What El Salvador's 90-Day Stay Rule Means for Temporary Residents
New amendments require temporary residents to remain in El Salvador for at least 90 days per year, either consecutively or cumulatively. Failure to meet this requirement may result in the cancellation of residency status unless a force majeure exception is granted.
What El Salvador's 90-Day Stay Rule Means for Temporary Residents
El Salvador quietly updated its residency rules this spring. Amendments to the Special Law on Migration and Foreigners, approved March 17, 2026 and in force since March 31, 2026, now require all temporary residents to spend at least 90 calendar days per year in the country, either consecutively or in chunks or risk losing their status. That's, turns out, a significant loosening from the previous threshold, which hovered around 180 days of required presence.
The only exceptions are force majeure cases, reviewed and approved by the General Directorate of Migration and Foreigners (DGME). No exceptions, no flexibility outside that channel.
Who's affected? Temporary residents across the board: investors, retirees, students, workers and digital nomads holding visas in the F3-F30 categories. Tourists on the standard CA-4 90-day visa waiver aren't touched by this and neither are permanent residents. So if you're just passing through, nothing changes, keep doing what you're doing.
For digital nomads and expats who honestly spend half their time bouncing between countries, 90 days is a much easier bar to clear than 180. That's the good news. The risk, though, is complacency: if you hold a 1-4 year temporary residency and let your in-country time slip without documenting it, the DGME can revoke your status. Track your entry and exit stamps carefully, they're your proof.
What to do:
- Count your days. Entry and exit stamps are your record; keep them organized and accessible.
- Apply for exceptions early if a medical issue or emergency will keep you out of the country. Don't wait until renewal time to explain a six-month absence.
- Check your visa category against the DGME's F3-F30 list to confirm you're under temporary residency, not permanent.
- The income requirement for digital nomad applicants remains $1,460/month, with health insurance and a clean background check still required at application.
The reforms also add nationality loss rules for naturalized citizens, though that's a separate issue for most nomads.
For the full breakdown on visas, costs and how to apply, read our El Salvador guide and stay current with nomad news as the DGME rolls out any implementation guidance.
