Italy Checklist: Sponsoring Highly Skilled Migrant Visas
Grab a copy of a guide to international employee relocation
View E-bookThe pandemic normalized remote work, and many employees now expect location flexibility. But when “remote” means working from another country, companies face a minefield of tax and immigration compliance issues that can result in significant penalties if not properly managed.
Physical presence in a jurisdiction triggers legal obligations regardless of where the employer is based or what the employment contract says. An employee working from Portugal for a U.S. company doesn’t escape Portuguese immigration and tax law simply because they’re employed by a foreign entity.
Many employees (and their employers) don’t realize this. They assume tourist visas and VPNs allow work from anywhere. This assumption is dangerous and often wrong.
Most tourist visas explicitly prohibit any work activity, even for foreign employers. Immigration authorities increasingly take the position that work performed physically in their territory requires proper authorization.
Violating visa terms can result in:
๐ธ Deportation and entry bans
๐ธ Fines for the individual and employer
๐ธ Criminal charges in severe cases
๐ธ Permanent immigration record affecting future travel
Over 50 countries now offer digital nomad visas, but these come with:
๐ธ Eligibility requirements (minimum income, health insurance, etc.)
๐ธ Restrictions on work for local entities
๐ธ Tax implications after certain durations
๐ธ Prohibitions on hiring local employees
๐ธ Application fees and administrative requirements
Before pursuing digital nomad arrangements, thoroughly research the specific visa requirements and restrictions.
Many employees believe short trips for work are always permissible. However:
๐ธ Activities qualifying as “business visitor” are narrowly defined
๐ธ Many countries require work permits from day one for certain activities
๐ธ Cumulative days across multiple trips can trigger requirements
๐ธ The 183-day rule is a tax concept, not an immigration safe harbor
Working from another country can trigger:
๐ธ Tax residency in the work location (often after 183 days but sometimes sooner)
๐ธ Obligation to file and pay taxes locally
๐ธ Continued home country tax obligations
๐ธ Complex tax treaty analysis to avoid double taxation
๐ธ Social security contributions in multiple jurisdictions
Companies may be required to:
๐ธ Register as an employer in the work location
๐ธ Withhold local taxes from compensation
๐ธ Make social security contributions
๐ธ File employer tax returns
๐ธ Provide local payroll infrastructure
An employee’s activities can create corporate tax obligations for the company:
๐ธ “Permanent establishment” triggers corporate income tax
๐ธ Thresholds vary but can include employee activities like sales, customer support, or management
๐ธ Companies must register and file taxes in the jurisdiction
๐ธ Significant compliance burden and potential tax liability
Determining which country’s social security system applies is complicated:
๐ธ Totalization agreements between some countries prevent double coverage
๐ธ Not all countries have agreements with each other
๐ธ Coverage affects both immediate contributions and long-term benefits
๐ธ Getting it wrong can mean paying twice or having coverage gaps
Employee requests to work from Spain for three months to help aging parents. Company agrees, thinking it’s short enough to avoid issues.
Reality: Even this brief period triggers:
๐ธ Visa requirements (tourist visa likely insufficient)
๐ธ Spanish tax withholding obligations
๐ธ Potential social security contributions
๐ธ Immigration scrutiny if discovered
Proper approach: Evaluate visa options (perhaps a digital nomad visa), determine tax withholding requirements, assess social security obligations, and ensure proper authorization before travel.
Employee hired to work remotely from home country while employed by foreign company. No plans to relocate, just permanent remote arrangement.
Reality: This creates:
๐ธ Employer registration requirements in employee’s country
๐ธ Full local employment law compliance
๐ธ Payroll, tax, and social security obligations
๐ธ Potential misclassification risks if structured as contractor
Proper approach: Use Employer of Record (EOR) service to employ locally or establish legal entity. Don’t attempt to treat as foreign employee indefinitely.
Employee wants to work from different countries every few months, moving before hitting any duration thresholds.
Reality: This creates:
๐ธ Visa compliance challenges in each location
๐ธ Complicated tax residency questions
๐ธ Logistical challenges (time zones, equipment, connectivity)
๐ธ Potential home country tax residency loss
๐ธ Mental health and stability concerns
Proper approach: Carefully evaluate feasibility, ensure compliance in each location, provide appropriate support, and set clear expectations about limitations and company support.
Define what international remote work your company will permit:
๐ธ Allowed duration limits
๐ธ Pre-approval requirements
๐ธ Supported vs. unsupported countries
๐ธ Employee responsibilities
๐ธ Company support provided
Before approving any international remote work:
๐ธ Immigration compliance review
๐ธ Tax implications analysis (employee and company)
๐ธ Social security determination
๐ธ Technology and security considerations
๐ธ Risk assessment and mitigation
Implement tools that:
๐ธ Track employee location
๐ธ Monitor duration in each jurisdiction
๐ธ Trigger compliance reviews at appropriate thresholds
๐ธ Coordinate immigration, tax, and HR stakeholders
๐ธ Maintain documentation for audits
Engage specialists:
๐ธ Immigration counsel in relevant jurisdictions
๐ธ International tax advisors
๐ธ EOR providers for compliant employment structures
๐ธ Legal counsel for employment law compliance
Ensure employees understand:
๐ธ Their compliance obligations
๐ธ Company policy and approval process
๐ธ Limitations and restrictions
๐ธ Support available
๐ธ Consequences of non-compliance
Managing cross-border remote work requires coordinating immigration, tax, employment law, and operational considerations. xpath.global provides:
๐ธ Centralized platform tracking employee location and triggering compliance reviews
๐ธ Tax calendar monitoring days in each jurisdiction with automatic alerts
๐ธ Vendor coordination connecting immigration and tax specialists across 183 countries
๐ธ Policy management tools ensuring consistent application of remote work rules
๐ธ Employee portal providing clear guidance and support
Companies using xpath.global reduce compliance risk while enabling the flexibility employees demand.
Remote work across borders isn’t as simple as opening a laptop in a new location. Immigration, tax, and employment law complexities require proactive management. Companies that enable international remote work without proper compliance infrastructure face significant risk.
The good news: With appropriate policies, processes, and technology, international remote work can be managed compliantly. The key is treating it as a mobility matter requiring the same rigor as traditional relocationsโnot as an informal arrangement that somehow escapes normal compliance obligations.

Italy Checklist: Sponsoring Highly Skilled Migrant Visas
Grab a copy of a guide to international employee relocation
View E-book