Verified facts on banking in Chile for non-residents — community reports fill in as members share their experience. Reviewed for 2026.
Chile: banking for non-residents and digital nomads. Chile is outside the EU where, for a foreigner, accounts open only with difficulty. Most banks work mainly with local and regional clients, so it pays to come prepared with proof of address, source-of-funds evidence and a clear account purpose.
Opening an account and going remote. Whether you can open remotely varies bank by bank.
Reporting, AML and stability. Chile takes part in CRS automatic exchange, so an account here is reported to your tax-residence country each year; it is not on the FATF/EU AML high-risk lists, so onboarding follows standard due-diligence rather than enhanced scrutiny; political and economic stability is rated medium (World Bank governance indicators), which shapes the risk of capital controls, abrupt banking-rule changes or currency turmoil affecting your account.
What applicants report. There are no first-hand community reports yet for Chile — this section fills in as members share their experience.
Bottom line. Chile is a hard place to bank as a non-resident — line up a local tie or a fintech fallback before you rely on it.
Grouped by bank — each applicant type is a row. Colour shows the reported outcome.
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