183-Day Rule
The 183-day rule is a widely used test for determining tax residency: if you are physically present in a country for 183 days or more during a defined period — usually a calendar or tax year — that country may treat you as a tax resident. The exact period, how partial days are counted, and any extra conditions vary by jurisdiction and applicable tax treaties.
Worked example
Counting your days in Country X over one tax year: 90 days in spring, 60 days in summer and 40 days in autumn. Total = 90 + 60 + 40 = 190 days. Because 190 ≥ 183, the day-count threshold is met and Country X may treat you as a tax resident for that year. Had you stayed only 170 days (170 < 183), the test would not be met.
Why it matters
The 183-day rule matters because it is often the first and clearest test of where you owe tax, and crossing the threshold can shift your liability to worldwide income. The pitfall is treating 183 days as the only rule: many countries add tests such as a permanent home or centre of vital interests, count days inconsistently, or use a multi-year average, so the day count alone is rarely the full story.
Frequently asked questions
Does the 183-day rule count travel and partial days?
It depends on the country. Some count any day on which you are present even briefly, while others exclude transit days or days spent for specific reasons. Always check the precise counting method of the jurisdiction concerned.
If I stay under 183 days, am I automatically not a tax resident?
Not necessarily. Staying under 183 days fails one common test, but a country may still treat you as resident under other criteria, such as having a permanent home there or your main economic ties. This is general information, not personal tax advice.
Related terms: Tax Residency, Digital Nomad