What counts as a tax home for the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion if I have no permanent address?
A tax home for the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion is the general area of your principal place of business, regardless of where you maintain your family home. For digital nomads without a permanent address, the IRS looks at which foreign location has the strongest claim to being your business base.
The IRS two-part analysis:
- Identify your principal place of business or employment. For digital nomads, this is the location where you most regularly work and maintain a base infrastructure.
- Determine if that location is in a foreign country. If it is, you have a foreign tax home. If you have no clear principal place, the IRS defaults to your abode (based on family, economic, and personal ties).
What strengthens a foreign tax home claim:
- Duration in one foreign country per year
- Lease or housing contract
- Foreign bank and payment accounts
- Client contracts or business relationships in the country
- Residency visa or permit
What weakens a foreign tax home claim:
- Retaining a U.S. house used regularly
- Family remaining in the U.S. (spouse, children)
- Returning to the U.S. for long stretches each year
- A pattern of brief hops across many countries without any anchor
Abode concept matters:
- The IRS uses “abode” to catch cases where your business may be abroad, but your personal life remains in the U.S.
- If your abode is in the U.S., you do not have a foreign tax home even with 330 foreign days
Relevant case law: Sochurek v. Commissioner and Jones v. Commissioner both denied FEIE on tax-home grounds.
For FEIE strategy, see our Foreign Earned Income Exclusion guide or How Do I Establish a Tax Home in a Foreign Country?
Last updated on April 29, 2026