Updated July 2026.
Every week, someone planning a move from the mainland asks us some version of the same question: what visa do I need for Puerto Rico? Do I need a work permit? Should I start an immigration process?
The answer surprises many people: none, none, and no. If you are a U.S. citizen or a lawful permanent resident, moving to Puerto Rico is legally identical to moving from Texas to Florida. There is no immigration component whatsoever.
Puerto Rico is the United States
Puerto Rico has been U.S. territory since 1898, and everyone born on the island has been a U.S. citizen at birth since the Jones-Shafroth Act of 1917. Federal law, including the entire Immigration and Nationality Act, defines the United States to include Puerto Rico. For immigration purposes, San Juan is as domestic as San Diego.
That means for a U.S. citizen relocating to the island:
- No visa exists, because there is nothing to apply for. Immigration law regulates the entry of foreign nationals, and you are not one.
- No passport is required. Flights between the mainland and Puerto Rico are domestic flights. A REAL ID-compliant license or other standard domestic identification is all you need to board.
- No work permit is needed. You can work, open a business, buy property, and enroll your children in school the day you land, exactly as you could in any state.
- No customs inspection on arrival for travelers from the mainland. (Agricultural inspection applies when flying out of Puerto Rico to the mainland, for produce and plants.)
Why the confusion exists
The island feels international to first-time visitors. Spanish is the dominant language, the culture is distinctly Caribbean, and the geography puts a thousand miles of ocean between you and Miami. Add the fact that Puerto Rico fields its own Olympic team and its own Miss Universe contestant, and the assumption that it is a foreign country becomes understandable. Legally, though, the question was settled more than a century ago.
What you actually need to handle when you move
Your checklist is administrative, and none of it involves USCIS:
- Driver’s license. Exchange your state license for a Puerto Rico license through CESCO, the local transit authority.
- Voter registration. You register locally. Note that residents of Puerto Rico vote in presidential primaries but do not cast electoral votes in the general election.
- Taxes. This is the area that genuinely requires professional planning. Puerto Rico has its own tax system, and bona fide residents generally pay Puerto Rico income tax instead of federal income tax on Puerto Rico-source income. Incentives under Act 60 have drawn thousands of mainland investors and remote workers. Speak with a tax professional; the residency tests are strict and well enforced.
- Professional licenses. Some professions require local licensure or reciprocity, just as they would when moving between states.
When immigration law DOES matter in Puerto Rico
Everything above applies to U.S. citizens and green card holders. For foreign nationals, Puerto Rico operates under exactly the same immigration system as the fifty states. A software engineer from Colombia needs the same H-1B, a Spanish executive transferring to a subsidiary in Guaynabo needs the same L-1, and a foreign spouse of a U.S. citizen in Ponce goes through the same green card process, with interviews at the USCIS field office in San Juan.
That is our work. KS Immigration Solutions has practiced U.S. immigration law exclusively from San Juan for over 20 years, representing companies and families across the island and the mainland.
Questions about a foreign national in your company or family?
If your move to Puerto Rico involves a spouse, employee, or business partner who is not a U.S. citizen, that person’s situation deserves proper planning. Contact us for a consultation.
This article provides general information and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Every case is different; consult a licensed professional about your specific situation.










