North AmericaTegucigalpa

Honduras

Last updated: April 2026

LOW COSTEASY VISAOK INTERNET

Overview

What remote workers notice first about Honduras.

Bay Islands — Roatán diving and cruise tourism — different world from mainland

Mainland cities are business hubs — research current neighbourhood safety carefully

Copán Maya ruins — weekend cultural trips

Affordable — but infrastructure and governance vary

Visa Spotlight

The Primary Choice

Tourist entry

Honduras for remote workers: Tegucigalpa, San Pedro Sula, Roatán, visas, safety context, and island vs mainland trade-offs.

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    Income proof

    Foreign remote income documentation

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    Clean record

    Police certificate where required

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    Local address

    Lease or accommodation agreement

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    Insurance

    Health coverage per application rules

Duration: Often 90 days — extensions per immigration·Fees: Low

Requirements: Passport validity, onward ticket sometimes

Your passport matters

Entry and stay rules depend on citizenship and purpose of visit. Always confirm the latest requirements for your nationality with official government sources before you travel.

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Application process

Immigration extensions — queue early, carry copies. Overstays risk fines — settle before flights.

ZEDE history on Roatán — legal landscape changed — verify property and visa rules with current counsel before investing.

Medical evacuation insurance — island diving injuries and mainland care gaps. Private hospitals in major cities.

Dengue — repellent. Tap water — filter in doubt.

Cost of Living

Average Rent
$400–$1,500/month
1BR Apartment (range)
Food & Dining
$200–$380/month
Groceries & dining out
Getting Around
$30–$100/month
Local transport
Coworking
$60–$140/month
Desk / membership

Tegucigalpa lifestyle index

Estimated monthly budget for a high-quality nomadic lifestyle including a modern apartment, co-working, and weekend trips—based on the guide's worked example where available.

$1,000
Per Month Total

Example month — Roatán, modest dive-town profile:

Rent: $900 Utilities + backup internet: $120 Scooter / taxi: $100 Groceries + imports: $340 Eating out: $220 Dive gear / maintenance: $100 Insurance: $95 Misc: $90

Indicative total: ~$1,965. Mainland cities can be 30–50% lower excluding security transport costs.

Top Nomad Hubs

Tegucigalpa

Tegucigalpa

Mountain capital — traffic, cooler air, government and NGO presence

Avg rent$450–$1,000/month
CoworkingLimited — business cafés — verify fibre
Explore neighbourhoods
San Pedro Sula

San Pedro Sula

Industrial and logistics hub — hot lowlands — business travellers

Avg rent$400–$950/month
CoworkingSparse — serviced offices in commercial zones
Explore neighbourhoods
Roatán

Roatán

Island diving — expat dive pros, cruise crowds, humid

Avg rent$600–$1,500/month
CoworkingMinimal — resort Wi‑Fi varies — test before signing
Explore neighbourhoods

Neighbourhood picks

Roatán

West End vs West Bay

West Bay quieter beaches — West End more social — test Wi‑Fi and generator noise before leases.

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Banking & cash

Banco Atlántida, BAC, etc. — residents with ID — tourists use foreign cards. ATMs in cities — fees vary — carry lempiras for buses.

Island ATMs may run dry — cash buffer. Inform banks before travel.

Expert tip: Compare ATM fees and prefer bank-owned machines in city centres.
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Health & safety

Private hospitals in San Pedro Sula and Tegucigalpa — pay or insure. Roatán clinics for basics — serious cases may airlift.

Hyperbaric chamber access for divers — confirm location. Emergency numbers — verify locally — response varies.

Mental health resources limited — telehealth abroad may supplement.

Note: Private clinics in Tegucigalpa are often a practical choice for expats where available.

Culture & lifestyle

Football passion — join conversations carefully. Baleadas culture — enjoy local food. Punctuality flexes — government offices painfully slow — bring water and patience.

Hurricane season — September–November — island infrastructure risk — insurance and backup plans.

The real talk

The advantages

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Affordable

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World-class diving on Roatán

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Garifuna culture

The challenges

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Mainland safety requires research

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Infrastructure uneven

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Island costs and hurricane risk

Join the conversation

Connect with nomads and locals—search these hubs to get started.

Frequently asked questions

Islands for diving and tourism services — mainland for regional business — totally different risk and lifestyle profiles.

Tax snapshot

Tax residency applies if you become resident — remote workers on short stays rarely trigger obligations — long-term bases need a Honduran accountant familiar with international income.

Community tips

Mainland safety requires hyper-local advice — vary routines, avoid displaying valuables, use trusted transport. Roatán is tourism-oriented — still use common sense. Garifuna culture on coast — respect drumming and festivals.

This destination is perfect for…

DivingValueNGO / development circlesIsland vs mainland choice

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