This is a perceptive question. Consider the following from the Wikipedia article "Virtual Particle":
As a consequence of quantum mechanical uncertainty, any object or
process that exists for a limited time or in a limited volume cannot
have a precisely defined energy or momentum. This is the reason that
virtual particles — which exist only temporarily as they are exchanged
between ordinary particles — do not necessarily obey the mass-shell
relation. However, the longer a virtual particle exists, the more
closely it adheres to the mass-shell relation. A "virtual" particle
that exists for an arbitrarily long time is simply an ordinary
particle.
However, all particles have a finite lifetime, as they are created and
eventually destroyed by some processes. As such, there is no absolute
distinction between "real" and "virtual" particles. In practice, the
lifetime of "ordinary" particles is far longer than the lifetime of
the virtual particles that contribute to processes in particle
physics, and as such the distinction is useful to make.
Also, consider this from the Wikipedia article "Near and far field":
In the quantum view of electromagnetic interactions, far-field effects
are manifestations of real photons, whereas near-field effects are due
to a mixture of real and virtual photons. Virtual photons composing
near-field fluctuations and signals, have effects that are of far
shorter range than those of real photons.