Nomad Visa Radar
Editorial

Editorial Policy

Nomad Visa Radar publishes practical visa research for remote workers, but the standard is simple: readers should be able to see where the important information came from and what still needs official confirmation. Visa pages prioritize government ministries, embassy and consulate pages, immigration portals, official eVisa systems, and recognized public agencies.

We separate stable context from moving requirements. Stable context may include the name of a route, whether it is designed for remote workers, and whether local employment is restricted. Moving requirements include income thresholds, fees, document validity windows, insurance wording, tax references, appointment systems, and processing times.

Automated monitoring may create review tasks, but it does not publish substantive visa changes automatically. Each important change should record a source URL, confidence score, reviewer, last checked date, and last updated date before publication.

Corrections

Corrections are welcome. When a reader sends a better source or spots an outdated requirement, we review the official page first, update the affected content when appropriate, and avoid presenting uncertain items as settled facts.

Advertising and independence

Advertising, sponsorships, or affiliate relationships do not decide visa rankings or editorial conclusions. If commercial relationships are added to a page, they should be disclosed clearly and kept separate from the source-review process.