Panama · Step by Step
Key Facts
Source matters most. Panama taxes Panama-source income; foreign-source income from clients abroad is generally outside its territorial tax net.
Local work needs status. Working in the Panamanian market generally requires the right immigration status and a work permit.
Operations notice. Local commercial activity typically requires an aviso de operación (operations notice).
Nomad visa caveat. The digital-nomad short-stay route is built for foreign clients and does not authorise local work.
Get local advice. A Panamanian accountant and lawyer are essential to confirm current rules, registrations and social-security duties.
Freelancing in Panama works very differently depending on where your income comes from, because Panama operates a territorial tax system that distinguishes sharply between foreign-source and local-source earnings. Understanding that single distinction is the key to staying compliant as a remote worker or self-employed expat.
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Foreign income versus local income
The crucial line in Panama is between foreign-source and local-source income. If you do remote work for clients located abroad — writing, design, consulting, software, online services — that income is generally treated as foreign-source and falls outside Panama’s territorial tax system.
By contrast, income earned from serving the local Panamanian market — clients, customers or an employer inside Panama — is local-source and is generally taxable and regulated like any domestic activity.
This distinction drives almost every other decision about visas, registration and tax, so it is worth being clear about exactly where each of your clients is based before you start invoicing.
The grey areas tend to appear when a freelancer mixes the two — for example, mostly serving foreign clients but occasionally taking a local one — which can change both the tax picture and the immigration requirements. Mapping your client base by location before you arrive saves a great deal of trouble later.
Work permits and immigration status
Earning local-source income usually requires both the right immigration status and a work permit. Tourist status does not authorise local work, and the rules around who may work and in what fields can be specific.
Several residency pathways — such as those linked to the Friendly Nations or Qualified Investor frameworks — can lead toward the ability to work locally, but the work-permit process is separate from residency itself and has its own steps.
Because immigration categories and the work-permit rules attached to them change periodically, confirm the current requirements for your situation with a Panamanian immigration lawyer before counting on local work.
Panama also limits certain professions and retail activities to nationals, and some regulated fields require recognition of foreign qualifications, so even with a work permit not every activity is open to foreigners. Treat the immigration step and the right-to-work step as two separate questions to resolve before signing local contracts.
Registering as self-employed locally
If you do intend to serve the local market, you generally need to formalise the activity. Commercial and professional activities in Panama typically require an aviso de operación, the operations notice that registers your business activity with the authorities.
Self-employed individuals (independientes) register their activity, issue compliant invoices, and file the relevant returns; certain regulated professions have additional licensing requirements. Some activities are reserved for Panamanian nationals, so check whether yours is open to foreigners.
An accountant can tell you whether your activity needs an operations notice, what tax registrations apply, and how to set up compliant invoicing from the start — cheaper than fixing it later.
The digital-nomad route for foreign clients
Many remote workers use Panama’s short-stay digital-nomad visa, which is designed for people earning from foreign clients or employers while living in Panama. It is a practical option for location-independent professionals.
The important limitation is that this visa is built around foreign-source income and does not authorise taking on local Panamanian clients or local employment. Mixing in local work on a nomad visa can put you offside.
If your plans shift toward serving Panamanian clients, you will likely need a different immigration category and a work permit — another reason to map out your client base early.
The practical appeal of the nomad route is real: a dollar economy removes currency friction, the time zone overlaps well with North and South American clients, and connectivity in the main hubs is solid. The eligibility conditions and permitted stay can change, so verify the current terms with an immigration lawyer before you rely on it.
Invoicing, accounting and social security
Foreign-source freelancers invoicing clients abroad typically handle billing and bookkeeping much as they would anywhere, but should keep clean records showing the foreign origin of their income in case it is ever questioned.
Those operating locally face Panama’s invoicing and tax-filing requirements and should also consider social-security (Caja de Seguro Social, or CSS) contributions, which apply to local employment and self-employment in defined circumstances.
The exact CSS obligations, contribution rates and filing duties depend on your status and activity, so confirm what applies to you with a local accountant rather than assuming a one-size-fits-all answer.
Practical tools matter too: a Panamanian bank account can be harder for newcomers to open than expats expect, so many freelancers keep foreign accounts and use international transfer services while they establish local banking. Whatever setup you choose, keeping personal and business finances separate from day one makes both bookkeeping and any future tax review far simpler.
Why local professional advice pays off
Panama is genuinely attractive for freelancers — a dollar economy, an Americas-friendly time zone and a territorial system that is light on foreign income. But the gap between “remote work for foreign clients” and “doing business in Panama” carries real compliance consequences.
A good Panamanian accountant and immigration lawyer will confirm your tax position, the correct visa, whether you need an operations notice, and your social-security duties — tailored to your specific clients and activity.
Rules, thresholds and registrations evolve, so treat everything here as a framework and verify the current figures and requirements with a licensed Panamanian professional before you act.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is my remote income from foreign clients taxed in Panama?
Generally no, because Panama’s territorial system taxes Panama-source income, and work for clients abroad is typically foreign-source. Keep records of the foreign origin and confirm your specific case with a local accountant.
Can I freelance for Panamanian companies on a tourist or nomad visa?
No. Local work generally requires the right immigration status plus a work permit, and the digital-nomad visa is limited to foreign clients. Serving local clients needs a different setup.
Do I need an aviso de operación as a freelancer?
If you carry out local commercial or professional activity, an operations notice is usually required, though specifics vary by activity. An accountant can confirm whether yours needs one.
Should I pay into Panama’s social security?
Social-security (CSS) obligations apply to local employment and self-employment in defined circumstances. Whether and how much you contribute depends on your status, so confirm the current rules locally.
Do I still owe taxes in my home country?
Quite possibly. Many countries tax based on residency or citizenship, and US citizens, for example, generally keep filing with the IRS.
Get cross-border advice covering both Panama and your home country.
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