Workations, slow travel, and the rise of the bleisure trip. 2026 is not just the year of travel recovery — it's the year travel was fundamentally reinvented.
In 2026, the classic 2-week summer holiday is officially a relic. The boundaries between work and travel have completely dissolved. Instead of asking "Can I take time off to travel?", more people are asking: "Where in the world should I work from this month?"
This shift is being driven by three converging forces: the normalization of remote-first companies, the explosion of digital nomad visas (now available in 60+ countries), and a growing desire for deeper, more meaningful travel experiences over quick tourist dashes.
A "workation" — working while traveling — was once seen as a millennial quirk. In 2026, it's a standard employee benefit at forward-thinking companies. Spain's Canary Islands reported a 340% increase in long-stay visitors since 2024, with Tenerife and Las Palmas becoming de-facto remote work capitals.
The biggest pain point for workation travelers? Reliable, fast internet that follows you across borders. A single dropped Zoom call can cost a freelancer a client. This is exactly why a Regional or Global eSIM — not a local tourist SIM — is now considered the #1 essential tool for remote workers abroad.
Travelers in 2026 are choosing depth over breadth. Instead of visiting 8 countries in 12 days, the slow travel movement focuses on spending 3–6 weeks in a single location — living like a local, learning the language, and building real community.
This trend is particularly strong among the 35–55 age group, who are leveraging increased workplace flexibility to extend trips far beyond traditional vacations.
"Bleisure" travel (blending business and leisure) is now standard practice. 67% of business travelers extended at least one business trip for personal travel in 2025, up from 43% in 2022. The logic is simple: if the company pays for the flight to Tokyo, why not stay an extra week?
What makes all three of these trends possible at scale? A single, unified data connection that works everywhere. And that means Global eSIM.
Unlike a traditional tourist SIM card that locks you to one country, a ViaConecta Global or Regional eSIM automatically connects to the strongest local network wherever you are — from a rooftop in Lisbon to a café in Chiang Mai — without you doing anything.
Why Remote Workers Choose eSIM over Local SIMs
The original Digital Nomad Village — stunning Atlantic views, fast fiber, and the special Portuguese nomad visa.
Latin America's tech hub. Spring-like weather year-round and a thriving co-working scene.
The undisputed king of affordable nomad hubs. Excellent food and blazing-fast internet in every café.
Europe's most digital nation. Offers the world's first official e-Residency and Digital Nomad Visa.
A Global or Regional eSIM is widely considered the best solution. It lets you keep your home SIM active for 2FA codes while having reliable, affordable data in every country you visit — without buying a local SIM each time.
Over 60 countries now offer some form of digital nomad or remote worker visa, including Portugal, Spain, Italy, Germany, Thailand, Costa Rica, and Colombia. Eligibility requirements and income thresholds vary by country.
Most tourist visas allow stays of 30–90 days without the right to work. However, enforcement of remote work rules varies. For longer stays and peace of mind, applying for a dedicated digital nomad visa is recommended.
Get your Global or Regional eSIM and stay connected in 150+ countries.
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