Nobody Wants Digital Nomads. They Want Their Money. And Their Silence.
The Nomag Pulse #47
Remote workers are not the villains of the story. But they have become the most convenient characters in someone else’s business model.
Let us get one thing out of the way before the comment section starts stretching its fingers: this is not an article against digital nomads. That would be both lazy and, in our case, professionally suicidal. NOMAG exists for people who live, work, think, earn, move, settle, unsettle and occasionally have a mild existential crisis across borders. We are not here to perform the old moral theatre in which remote workers are blamed for everything from rent increases to the disappearance of decent neighbourhood bakeries, as if housing crises were invented the day someone opened a laptop in Lisbon. Digital nomads are not the villains of this story. But they are very often the most convenient characters in a story written by governments, landlords, platforms, property managers, tourism boards, relocation consultants and cities desperate to look international without having to solve anything too deeply local.
The title is deliberately brutal because the arrangement is deliberately polite. Nobody says it plainly, because plain language would ruin the brochure. A city does not say: “Please come here with your foreign salary, pay inflated rent, keep our cafés busy, make our streets look cosmopolitan and try not to ask too many questions about public services.” A government does not say: “We quite like remote workers because they consume, spend, sometimes pay tax, photograph well and are unlikely to join a municipal committee about bus timetables.” A landlord does not say: “I have discovered that your income from Berlin, London, Amsterdam or New York makes my local rental market much more exciting.” Instead, everyone says talent, ecosystem, innovation, global community, lifestyle destination, creative economy, future of work. The vocabulary is soft because the transaction is hard.
And the transaction is this: digital nomads are attractive because they bring money without immediately bringing politics. They are resident enough to spend, rent, consume, post, recommend, introduce friends, fill coworking spaces and help a city tell itself that it belongs to the modern economy. But they are often not resident enough to demand much in return. They are less troublesome than long-term citizens because they usually do not need schools for their children, do not know which local authority is responsible for the broken pavement, do not spend years fighting hospital waiting lists, do not understand the planning system, do not vote, do not organise tenants’ associations, do not complain about the bus route that was cut in 2017, and very often leave before the slow consequences of urban policy become their personal problem.
From a city’s point of view, this is almost too perfect. The digital nomad is more profitable than a backpacker, more respectable than a tourist, easier to market than a migrant, and less administratively annoying than a resident family who would quite like affordable housing, healthcare, childcare, transport, rubbish collection, public accountability and perhaps, in an outrageous moment of civic entitlement, the possibility of still living in the place where their parents and grandparents lived. The nomad arrives with a laptop, a card, a foreign income and an ability to make the place look desirable. What is not to love?
Well, quite a lot, as residents are increasingly pointing out. And often they have a point.
The uncomfortable truth is that digital nomads sit in a strange and combustible middle category. They are not exactly tourists, because they stay longer, spend more consistently, often rent proper apartments, build routines, return regularly and may genuinely care about the places they live in. But they are not exactly locals either, because their income, clients, networks, rights, expectations and exit options are usually somewhere else. They are long enough to matter and short enough to deny responsibility. They are present enough to affect housing, prices, atmosphere and local business models, but often absent from the deeper obligations of belonging.
That is not a moral accusation. It is a structural observation. Most digital nomads are not wandering around with a monocle and a spreadsheet trying to destabilise neighbourhoods. Many are simply trying to build a better life with the tools available to them, and frankly, who can blame them? If work has been reduced to a laptop, a calendar, a payment platform and the faint background terror of Slack notifications, there is no sacred reason to experience that terror in a grey office park under fluorescent lighting. Wanting sunlight, good food, walkability, beauty, lower costs, friendlier taxes, better weather, a slower morning or a balcony with a view is not a crime. In many cases it is just common sense with better scenery.
But common sense at the individual level can become chaos at the collective level. One remote worker choosing a nicer life is not the problem. Ten thousand remote workers, property owners, tax consultants, short-let platforms, lifestyle publications, visa schemes and tourism strategies all moving in the same direction can become a system. And systems have consequences, even when every individual inside them has a charming explanation.
This is where the hypocrisy begins to shine.
A tourist with a suitcase is called mass tourism. A tourist with a MacBook is called economic development. The first is treated as a pressure on the city. The second is treated as a sign that the city has a future. The first is accused of consuming the place. The second is praised for joining the ecosystem. The first blocks the pavement and takes pictures. The second blocks a table for four hours with one espresso and takes investor calls. One is vulgar because he stays in hotels. The other is sophisticated because he stays in an overpriced “authentic” apartment with limewashed walls, bad plumbing and excellent natural light.
The difference is not as moral as everyone pretends. It is commercial.
This does not mean digital nomads are the same as tourists, or that staying longer has no value. A thoughtful remote worker can support small businesses, return off-season, rent outside hotel districts, learn the language, build friendships, collaborate locally, start projects, contribute to communities and become part of a place in ways that ordinary tourism rarely allows. Many do. Some become far more committed to their adopted cities than locals who merely inherited them. The lazy anti-nomad argument ignores this completely and reduces a diverse world of workers, freelancers, founders, writers, designers, developers, consultants, editors, teachers and small business owners to one caricature: the laptop colonialist with linen trousers and a podcast.
That caricature exists, obviously. We have all met him. Sometimes, in weaker moments, we may even have been him. He is usually explaining authenticity in English, complaining about bureaucracy in a country whose tax advantages he is researching, and declaring that he “lives like a local” because the barista recognises him after three weeks. He is not the whole story, but he is real enough to be dangerous in groups.
Still, blaming digital nomads alone is too easy, and suspiciously convenient for everyone else. The landlord who doubles the rent because foreigners can pay is not an innocent spectator. The city that markets itself as a remote-work paradise while failing to protect long-term housing is not a victim of nomadism. The government offering special regimes to mobile foreigners while local wages stagnate is not merely embracing innovation. The platform turning homes into investment products is not building community. The developer converting neighbourhood life into a lifestyle asset is not promoting cultural exchange. And the tourism board that sells “authentic local living” to outsiders while residents are priced out of that very authenticity does not get to act surprised when the locals become angry.
Digital nomads often become the visible face of problems they did not create alone. Housing pressure, weak regulation, speculative property ownership, touristification, low wages, inadequate public services and bad urban planning usually existed long before the remote workers arrived. But laptops make these problems look new, clean and photographable. They give old inequalities a modern silhouette. They turn structural failure into an Instagrammable scene: a MacBook, a cortado, a tiled floor, a rental contract nobody local can afford.
The backlash from residents should therefore not be dismissed as jealousy, xenophobia or provincial resentment, though sometimes it contains elements of all three, because human beings are rarely pure political instruments. Often the anger is much simpler and more legitimate: people are watching their everyday lives become someone else’s curated experience. They see apartments removed from the long-term rental market. They see cafés change their prices and language. They see ordinary shops replaced by concepts. They see local culture packaged for people passing through. They see neighbourhoods described as “up-and-coming” by people whose arrival is exactly what makes them unaffordable. Then they are told to be grateful because global talent has arrived with reusable water bottles and an interest in ceramics.
The nomad, meanwhile, is often genuinely confused by this hostility. From his point of view, he is not behaving like the worst kind of tourist. He is not vomiting in a fountain. He is not arriving by cruise ship. He is not wearing a plastic wristband from an all-inclusive resort. He buys groceries. He tips. He goes to independent cafés. He learns how to say thank you. He has a favourite bakery. He is not here for three drunk nights; he is here for three months, six months, maybe longer. He feels, quite reasonably, that he is better than mass tourism.
And in many ways, he is.
The problem is that being better than the worst possible visitor is not the same as being harmless. A remote worker can be more respectful than a weekend tourist and still contribute to rental pressure. A nomad can spend locally and still reshape local businesses around foreign purchasing power. A foreign resident can love a place and still participate in a market that makes it less liveable for others. These truths are not mutually exclusive, which is precisely why the subject is interesting and why most writing about it is so painfully stupid.
The marketing version says: digital nomads revitalise cities. The activist caricature says: digital nomads ruin cities. The honest version says: digital nomads are part of a much larger transformation in which income, housing, mobility, citizenship, tourism and work no longer fit neatly inside old categories, and nearly everyone is trying to profit from the confusion while pretending to have principles.
Governments are particularly fluent in this theatre. They have discovered that the remote worker is politically delicious. Unlike the low-wage migrant, he is usually coded as affluent, educated, voluntary and temporary. Unlike the refugee, he arrives with a credit card. Unlike the tourist, he can be described as talent. Unlike the local taxpayer, he is unlikely to immediately demand too many services or rights. He is immigration without the unpleasant word immigration. He is tourism with a better blazer. He is residency as a subscription product.
This is why so many “digital nomad visas” feel less like a social project and more like a commercial filter. They are designed to attract people with external income, low immediate dependency and high spending potential. There is nothing inherently wrong with that, provided we call it what it is. But the rhetoric is often absurdly inflated. We are told these schemes are about innovation, community, knowledge exchange and global competitiveness, when in many cases the real appeal is brutally simple: come here, spend here, maybe pay something here, make us look modern, and please do not become too complicated.
The industry around nomadism then adds its own layer of scented nonsense. It sells community to people who are lonely, freedom to people still answering client emails at midnight, authenticity to people living in furnished apartments designed for foreigners, and belonging to people whose entire social calendar is conducted in English. This does not make the experiences fake. Some coworking spaces are genuinely useful. Some friendships are real. Some local connections matter. Some people do build lives across borders with depth, care and responsibility. But we should be honest about the business model: much of the digital nomad economy monetises the practical and emotional side effects of not belonging anywhere for very long.
And here we should be self-ironic, because NOMAG is not watching this from a monastery of moral purity. We are part of the world we are describing. We like mobility. We believe remote work can be liberating. We understand why people leave expensive, exhausted, status-obsessed cities in search of a life that feels less like a subscription to burnout. We know that many nomads are not escaping responsibility but escaping systems that gave them very little reason to stay loyal. We also know that crossing borders can make people smarter, kinder, more adaptable and less provincial. The digital nomad life is not a joke. It can be one of the most intelligent responses to a labour market that no longer deserves the emotional devotion it demands.
But loving a lifestyle does not require believing its mythology. In fact, the opposite is true. If we are part of this world, we should be the first to call out the nonsense built around it. We should not pretend that every move is meaningful, every café is a community, every cheap rent is a discovery, every tax break is a lifestyle choice, every criticism is jealousy and every city that welcomes us is doing so because it has recognised our radiant creativity. Sometimes we are welcomed because we are useful. Sometimes because we are profitable. Sometimes because we are easier to manage than residents and easier to justify than tourists. Sometimes because we bring money and do not yet know which door to knock on when the system fails.
The more mature nomad culture would start by dropping the innocence act. It would say: yes, we are often good for local economies, but not automatically good for local residents. Yes, we may be more engaged than tourists, but we are not exempt from the effects of our purchasing power. Yes, we can love a place, but love does not cancel impact. Yes, spending money locally matters, but it is not a complete ethical position. Casinos also generate economic activity, and nobody calls them community.
At the same time, the more mature local and political response would stop using digital nomads as a convenient distraction from failures of governance. If rents are exploding, regulate housing. If whole neighbourhoods become temporary accommodation, deal with platforms and property ownership. If local wages cannot compete with foreign incomes, talk about wages, not just foreigners. If cities are becoming unliveable for residents, ask who benefits, who owns, who regulates, who markets, who profits. It is far too easy to blame the visible outsider with the laptop while ignoring the local landlord cashing the transfer.
So no, digital nomads are not the villains. But they are also not the innocent heroes of a borderless future. They are people moving through systems shaped by inequality, opportunity, policy failure, personal ambition, curiosity, economic asymmetry and, occasionally, very good coffee. They are both symptom and participant. They are sometimes helpful, sometimes disruptive, sometimes thoughtful, sometimes ridiculous, often over-marketed and almost always more complicated than the slogans built around them.
The real villain, if we need one, is not the person working from a laptop in a sunny city. It is the cowardly language around him. It is the refusal to admit that “talent attraction” often means imported purchasing power. It is the refusal to admit that “revitalisation” can mean displacement with better branding. It is the refusal to admit that “community” cannot simply be sold in monthly membership tiers. It is the refusal to admit that a place is not successful because foreigners can afford it, but because the people who live there can still afford it too.
Nobody wants digital nomads. That is, of course, an exaggeration. Many people do want them: as friends, neighbours, customers, collaborators, readers, partners, tenants, colleagues and sometimes even citizens. But the system that markets to them most aggressively often wants something narrower. It wants their money, their rent, their tax potential, their international glow, their Instagram proof that the city is desirable, and, ideally, their silence on the boring civic problems that would make the whole arrangement less glamorous.
And perhaps the most honest digital nomad is the one who can admit this without collapsing into guilt or defensiveness. We are not the problem. We are not the solution either. We are part of the story.
The least we can do is stop pretending the laptop makes us morally different from everyone else in the arrival hall.





You just described gentrification and it exists period in every single culture.