Milosh Online — Analytical Nomadism from the Inside
Most travel blogs are either pure lifestyle content or dry destination guides. Milosh Online, the platform of Miloš Pelucha, carves out a different niche: it combines honest personal travel stories with sharp, research-backed analysis of the digital nomad world itself.
Now in his fourth year of traveling and working remotely, Miloš writes from lived experience rather than theory. His posts cover motorbike journeys through Vietnam, rail travel across Japan, and slow exploration of Galicia in Spain — but they sit alongside deeper pieces examining nomad demographics, destination economics, and emerging visa programs that are reshaping where nomads can legally live and work.
What You'll Find
The content on milosh.online falls into a few distinct areas:
- Destination deep dives — Cities like Buenos Aires, Seoul, Tbilisi (Armenia), and Auckland get the full treatment: cost structures, coworking scenes, visa reality, and cultural fit for remote workers.
- Industry analysis — Posts like "Nomad Life Cycle" and analyses of digital nomad market opportunities go beyond the typical listicle, treating location-independent work as an industry worth examining critically.
- Personal essays — Reflective pieces on what long-term nomadism actually feels like after multiple years, without the relentless positivity that dominates the genre.
- Practical guides — New visa programs, logistical tips, and the kind of on-the-ground detail that only comes from someone who has already made the mistakes.
Subscription Model
The platform runs as a subscriber-supported publication. Free readers can access some content, while paid subscribers unlock the full archive, community access, and email delivery of new posts. Miloš also offers professional services through a "Work with Me" page for brands and companies looking to reach the nomad audience.
Who It's For
Milosh Online is particularly well-suited for nomads who are past the beginner stage — people who already know the basics and want more nuanced perspectives on where to go next, how the lifestyle evolves over time, and what the broader nomad economy looks like from the inside. The business-oriented angle on destination analysis is a standout feature: rather than simply asking "is this city cheap enough?", Miloš asks what kind of nomad a place is actually built for and whether that ecosystem is maturing or stagnating.
For remote workers researching their next base or trying to understand how visa landscapes are shifting across Europe, Southeast Asia, and Latin America, the site offers a level of analytical depth that's genuinely useful — not just inspiring.
Four years in, Miloš Pelucha is writing the kind of nomad content that only comes from staying long enough to see the patterns.