Policy Changes Peru

Peru launches 24 month review of digital nomad and tourist rules

Brandon Richards
Brandon Richards ·
Verified · 6 sources· Updated June 8, 2026
Peru launches 24 month review of digital nomad and tourist rules

What the working group will do

Peru's Ministry of Foreign Affairs has set up a multisectoral working group to redraft the country's National Migration Policy, under Ministerial Resolution No. 333-2026-RE published in the Official Gazette on June 8. The group will run for 24 months from the date it's installed.

The Foreign Ministry chairs the body, with the Migration Policy Directorate serving as its technical secretariat. Representatives come from Interior, Labor, Health, Education, SUNAT, RENIEC and INEI, among other state bodies. The mandate covers shifts in migration patterns that the previous framework no longer addresses.

Who has a stake in the rewrite

The drafting process itself changes nothing at the border today. Tourists, residents and applicants in the pipeline continue under existing rules while the group meets.

The longer-term audience is broader: foreign residents, asylum seekers, expats and remote workers whose visa categories or document requirements could shift once the policy lands. Peru's digital nomad residence permit, created in late 2023 for remote workers paid by foreign employers, sits inside the framework the group is now reviewing. Initial stays run up to one year with extension possible.

Tourists currently get up to 183 days per entry with no extension on the consular tourist visa, a baseline that predates this review.

Current rules and what to track

Travelers who need a consular tourist visa still file under the existing checklist:

  • Completed application form and consular interview
  • Valid passport and round-trip ticket
  • Proof of lodging or invitation letter
  • Passport photos and proof of funds
  • Consular fee of 30 consular soles

Anyone planning a residency application, a digital nomad permit or an asylum claim over the next two years should monitor Foreign Ministry and migration-administration portals for draft text and public consultation windows. The working group's output will move through formal channels before any rule change reaches the border, so document requirements and fees in force today remain the operative ones until a successor policy is published.

Read our full Peru guide for the complete picture and check our nomad news feed for updates as the drafting process advances.

Frequently asked questions

Does Peru's new migration review change border rules right now?
No, the drafting process changes nothing at the border today. Tourists, residents and applicants in the pipeline continue under existing rules while the group meets.
How long can digital nomads stay in Peru under the current permit?
Digital nomad residence permits currently allow stays of up to one year. Extension is possible.
How long can tourists stay in Peru on a consular tourist visa?
Tourists currently get up to 183 days per entry. The consular tourist visa has no extension.
What documents are needed for Peru's consular tourist visa?
Applicants currently need a completed application form and consular interview, valid passport and round-trip ticket, proof of lodging or invitation letter, passport photos and proof of funds.
How much is Peru's current consular tourist visa fee?
The current consular fee is 30 consular soles. That fee applies under the existing checklist.
What should expats and remote workers watch during Peru's migration review?
They should monitor Foreign Ministry and migration-administration portals for draft text and public consultation windows. The review could affect visa categories or document requirements later.

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