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Coronavirus pandemic: All stories
LifestyleTravel & Leisure

Fancy a year on a tropical island? Bermuda is offering Covid-19 escape visas

  • The British Overseas Territory of 64,000 is offering one-year, renewable residency certificates for remote workers and postsecondary students
  • Workers approved for the programme must have health insurance and be employed by a legitimate overseas firm or their own company

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Bermuda is pitching itself as an escape from the pandemic with offers of one-year, renewable residency certificates. Photo: Getty Images/iStockphoto
Bloomberg

For anyone tired of dodging coronavirus, sick of arguments over masks or just fed up with the home office grind, Bermuda has an offer: a year at the beach.

The British Overseas Territory of 64,000, known for its pink sand shorelines and balmy climate, is offering one-year, renewable residency certificates for remote workers and postsecondary students. It’s pitching itself as a refuge as Covid-19 cases continue to climb in other countries and upend rules about where people can work.

“The world is changing, and we want people we consider long-term visitors to come to Bermuda,” Premier David Burt said in a telephone interview.

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Newly minted temporary residents may also provide a boost at a time when the pandemic is roiling the economy, which is heavily dependent on tourism, the government said in a statement.

Bermuda is pitching itself as a refuge as Covid-19 cases continue to climb in other countries. Photo: Getty Images/EyeEm
Bermuda is pitching itself as a refuge as Covid-19 cases continue to climb in other countries. Photo: Getty Images/EyeEm
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Burt said life on the islands would appeal to foreigners because Bermuda managed to contain the spread of Covid-19 through rigorous testing, quarantine-monitoring bracelets, and rules on social distancing and mask wearing. Bermuda has had fewer than 150 confirmed Covid cases and nine deaths. As of Friday the island had just six active cases of the disease, Burt said.

“Unlike places where you have to worry about going to the supermarket, here we have very clear rules,” he said.

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