South AmericaSantiago

Chile

Last updated: April 2026

MODERATE COSTPLAN VISAGOOD INTERNET

Overview

What remote workers notice first about Chile.

Stable institutions by regional standards — straightforward banking once documented

Santiago: Andean backdrop, strong fibre, regional HQ city

Valparaíso: colourful hills, port culture, universities — cooler ocean air

Puerto Varas / Lake District — outdoor gateway, smaller scene

Visa Spotlight

The Primary Choice

Permiso de Permanencia Transitoria (tourist)

Chile for remote workers: visas, Santiago vs regions, cost of living, taxes, and practical tips from Valparaíso to Patagonia gateways.

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    Income proof

    Foreign remote income documentation

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    Clean record

    Police certificate where required

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    Local address

    Lease or accommodation agreement

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    Insurance

    Health coverage per application rules

Duration: Often 90 days; extensions subject to rules — verify for your nationality·Fees: Reciprocity fee history for some countries — check current SERMIG / consulate

Requirements: Passport, onward ticket, accommodation proof sometimes

Your passport matters

Entry and stay rules depend on citizenship and purpose of visit. Always confirm the latest requirements for your nationality with official government sources before you travel.

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Application process

Chile's Servicio Nacional de Migraciones (Migraciones) moved many procedures online — create a profile, upload PDFs, and track cases. Tourist entry stamps vary; overstays carry fines — pay before airport exit.

Residence categories include rentista (passive income), work contract, investment, and family reunification — each demands a specific paper trail: apostilled FBI/police checks, civil docs, medical certs where listed.

Rentista applicants must show recurring foreign income translated and sometimes bank-certified — minimums change — verify peso equivalent on official tables.

After approval, obtain carnet, register RUT with SII if tax obligations apply, and open bank accounts with cédula. Private health insurance (ISAPRE) or public FONASA choice follows — decide with a broker.

Processing times fluctuate — months are normal post-pandemic backlogs. Keep digital copies of every stamped PDF.

Cost of Living

Average Rent
$450–$1,500/month — Santiago core higher
1BR Apartment (range)
Food & Dining
$250–$420/month — wine excellent value
Groceries & dining out
Getting Around
$40–$70/month (Bip! card)
Local transport
Coworking
$100–$220/month
Desk / membership

Santiago lifestyle index

Estimated monthly budget for a high-quality nomadic lifestyle including a modern apartment, co-working, and weekend trips—based on the guide's worked example where available.

$1,500
Per Month Total

Example month — Santiago, Providencia-ish:

Rent one-bed: $950 Utilities + fibre: $85 Transport (Metro + occasional Uber): $90 Groceries: $300 Eating out: $280 Coworking: $140 Gym: $55 ISAPRE-style plan: $120 Weekend trip savings: $150 Misc: $100

Indicative total: ~$2,270. Valparaíso can reduce rent 10–20% with trade-offs in commute noise; Puerto Varas lower dining variety, higher heating in winter.

Top Nomad Hubs

Santiago

Santiago

Business capital — Providencia, Las Condes, Ñuñoa nomad pockets; smog in winter

Avg rent$600–$1,500/month
CoworkingWeWork, Co-work Latam, plenty of café bandwidth
Explore neighbourhoods
Valparaíso

Valparaíso

Steep cerros, street art, students — edgier than Viña del Mar next door

Avg rent$450–$1,000/month
CoworkingRecharge, Puerto Creativo — verify current listings
Explore neighbourhoods
Puerto Varas

Puerto Varas

Lakes, Osorno volcano views — smaller, nature-first, rainy winters

Avg rent$500–$1,100/month
CoworkingLimited — home office + café culture
Explore neighbourhoods

Neighbourhood picks

Santiago

Providencia

Green, Metro-linked, dining — popular with expats; verify earthquake retrofit on older buildings.

Santiago

Ñuñoa

More residential, younger vibe — good value vs Las Condes; check Metro line proximity.

Valparaíso

Cerro Alegre

Tourist-friendly, views — stairs daily; tourists in summer — secure Wi-Fi before signing lease.

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Banking & cash

Major banks: Banco de Chile, Santander, BCI, Scotiabank Chile. Fintechs like Tenpo and MACH power instant transfers. You'll need RUT + address for most products.

Cards are tap-friendly in cities. Cash still matters in ferías (markets). FX spreads at airports are poor — use regulated casas or bank wires.

US persons: FATCA reporting — Chilean banks ask extra questions. Wise may not offer CLP balance; plan USD/EUR offshore settlement.

Earthquake or protest days can jam ATMs — keep small cash buffer at home (securely).

Expert tip: Compare ATM fees and prefer bank-owned machines in city centres.
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Health & safety

Mixed public-private system — many expats use ISAPRE plans for faster specialist access; FONASA is the public option — lower cost, longer waits.

Santiago has Clinica Alemana, UC Christus — high standards. Wait times for mental health can be long — private route faster.

Air quality in Santiago winter (May–Aug) aggravates asthma — monitor AQI. Sun is strong year-round — SPF habit.

Emergency: 131 (SAMU) in many regions — confirm local numbers. Travel insurance for Torres del Paine treks — evac costs mount fast.

Note: Private clinics in Santiago are often a practical choice for expats where available.

Culture & lifestyle

Tea time (once) is social glue — sweet cakes and conversation. Personal space smaller than US; greetings one kiss among friends.

Class awareness is real — avoid performative wealth in public transit. Politics polarised — tread lightly until trust exists.

Tipping ~10% sit-down restaurants if not included. Uber works in major cities; taxis meter — confirm route apps.

Recycling culture growing but inconsistent — carry tote bags. Water is safe in Santiago; carry filter bottles in rural south if unsure.

The real talk

The advantages

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Regional stability and infrastructure

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Strong internet and coworking in capital

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Outdoor lifestyle — ski, surf, hike within hours

The challenges

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Santiago winter air quality

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Higher cost than Peru/Bolivia

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Complex migration paperwork

Join the conversation

Connect with nomads and locals—search these hubs to get started.

Frequently asked questions

Compared to neighbours like Peru — yes for rent and dining in Santiago. Compared to Western Europe capitals — often still cheaper. Budget depends on peso exchange and neighbourhood.

Tax snapshot

Chile taxes residents on worldwide income once domiciled or staying beyond thresholds — definitions are legal, not intuitive. Remote workers invoicing foreign clients may still analyse PE risk and treaty positions. RUT (tax ID) ties to banking — coordinate with a Chilean tax advisor before long stays overlapping calendar years.

Community tips

Spanish with Chilean modisms (cachai, weon used carefully) — listen before mimicking. Wine country weekends, skiing from Santiago, Atacama trips. Earthquakes are routine — learn protocol, secure shelves.

This destination is perfect for…

StabilityNature accessWine & outdoorsPacific time alignment

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