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Residency· 6 min read

Romania in 2026: residency routes, Digital Nomad permit, and the Schengen position

Romania completed its Schengen accession across the past years. Combined with the existing residency framework, that has changed how cross-border movers should weigh it.

Romania's residency landscape in 2026 sits inside its EU + Schengen position. The country joined Schengen in stages, with full land-border integration following the air/sea accession. For cross-border movers, that materially changes the day-to-day, even if the residency permit categories themselves are similar to before.

The main routes

EU citizens. Standard registration process; no permit needed beyond the registration certificate after qualifying period.

Long-stay D visa, non-EU. Sub-routes for employment, self-employment / commercial activity, study, family reunification, and other qualifying categories. Each has its own documentation pack.

Digital Nomad visa. For non-EU remote workers earning above the published threshold from foreign employers / clients. Initial duration with renewal, suitable for movers wanting EU presence without committing to investment.

Investor / entrepreneur routes. For founders deploying real capital into a Romanian business with credible activity.

What Romania actually offers

  • EU + Schengen presence
  • Generally low cost of living relative to Western EU
  • Established expat presence in Bucharest, Cluj, Timișoara, and a few other cities
  • Strong IT sector with established outsourcing and product-development hubs
  • Decent professional services market for cross-border cases

Tax overlay

Romanian personal income tax is a flat rate; specific regimes exist for micro-enterprises and freelancers (PFA, micro-SRL) with their own thresholds and conditions. The IT-sector tax incentives that historically applied to qualifying employees have been reformed; the current rules need to be checked against the case at the time of planning.

When Romania fits

  • IT professionals and tech founders who genuinely want EU presence at lower cost
  • Cross-border consultants with multi-jurisdiction client bases
  • Remote workers who fit the DNV income profile
  • EU citizens wanting EU residence in a lower-cost market

When it doesn't

  • Cases where the move is paper-only and life is genuinely elsewhere
  • Cases that depend on now-reformed historic tax benefits without revalidating
  • Cases that ignore the practical realities of Romanian administrative processes

How we coordinate Romanian cases

  1. Confirm the route fits the actual income and life pattern.
  2. Plan banking before signing leases.
  3. Confirm the tax regime that will actually apply, not the historic version of it.
  4. Take substance seriously for any company-based structure.

Romania in 2026 is a cleaner choice for cases that actually want Romanian life. It's a poor choice for cases that want a Romanian registration without the residence.

Bordercase notes are informational and do not constitute legal, tax, or fiduciary advice.