Argentina · Immigration
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Key Facts
Insurance at entry. Non-residents must show health insurance covering their stay, in force since July 2025.
False tourism. Officers can refuse entry to a “tourist” they judge intends to live or work in Argentina.
Absence limits. Temporary residency lapses after six months abroad; permanent residency after a year.
Citizenship. The two-year residence requirement must now be continuous, with no exits.
The takeaway. If you live in Argentina on tourist stamps, the durable fix is formal residency.
Argentina has long been forgiving of the perpetual tourist — the foreigner who lives in Buenos Aires and renews a 90-day stamp with a quick ferry to Uruguay. A 2025 migration reform, now being enforced more firmly, is closing that door.
What the 2025 reform changed
Decree 366/2025 amended Argentina’s migration law, widening the grounds on which a foreigner can be refused entry and tightening the rules on residency and citizenship. The migration authority now sits under the Ministry of Security and operates as an enforcement agency.
Two changes matter most for long-staying foreigners: a health-insurance requirement at the border, and a new “false tourism” ground for refusing entry.
Insurance is checked at entry
Since July 2025, foreigners without permanent residency must show they hold health insurance covering their stay, alongside a sworn statement of the purpose of their visit. Those who cannot can be turned away at the border.
The cover must include basic care, hospitalisation, 24-hour emergencies and medical evacuation. Emergency treatment remains guaranteed to everyone, but routine public care now requires insurance or payment.
The “false tourism” rule
The reform lets border officers refuse entry when they have founded reason to believe a “tourist” actually intends to reside, work or settle. It is a discretionary judgment made at the airport or crossing.
In practice, that squeezes the visa-run pattern: someone who repeatedly re-enters on tourist stamps to live in the country can be questioned and, in principle, refused. Carrying evidence of a genuine short visit matters.
The residency clock is stricter too
Temporary residency is now cancelled after six continuous months outside Argentina, and permanent residency after a year. Citizenship by naturalisation requires two years of continuous, effective residence with no exits during that time.
The upshot is that residency, once granted, has to be maintained by actually living in the country. Long absences can undo it.
How to stay legal
If you genuinely live in Argentina, the durable route is formal residency, most commonly the rentista (passive-income) or investment routes, which lead to permanent residency and eventually citizenship. The transitory digital-nomad permit is short and leads nowhere.
Whatever your status, carry compliant health insurance when you cross the border. None of this is legal advice; confirm the current rules with Migraciones or an immigration lawyer before you travel.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I still live in Argentina on tourist stamps?
It is riskier now. Officers can refuse entry to a repeat “tourist” they judge is really residing, so the durable fix is formal residency.
Do I need insurance to enter Argentina?
Yes. Since July 2025, non-residents must show health insurance covering their stay, or risk being turned away at the border.
How long can I be outside Argentina without losing residency?
Temporary residency lapses after six continuous months abroad, and permanent residency after a year, unless the absence is authorised.
What is the “false tourism” rule?
It lets border officers refuse entry when there is founded reason to believe a tourist intends to live, work or settle in the country.
What residency route should long-stayers use?
The rentista or investment routes lead to permanent residency and citizenship; the digital-nomad permit is short-term only.
Connected Coverage
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LatAm Expat & Nomad Daily Guide — Thursday, July 16
View original source — Rio Times ↗



