
  • Pricing — Free (25 videos), Business USD 12.50/user/month.

Vidcast (Cisco) is Webex's async video tool. Launched in 2022. Enterprise-focused.

Tella (tella.tv) is a more cinematic async video tool. Founded in 2020. Strong with content creators and sales demos.

Bubbles (usebubbles.com) is desktop-first async video. Founded in 2020. Record a part of your screen and share immediately. Strong Slack and Notion embeds.

Komodo Decks (komododecks.com) combines video with slides. Strong in sales demos.

The ROI of async video is clear — meeting time reduced 30 percent (Loom internal data, 2024). A 5-minute video replaces a 30-minute meeting.


11. Around, Tandem, gather.town — Modern Sync Video

Zoom, Google Meet, and Microsoft Teams dominate synchronous video. But during 2020-2024 a new generation called "modern sync video" emerged.

Around (around.co) was founded in San Francisco in 2018. Acquired by Miro in 2024. Differentiator: "bubble video" UI — small circular video bubbles float above the screen, and you can use other apps at the same time. AI-based noise cancellation is powerful. Free + team plans.

Tandem (tandem.chat) is a "virtual office" concept. Founded in 2019 in SF, Y Combinator. You see colleague status (working/in meeting/away) and start an audio or video call with one click. It tried to recreate Steve Jobs's "hallway encounter" virtually. About USD 8 million Series A in 2023.

gather.town (gather.town) is a "2D pixel virtual office." Founded in 2020. You enter as an avatar in a game-like 2D space; when you approach another avatar, a video call starts automatically. It was the hottest during the pandemic. USD 5 billion Series B (Sequoia) in 2021. Growth has slowed since but about 10,000 companies still use it.

Spatial Chat (spatial.chat) is a similar 2D-space video tool. Headquartered in Eastern Europe.

Common features of this camp.

  • Immediacy — Meet a colleague without scheduling a meeting.
  • Spatial sense — The avatar or bubble gives a sense of "being near."
  • Drawback — Only suitable for small companies. Doesn't fit organizations of 100-plus.

12. Global Coworking — From WeWork to Industrious

When remote workers cannot go to a cafe, the answer is coworking. Nomads typically buy a coworking membership during the 1-3 months they spend in each city.

WeWork (www.wework.com) was founded in 2010 by Adam Neumann. After failing an IPO at about USD 47 billion in 2019, it filed for bankruptcy protection in November 2023. But after restructuring in 2024 it has recovered. About 700 locations operating.

  • Status — Recovered from bankruptcy, shrunk to about 600.
  • Pricing — Hot desk USD 350-500/month, dedicated desk USD 500-1,200/month.
  • For nomads — All Access (global membership) USD 299-449/month.

Industrious (industriousoffice.com) is more premium coworking. Acquired by CBRE in 2023. About 200 locations. Pricing about 20 percent higher than WeWork but much better interior and hospitality.

Regus / IWG (regus.com) is the oldest coworking brand. Started in 1989. About 3,500 locations in 120 countries. Quieter and more traditional than WeWork. Pricing USD 199-399/month.

The coworking brands nomads love most.

  • Selina CoWork — Strong in Latin America, combined with hostels.
  • Outsite — Coliving + coworking.
  • Roam — Global coliving + coworking.
  • Hubud (Bali) — The legendary coworking space in Ubud, Bali.
  • DOJO Bali (Canggu) — Major coworking in Canggu, Bali.

13. Workation Korea — Jeju, Yangyang, Gangwon, Busan

The Korean government launched the Workation Visa (J-1) in January 2024. It allows foreign digital nomads to legally stay in Korea for 1 year. Conditions: annual income about USD 60,000-plus, proof of remote work.

The Korea Tourism Organization (KTO) has actively promoted "workation businesses" since 2022. Each local government is building workation hubs.

Jeju Workation — The most popular. The "Jeju Work" program run by Jeju Tourism Organization. Hotel + coworking + rental car packages USD 1,200-2,500/week.

  • Coworking — Workation Jeju, Loungelab, WeWork Jeju.
  • Strengths — Nature, cafes, safety, fast internet.
  • Weaknesses — Cold winters, separated from the mainland.

Yangyang + Gangwon Workation — Surfing + workation. Coworking and coliving have grown around Yangyang's Jukdo and Ingu beaches. Workation Yangyang, Sea Place Coworking.

Busan Workation — Urban-style workation. Nomad-friendly cafes and coworking around Gwangalli and Haeundae. WEXX Busan, BNK Workation.

Weaknesses of Korean workation.

  • Language — Still challenging for English speakers.
  • Visa — J-1 visa issuance is slow.
  • Social security — Foreign nomads sit in a medical insurance gray zone.

But with the global popularity of K-content and K-food, Korea is rapidly becoming a nomad hub.


14. Workation Japan — Hokkaido, Kamakura, Okinawa, Nagano, Wakayama

The Japanese government launched a Digital Nomad Visa (Designated Activities No. 46) in April 2024. Annual income of about 10 million yen (about USD 65,000)-plus, 6 months of stay.

Japan first coined the word "workation" in 2019 in Wakayama Prefecture. As of 2026, the hubs are:

Hokkaido Workation — The number one in Japan. Sapporo, Niseko, Biei. Cool summer and wide-open spaces. Tokyo IT companies often go for summer workation.

  • Coworking — Drop-in Sapporo, Niseko Workation Lab.
  • Strengths — Nature, food, cool summer.
  • Weaknesses — Heavy snow winter, distance from Tokyo.

Kamakura Workation — Suburb of Tokyo, 1 hour away. Historical city, ocean + mountain. Kamakura Workation Office, HafH Kamakura.

Okinawa Workation — Beaches, warm winters. WAKUWORK Okinawa, HafH Okinawa.

Nagano Workation — Centered on Karuizawa. Summer villa + workation. HafH Karuizawa, Sawamura Bakery working cafe.

Wakayama Workation — The origin of workation in Japan. Shirahama and Kumano Kodo. WAKUWAKU Wakayama operates.

Features of Japanese workation.

  • HafH (www.hafh.com) — Japanese coliving/coworking membership. About USD 200-500/month for access to 50 locations across Japan.
  • Workplace Jam — Japanese nomad community.
  • Locowork — Specialist in rural workation.

15. Digital Nomad Visas in 50 Countries — 2024-2026

In 2020 fewer than 5 countries issued nomad visas. As of 2026 there are more than 50. Major visas.

  • Portugal D8 (2022) — Most popular. Annual income over EUR 3,480, 1 year + renewable.
  • Spain Digital Nomad Visa (2023) — Annual income over EUR 28,000, 1 year + 5-year renewable.
  • Estonia e-Residency + DNV (2020) — First mover. 1-year visa.
  • UAE Virtual Work Visa (2021) — Annual over USD 5,000/month, 1 year.
  • Argentina DNV (2022) — 6 months, renewable.
  • Indonesia Bali B211A (2023) — 6 months, renewable.
  • Brazil DNV (2022) — Annual income over USD 18,000, 1 year.
  • Croatia DNV (2021) — 1 year.
  • Greece DNV (2021) — 1 year, 50 percent tax discount.
  • Italy DNV (2024) — 1 year, annual EUR 28,000-plus.
  • Korea Workation Visa J-1 (2024.1) — 1 year.
  • Japan Digital Nomad Visa (2024.4) — 6 months.

Features of each visa.

  • Income requirement — USD 1,500/month (Romania) to USD 8,400/month (Iceland).
  • Tax — Some countries offer tax exemption for visa holders (Portugal, Greece).
  • Family — Spouse and children typically allowed.
  • Social security — Some countries include health insurance, others require separate.

Recommended resources.

  • Nomads.com Visa Guide — 50-country visa comparison.
  • Citizen Remote — Visa application consulting service.
  • NomadCapitalist — Tax optimization consulting for high-income nomads.

16. Airalo, Holafly — The eSIM Revolution

The first challenge for nomads is internet. Buying a USIM at the airport means lining up, showing ID, and filling out paper. eSIM removed all that friction.

Airalo (airalo.com) was founded in Singapore in 2019. About 15 million users (2024). eSIM data packages for over 200 countries. Pricing: Indonesia 1GB USD 4.50, Japan 1GB USD 4.50, Europe 5GB USD 16.

  • Strengths — Fast activation (1 minute QR scan), pricing, coverage.
  • Weaknesses — No voice calls in some countries, data-only.

Holafly (holafly.com) was founded in Valencia, Spain in 2018. Strong in unlimited data eSIMs. Pricing: Japan 8-day unlimited USD 27, Europe 30-day unlimited USD 99.

  • Strengths — Unlimited data, Catalonia HQ for EU strength.
  • Weaknesses — Slightly more expensive than Airalo.

Nomad eSIM (getnomad.app) is more aggressive pricing. Founded in 2020. Europe 25GB USD 19.

eSIM comparison sites.

  • eSIMDB (esimdb.com) — All eSIM price comparison.
  • Esim.net — Reviews + comparison.

iPhone XS or later, Pixel 3 or later, Galaxy S20 or later all support eSIM. In 2026 in the US and Japan, the primary SIM slot is transitioning to eSIM-only.


17. Wise, Revolut, Mercury — Banking for Nomads

The second challenge for nomads is money. Withdrawing from a Balinese ATM with a US bank account means USD 5-15 fees plus a 3-5 percent exchange spread. Multi-currency banks solved this.

Wise (wise.com, formerly TransferWise) was founded in the UK in 2011. London LSE listed in 2021. About 16 million users. Local bank account numbers in 50-plus countries (USD, EUR, GBP, SGD, etc.).

  • Differentiator — Real exchange rate (mid-market), 0.4-1.5 percent fee.
  • Nomad usage — Hold multi-currency in Wise, debit card for local ATM withdrawal (free up to USD 100/month).

Revolut (revolut.com) was founded in the UK in 2015. About 45 million users (2024). Multi-currency + crypto + stocks. Pricing: Standard free, Premium USD 9.99/month, Metal USD 16.99/month.

  • Differentiator — Strong card-only payments, free FX (on weekdays).

N26 (n26.com) was founded in Berlin, Germany. Strong with EU nomads. Monzo/Starling are UK-strong.

Mercury (mercury.com) was founded in SF in 2017. Non-US-residents can open US business accounts. Popular with solo-entrepreneur nomads.

Korean nomads rely on Toss and KakaoBank for foreign payments and remittances. Japanese nomads use Sony Bank for foreign payments and foreign-currency deposits as standard.


18. SafetyWing, World Nomads — Insurance for Nomads

The third challenge for nomads is healthcare. If a motorcycle accident happens in Bali, who pays the USD 50,000 hospital bill? Nomad insurance.

SafetyWing (safetywing.com) was founded in Norway in 2018, US YC alumni. A nomad-specific insurance: "Nomad Insurance." Pricing: 28 days USD 56 (under 35), 28 days USD 100 (over 35).

  • Strengths — 5-minute signup, monthly renewable, in-transit coverage.
  • Weaknesses — No chronic illness coverage, weaker US coverage.

World Nomads (worldnomads.com) was founded in Australia in 2002. The original nomad insurance market. Short-term traveler strong, risky activity coverage (skydiving, surfing).

IMG (International Medical Group) — Global insurance including chronic illness.

Cigna Global — Premium global health plans for nomads. USD 3,000-10,000 per year.

Allianz Care — Strong for family nomads.

Selection guide.

  • Short term (1-3 months) — SafetyWing is cheapest.
  • Long term (1 year-plus) — Cigna Global / IMG global health plans.
  • High-risk activities — World Nomads.
  • Families — Allianz Care.

19. VPN — Mullvad, ProtonVPN, NordVPN

Nomads often use cafe, airport, and public WiFi. VPN is an essential tool.

Mullvad VPN (mullvad.net) is headquartered in Sweden. Anonymous signup (no email needed, account number only). Pricing: EUR 5/month (about USD 5.40). Privacy strong.

ProtonVPN (protonvpn.com) is headquartered in Switzerland. ProtonMail's sister company. Free plan available. Paid USD 9.99/month.

NordVPN (nordvpn.com) is the most-used VPN. Panama HQ. Over 6,000 servers. USD 3.99/month (2-year commitment).

Surfshark (surfshark.com) is headquartered in the Netherlands. Cheaper than NordVPN. USD 2.49/month.

ExpressVPN (expressvpn.com) is UK HQ (BVI registered). Reputedly the fastest. USD 8.32/month (15-month plan).

Tailscale (tailscale.com) is a different category — mesh VPN (WireGuard-based). Nomads use it to access their home NAS or home server. Free (up to 20 devices).

Nomad VPN choices.

  • Privacy first — Mullvad, ProtonVPN.
  • Speed first — ExpressVPN, NordVPN.
  • Price — Surfshark.
  • Home server access — Tailscale.

20. AI Tools — Otter, Reclaim, Motion

AI has penetrated remote work deeply.

Otter.ai (otter.ai), Granola (granola.so), Fathom (fathom.video) — AI meeting notes. Automatic recording, transcript, summary of meetings. Essential for a solo nomad to keep up with meetings. (Covered in iter85.)

Reclaim AI (reclaim.ai) — AI calendar. Meetings, focus time, and exercise scheduled automatically. Free + USD 8/month.

Motion (usemotion.com) — Similar to Reclaim. AI auto-places to-dos on the calendar. USD 19/month.

Akiflow (akiflow.com) — Email, Slack, Notion in one inbox. Addresses nomad timezone differences. USD 24/month.

Magic Schedule — Calendar + timezones + auto-scheduling.

Cron (now Notion Calendar) — Timezone-emphasizing calendar. Nomad standard.

Common traits of these AI tools.

  • Timezone awareness — Auto-converts whether teammate is in Bali, Tokyo, or New York.
  • Focus-time protection — AI finds free time and creates "focus blocks" automatically.
  • Auto-reschedule — When a meeting is canceled, other to-dos move automatically.

21. Korean Nomad Community

The Korean nomad community is growing fast.

  • Work & Travel — Korean nomad Slack/Discord. About 3,000 members.
  • Free Korea Nomad — Facebook group, about 10,000 members.
  • UnaByte — Nomad + digital entrepreneur community.
  • Nomad Trinity — Nomad career coaching.

Characteristics of Korean nomads.

  • Preferred destinations — Bali (Ubud, Canggu), Chiang Mai, Lisbon, Ho Chi Minh, Medellin.
  • Income models — Solo SaaS, freelance dev, content creator, remote job.
  • Tax issues — Conflict between Korean tax-resident (183-day) rule and nomad visa.
  • Social security — Voluntary national pension, regional health insurance.

Resources.

  • Nomad Code — Korean nomad bootcamp.
  • Nomad Korea — Nomad info media.

22. Japanese Digital Nomad Community

Japanese nomads are more closed but growing fast.

  • Wakuwaku Wakayama — Wakayama prefecture workation promoter.
  • Locowork — Specialist in rural workation.
  • Workplace Jam — Japanese nomad Slack + meetups.
  • HafH — Japanese coliving/coworking membership.

Japanese nomad characteristics.

  • Preferred destinations — Bali, Chiang Mai, Taiwan (Taipei, Taichung), Seoul.
  • Language — Lower English-speaking nomad ratio than other Asian countries.
  • Tax — Strict 1-year residency rule for Japanese tax residents.
  • Pension/health — Japanese national pension and health insurance are mandatory regionally.

A peculiarity: Japanese companies still default to "WFH + office" hybrid, and pure nomads are a minority. But the 2024 digital nomad visa is accelerating foreign nomad inflow.


23. AI-Augmented Coworking — Coworker and Review Sites

The standard for coworking info is two sites.

Coworker.com (coworker.com) — 25,000 coworking listings in 130 countries. Price, internet speed, amenities, nomad reviews. Annual "Best Coworking Awards."

CoworkingResources (coworkingresources.org) — Resources for coworking operators. Community of about 50,000 operators.

AI-powered nomad tools.

  • NomadGPT — Nomad List's AI chatbot. Recommends nomad cities.
  • TripSage — AI nomad trip planner.
  • Wanderboat — AI nomad itinerary builder.

These tools layer nomad domain knowledge on top of OpenAI/Anthropic APIs.


24. Async Docs — Notion, Coda, Slab, Almanac, GitBook

The "memory" of a distributed team is documents. Nomads need to record meeting notes, decisions, and code reviews all as documents.

Notion (notion.so) — Nomad standard. About 100 million users (2024).

Coda (coda.io) — Notion competitor. About 50 million users. Data + document integration.

Slab (slab.com) — Team wiki specialist.

Almanac (almanac.io) — Distributed team document specialist. 2020 a16z investment.

GitBook (gitbook.com) — Developer docs specialist.

Confluence (Atlassian) — Enterprise standard.

Differences of each tool.

  • Notion — General use, clean UI.
  • Coda — Data-centric documents.
  • Slab — Wiki-only, fast.
  • Almanac — Distributed team collaboration workflow.
  • GitBook — Developer docs.
  • Confluence — Large enterprise.

25. The 7 Mistakes Nomads Make — Pitfalls to Avoid

Finally, the traps nomads commonly fall into.

  1. Undefined tax residency — Living without knowing which country you are a resident of and getting hit with double taxation. Answer: use a NomadCapitalist-style consultancy.
  2. Health insurance gap — Letting home-country insurance expire without nomad insurance. Answer: SafetyWing.
  3. Bank account freeze — US/Korean banks freezing accounts when they see foreign-IP logins. Answer: travel notice before departure, Wise/Revolut.
  4. Over-reliance on VPN — Some countries (China, Russia, Iran) block VPN. Answer: multiple VPN backups.
  5. Internet dependency — Paralysis when coworking internet goes down. Answer: eSIM hotspot backup.
  6. Social isolation — The number one nomad complaint. Answer: WiFi Tribe, Hacker Paradise, Nomad List Slack.
  7. Burnout — The 24/7 work trap. Answer: fixed timezones, focus blocks.

Each trap has been repeated tens of thousands of times in nomad community experience.


26. The Future of Nomads — Beyond 2026

Finally, the outlook for the next 3-5 years.

  • 100 countries with nomad visas era — 100 countries expected to issue nomad visas by 2030.
  • EOR integration — Deel/Remote/Rippling Global combining payroll, HR, and IT.
  • AI nomad copilot — AI automatically managing visa, tax, banking, and insurance.
  • Workation infrastructure standardization — Hotels and resorts making "workation room" a standard room type.
  • City competition for nomads — Cities more aggressive in attracting nomads (tax breaks, visa fast-tracks).
  • Family nomads — Growing community of nomads with children (World Schoolers).

Risks.

  • Tax crackdown — OECD strengthening tax guidelines for digital nomads.
  • Anti-nomad movement — Backlash in Lisbon and Barcelona over nomads raising rents.
  • AI automation — AI replacing nomad jobs (dev, design, marketing).

But nomad life is no longer a small tribe's lifestyle. From 40 million in 2026 it is heading toward 100 million by 2030. I hope this article serves as a map to take in that current in one view.


References

  • Nomad List. nomadlist.com.
  • Pieter Levels. levels.io.
  • Remote OK. remoteok.com.
  • MBO Partners. State of Independence in America 2024. mbopartners.com/state-of-independence.
  • Deel. deel.com.
  • Remote.com. remote.com.
  • Oyster HR. oysterhr.com.
  • Multiplier. usemultiplier.com.
  • Velocity Global. velocityglobal.com.
  • Globalization Partners. globalization-partners.com.
  • Papaya Global. papayaglobal.com.
  • Rippling. rippling.com.
  • Plane. plane.so.
  • Linear. linear.app.
  • Asana. asana.com.
  • ClickUp. clickup.com.
  • Monday.com. monday.com.
  • Notion. notion.so.
  • Loom. loom.com.
  • Tella. tella.tv.
  • Bubbles. usebubbles.com.
  • Around. around.co.
  • Tandem. tandem.chat.
  • gather.town. gather.town.
  • WeWork. wework.com.
  • Industrious. industriousoffice.com.
  • Regus / IWG. regus.com.
  • Airalo. airalo.com.
  • Holafly. holafly.com.
  • Wise. wise.com.
  • Revolut. revolut.com.
  • Mercury. mercury.com.
  • SafetyWing. safetywing.com.
  • World Nomads. worldnomads.com.
  • Mullvad VPN. mullvad.net.
  • ProtonVPN. protonvpn.com.
  • NordVPN. nordvpn.com.
  • Tailscale. tailscale.com.
  • Korea Tourism Organization Workation. visitkorea.or.kr.
  • HafH. www.hafh.com.
  • Coworker.com. coworker.com.
  • Citizen Remote. citizenremote.com.
  • NomadCapitalist. nomadcapitalist.com.