France has the best tax treaty with the US for retirees. Zero taxes on your US pension and zero taxes on capital gains. After three months of residing continuously in France, you are then eligible to apply for the public health system in which you only pay 27 euros to see a general practitioner.
And if you become a French citizen you can never tax advantage of tax residency in Andorra or Monaco, not even if you renounce French Citizenship. Just something to keep in mind.
@@falconellirk901 The only way for a person to get citizenship to Monaco is for them to have had PR (easy to get if you can buy property/apartment/open a giant bank account - takes 3yrs due to wait list) for 10-20yrs and to renounce all other citizenships once they've been told they'll become a citizen of Monaco after having applied. Monaco doesn't permit dual/multi nationality. Literally most people in Monaco have PR which is all you need to live forever in Monaco without having to renounce citizenships.
France is the last country here in the EU i would go to!!! Islamic violence, the nogo zones in every big city, they also have the biggest debt in the EU...And if i may, stay away from West-Europe, at least in the US you have weapons to defend you when things turn evil, here we have nothing!!! If you want to leave the US and renaunce your citizenship, go to Namibia, south African country.
As an Egyptian, you definitely do NOT want an Egyptian passport, literally one of the weakest in existence with no tangible benefits and only a bunch of drawbacks
Please advise your viewers NOT to move to Costa Rica. This country is EXTREMELY expensive. It’s more expensive than many countries in Europe. We call it Monaco of Central America. We are returning to US with plans to move somewhere else after living here in Costa Rica for 4 years.
Many Canadians are still under the misguided perception that it’s a great place to go in terms of tax and property values. My husband’s family is from there and we were there 30 years ago and it was expensive then. During the 2008-09 mortgage bust in the US many Americans went down and prices rose very quickly. Problems with cartels. Small police force that can’t handle the crime and no army for back up either.
We’re considering moving to Costa Rica. Please change our mind? We’re a family of 3 (young child 2 years old). I hear that food and real estate is expensive, but so is America. We found it hard to spend less than $400/week on groceries in the US, and everyday life is so expensive ($12/hr for parking, $80 for nails minimum…). Add to it income and property taxes… and it’s insane. I feel like even if Costa Rica was twice the price in food and similar real estate prices, the savings in taxes (nothing on foreign income) would still be greater than the increase in grocery bill. What do you think? Please prove me wrong, as I’d rather not move my entire family in the wrong direction.
Try Ecuador . It’s cheaper . Many expats, or Panama. I know someone that bought a house and wants it as a second home but not live there. She has so many regrets. She put a lot of money into it wants to sell it very bad.
@@TheAblackb2 That's not me, I'm a dude. But we were just visiting the US and my partner went to a nail salon with her friend, it was $80. And supposedly that was cheap. Other places charged $120. I mean... that wasn't the most surprising, what shocked me most was paying $12/hr for parking in downtown of a small city, or $50 for the most basic lunch with sandwiches (+ tax + tip)
My son is applying for Italy. My wife came from Italy as a teenager, and my grandparents came from Italy (1912). So I think he has some chance, but it is a long process.
Wishing your son, the best of luck. I was born here my mother was born in Greece. My father was born in Cyprus. Well, I went to the consulate here and they said that my parents who got married in Cyprus did not have their marriage officially registered in Greece. And that someone would have to go to Greece to register it before I could think about going ahead with applying for citizenship.
My son says he has a Turkish Passport. Interesting to understand how he did it. It came as a shock as the only other person from the family that went there was blown to bits at Gallipoli. It is so surprising how things change in subsequent generations.
@@RajanKumar-ui5yr I wouldn’t mess around there. It’s another country where nosey reporters end up in “car accidents” while looking under rocks they shouldn’t.
Turkey is on its way to becoming rich. Gold backed digital Lyra. Precious metals and partners with Ripple and positioning as a crypto hub and working with rich mineral countries in Africa and are not viewed as a threat like the European countries
To get Turkish citizenship, you need to invest at least $400,000 in real estate, which can be residential, commercial, or land, and hold it for at least three years. Alternatively, you can deposit $500,000 into a Turkish bank or buy government bonds for three years. Note that 2,200,000 Turkish lira, around $65,000 USD, isn’t enough for citizenship. The process can take six months to a year.
@@Blueskies1180 He's not an intellectual/intelligentsia. It's privileged/sheltered/ and/or nepo-baby speak -- i.e., a privileged, *hyper*-capitalist pitchman. Occasionally, the information is useful to working and middle-class folks, but most of it is for billionaires and very wealthy multi-millionaires. It would be fine, if he had some consideration of the negative impact of some of his "advice" and actions on "regular" people, particularly the local residents.
@@id9139 sometimes there are restrictions that come with citizenship. Like forfeiting your US passport or having to pay taxes. The goal is to have freedom, flexibility, options and mobility.
It's not true. To get a Brazilian passport it's necessary to be a citizen. It's not easy to get Brazilian citizenship. There is a set of exceptions for refugees and foreign people without documents.
@@alchemira, stop watching news from Rio (unsafe place, despite the wonderful landscape). South Brazil is an amazing place to live. Also, half of the Brazilian Southeast is rich and developed, with a dozen good cities between 500K to 1 million people.
No one talks about language. Unless a person is over 60 years of age, it is mandatory to learn the de facto/official language for citizenship. Individuals seeking Brazilian citizenship need to speak Portuguese.
Stack up 6 or 7 figures and you will acquire second citizenship pretty easily in a handful of caribean nations. The other way around is to pile humongous amount of money into a business or stocks to reap dividends before getting naturalized.
Curious - Ireland - isn't there lots of issues over there? Tight housing? Employment issues? Wouldn't moving their add to their problems (supply of housing) for the locals and push prices even more?
Interestinly, Jordan does not only come with a citizenship program, but also with a permanent residency program for property investment as low as usd 200'000. As the passport is not powerful anyway, maybe the residency program is the better option for retirees. For me Akaba is a high end place to live, with all amenities given and a great tax regime (only local income is taxed and due to special economic zone, goods are duty free and consumer prices are very affordable). And the property prices are considarably low for such a prime place with perfect year around climate. I just wonder why is this option not more famous?
I'm Jordanian, I don't recommend citizenship by investing unless you want to live there, and you you have a better passport that you can go to Europe buy what you need without high taxes. And if you make money outside Jordan.
As for Amman and Aqaba, air traffic connectivity is very bad (prob only or mostly shitty Rj) compared to Cairo, Istanbul or Bangkok etc. I am more than two decades-long expat in the ME, I don’t mind to retire in the region but Aqaba is def. not in my list, way too small & trapped.
Turkey is nice. Not for Turks. Free and good Healthcare, good beaches, big cities, lower cost of living. List goes on. But that's possible if that you have western money. If not you are destined to live like 13th century peasant.
Turkey is a beautiful country and culture the only problem is earning money in Türkiye is impossible and the lira is worth nothing with constant inflation. If you have to make money in Türkiye and aren't already wealthy and connected you are like a slave or peasant. If you are making good money in euro or dollar remotely from a business or remote work you will live like a sultan in Türkiye.
@@ZuniMountainNM Mexico is a very dangerous and unstable country. However , in any country, there are pockets that don't experience the regular criminality and violence.
Can you make a video on what residence permits with a path to citizenship that you can get by being in certain in demand fields without needing a work visa supported by a company in the foreign country necessarily? For example, I am looking into moving to Colombia and found out I qualify for residency through the independent professional visa option. I think I’ve seen a similar program for Ireland who needs people from certain skilled professions (ex. I’m a speech-language pathologist) or El Salvador that’s offering their free 5,000 passports to skilled professionals. Would be another interesting “free” residence/passport option that I believe some countries offer but it’s not a highly discussed option
I don't always agree with everything that's said in these videos, but I admit that they're always interesting and deal with important and useful topics that, in everyday life, no one talks to us about.
Nobody likes to fly Turdkish Airlines. I had the misfortune and would not repeat. They took money for seat upgrades on 4 different flights, then didn't provide it ANY of the flights. When this incontrovertible fact was brought to their attention they refused to refund the money. We had numerous staff lie to our faces when we tried to confirm the seats after first discovering the issue. And rude, let's just say that if doing some unscheduled dental work for other people was not likely to get one sent to lock-up, there would have been some very happy Turkish dentists. If given the choice in future, I would choose to walk rather than fly with T/A.
I’m Australian and both my grandparents on one side, 1 is from Belgium the other from Croatia. I tried to apply for a European visa but because my mother was actually born here not overseas I got denied. Found that quite annoying. Just to save anyone anytime your parent must be born in the country for you to be eligible.
My husband's grand father was Lithuanian and my mother -in law is born in Australia,so is my husband but he managed to obtain that passport and I think he got it for him mother as well..I think he said it was a pain but he got it done all while he was living in Australia...there were restrictions to apply (birth year of the grandfather....etc etc) but he managed to get it years ago....maybe worth looking into it or check with a lawyer...hope you will find a way...
I live in Sharm el Sheik (Red Sea) and I love it. After 25 years in S.E.A I\m happy here. Red Sea cities are very relaxed and western woman wear European clothes. Weather is fantastic, although summer is hot.
In Türkiye, although you could probably avoid it if you come to the country at an old enough age, all of your male children would have mandatory military service unless they renounced their Turkish citizenship.
Mark my words - any country that thinks they can "appease" the EU or the USA is utterly delusional. The only thing that will truly appease the EU or the USA is the abolition of all CBI. Raising prices has simply now made all of the Caribbean programs (except St Kitts & Nevis) pointless as they are way overpriced for what you get. Other than St Kitts & Nevis, the only remaining program that's worth the money is Vanuatu.
ISRAEL. By far the BEST PASSPORT in the world. FREE HEALTHCARE, FREE COLLEGE, AND IN AMERICA YOU WILL GET AN ORGAN TRANSPLANT BEFORE AN AMERICAN GETS HIS.
Idk about the best place it's like most the world controlled by an oligarchy either the west or the east. Plus you have to be Jewish to get citizenship.
@@2ASHKENAZI Yes. The best thing about israeli citizenship is you get money straight from the American tax payers. How nice is that !!!! You will also get a free house in some cities in the OCCUPIED West Bank (like In Hebron or Jerusalem). You just pick a house and get some IDF to come with you and you just move in. They'll clear out the house of its Palestinian owners and you can just claim it right then and there ! Oh, how do you get israeli citizenship ? You just say your grandfather or grandmother are jewish. No DNA test or nothing.
My grandmother was born in Germany. A German citizenship would get me into the EU w the opportunity to travel Europe w less drama than my American passport affords. But I want to move to Asia, and I am obviously not Asian!
Are there any benefits to getting a Jamaican Passport? My father was born in Jamaica so there is an opportunity to obtain dual British and Jamaican nationality .
I'm Jamaican by descent too. You'll need an INFINITE supply of patience to deal with that government! Jamaican passport is useful in the Caribbean I guess, plus is superior to a UK passport in Ghana and Russia.
It depends. Do you hold British nationality? A Jamaican passport affords you the opportunity to move around the Caricom states with ease, but jobs are scarce
Coming back to your country of birth, having all German roots, speaking the language, looking German, but only having a Canadian passport (due to German regulations at the time) makes you eligable for a stay in Germany for up to 90 days. That's it!
I hear you. But then would you go back to Germany to live there? Not cheaper, apartment living with Germans can be cruel. Very nosy and watch over your coming and goings . I left Germany over 50 years ago . I followed my heart ,no retreats but unforgettable did not understand or wanted to understand what it means to give up your birthright . To late know. I might go to Germany for one more visit for way less than 90 days. As everyone gets older and visits become a burden for long stays.
Just supply your mothers birth certificate and your birth certificate and you should get a passport. Unless, you have given up your citizenship voluntary.
@@shekel-w5c German Citizenship was removed at the time when he got Canadian Citizenship. He can try to come back and seek permanent status like any other foreigner. Therefore needs proof of financial independance which is basically correct. He would be much better off if coming from another state than Canada. Whole different story then.
left Germany 43 yrs ago for canada they took my citizenship way from me, why would I go back after the way they treated me that country sucks they still haven't learned how to treat people
I’m not sure about Egypt, but if you receive Turkish citizenship after the age of 22, you don’t need to do military service. However, your children will still be required to serve, just like any other Turkish citizen. But you can pay for an exemption, which costs about 5,000 euros.
I’ve been thinking about it for years. When I was eight years old I remember thinking how convenient it would be. If I ever get enough money I will reach to you to get that chance for my hole family.😊
I heard that 93 (dont count me on that exact figure) want to join BRICS. It would be interesting to see what happens to countries economies and property prices if and/or when they actually start signing up.
I have a great great grandparent from Ireland that immigrated. We have all the documents. None of the next descendants were registered. Is it possible to get an Irish passport?
If I heard you correctly, you said your company can help with citizenship by descent as an ala carte service. Where can I find your fee range for this on your website?
Egyptian, Turkish and Jordanians are running away due to the limited opportunities in their counties. Why would recommended getting a passport in one of these poor counties and they are like Tier 4 passport wouldn't get you to even 80 countries and Tier 3 for Turkey (+120 Countries). Saint Lucia health care and job market not as good as US or even Europe. True, their passport are like Tier 2 with access to almost 150 counties but that's all. So if you already have Tier 1 (+170 Countries) or Tier 2 (+150 Countries) there is no point of getting it. Unless you're Like Tier 5 passport with below 50 counties then it will be an advancement for you.
You do amazing work! Can you make a video or a short clip that talks about (besides the US and Israel), where Jews are treated best and feel safest (physical safety) to invest and live in? Thank you in advance!
Even in countries where you may think that Jewish people would not be safe, such as South Africa for example, many, many Jewish people still live there with ease and have a good life!
If you are paying 300k for five year no interest bonds, your citizenship is not free because a savy investor could easily double their money in 2-3 years in the stock market. So in effect you are paying 500k even after getting the original 300k back.
Before the war, Ukraine gave Passports out for 5k USD bribe to the right Person. How you do it if you have a customer from a country like Germany. Germany does not Accept Dual Citizenship. I have a friend he married in Australia and got Afterwards the Australian Passport. Faster than he could think, Germany took off his German Passport. I have a German Passport, but I could have also another one because of Family line. There was a time in my life, nov 2017 to Feb 2018, where I had to go to an Office (Bürgeramt) and sign a paper that I only have one Citizenship. How do you do this with those customers, how high is the risk that the other country find out the Person has a second Passport?
Are there any disadvantages to getting a second passport? I have been going through the process of renewing my British passport. They ask if you have a second passport but the way they frame the questions makes t seem as if they will give you less support in a crisis if you have dual nationality -- like they will shift responsibility to the other country.
I have the Colombian passport by birth and the Jordanian one by marriage which was very easy to obtain, my husband though couldn’t get the Colombian passport only because the citizenship test has gotten very difficult to pass
Are you sure? I think the ruling was that foreign spouses don't have right to due process, so the US can bar their entry for any reason, or for no reason.
Hi , I am looking for getting europian passport my mom side great grandfather is european and father is buddhist indian but no paperwork only dn proof genetics I have , I really want european citizenship, Please guide on this Thank you
I have a Great Grandfather who was born in 1859 in the Liguria region of Italy. He emigrated to the US in 1881 and married a US citizen of Italian descent. As of the 1910 US census, two years before my grandfather was born, he was still listed as being unnaturalized. I do not think he had ever revoked his Italian citizenship since he was a US citizen through marriage. Of course my search ends at his birthday and place of origin. His father, who had the same name, was the only name listed. I do not know who his mother was. The other problem is tracking down a birth record if it still exists. Churches in that region would have those records and most are not digitized as far as I know. The other issue is that I have only three data points on tracking down his birth record - birthday, father’s name and region. The problem is that the first and last name is extremely common in that region.
If you have any mormon friends, you can ask if they have a family history search library in your area. The library has volunteers that can help and access to many resources that usually are not available for free.
I have a question that may seem silly, but I’m curious-why does this gentleman keep claiming that Ireland is a tax haven? I moved to Ireland 2.5 years ago and am halfway through the naturalization process. The tax rate here is 40% on income over €44,000 per year and 20% on income below that. If someone could explain this to me, I would be very grateful.
My grandfather emigrated to the US from Scotland. Would it be advantageous in any way to have this passport without planning to move there? Or would I be subject to taxes there and would it end up being a hassle?
I wish I could get citizenship by discent in Italy, but unfortunately, my great great grandfather became a US citizen before they were allowed to have dual citizenship
I've heard that Turkey has a great investment opportunity in the resort village of Burj Al Babas. As a matter of fact, if you enjoy peace and quiet and to not be bothered by pesky neighbors, it's the perfect place!
I was considering getting a second passport and because I’m a naturalized US citizen who was born in Canada I thought that might be a good one to get, but then I started thinking about Trudeau and put that idea on the back burner.
If you move to another country, you will still have to pay the US for all income taxes gained in any country in the world, as an American citizen. If you pay taxes in the other country already, and if that country has a tax treaty with the US, then you only need to pay the remainder of the balance between the taxes owed to the US. For Canadians, Canadians can declare to be a non resident for tax purposes (satisfying a bunch of conditions), and thus, only need to pay the taxes to the country where they live. Trudeau will not be the Prime Minister ever. Your decision on citizenship is usually for the long term. It's funny that you made a decision based on a political situation that eventually will end one day (and cycle).
So my grandma and great grandma is from Mexico. I bought a penthouse over 9 months ago in Bucerias. My grandpa is is from Ireland. I also am looking at HUA hin or Curacao or Back to Belize. In cash around 700k. I'll either keep 3x2 in Clearwater or keep the penthouse in Bucerias. I can keep both for portfolio, but I think I should lose one to put on next investment?
yeah, sure, turkey, jordan and egypt. I don't think they would let me live very long in one of those countries. I'd rather pay the 200-300K for a nice, friendly place to live.
I live in the USA now but was born in former Yugoslavia. I am a Croatian. I still have a permanent legal resident card here as I have been here since 1990. My parents, aunts and uncles have passed away. How would I go about getting a Croatian passport and citizenship reinstated there again?
Some of my family came from germany, very hard place to move to. Croatia is about the same, I looked it up. It say you must get copy of your birth certificate and have a valid ID. Also get any proof that your mom or dad was from Croatia. Then apply at your local Croatia embassy.
@nomadcapitalist 50 employees. You don't have to waste $1000000 dollars to move to another country. Love your work, Nomad capitalist. You inspired me to go places out of America!
These prices are they per person ? I have. 20 yr old and an 18yr old. Anything I want to do for me I would need to include them so they have options also due to the automatic draft coming down the pipeline
why would you want a US passport if you live in Canada? you will be forced to file taxes in US every year no matter how much or where you make you money)))) US passport is only good if you want to live there.
Who wants to move to France? The country with the highest taxes. Sure. But what do you get in return? Social and medical services. Retirement pensions. You can move to France and move to Ireland if you miss the English language. EU Schengen zone.
Is St. Nevis tax-free and do they pay any coupon for holding their 5 years bond? What is the cheapest tax-free country? Ideally for buying a property. I mean the income tax for profits from crypto trading and staking and other DeFi activities
Which countries are those? All those I have checked have increasing populations. The birth rate has slowed in many European countries but immigration numbers are increasing so much.
I think I am a descendant from Ireland. My last name Amos tracks back there and I know for a fact does not originate from the Caribbean. However, tracing that back has proven difficult, is this something you could do?
Irish citizenship by descent only goes back to Grandparents. So unless one of your Grandparents has an Irish (or British on the island of Ireland) birth certificate then you don’t qualify. If you have an Irish great grandparent though, the naturalization time goes from 5 years to 3 years.
That's not likely as most countries will not agree with your assessment of the need for asylum. Instead, be flexible as a family. Are any of your kids or grandkids getting ready to have a baby or talking about it? If so, pool your money to pay for them to have that baby in Mexico or Brazil. Both of which grant citizenship to the baby at birth and permanent residency to the parents and grandparents. My wife and I are about to have our first in Mexico to give most of our family a plan B.
Ecuador? DR? Vanatau? I hope this wasn’t an exhaustive list because maybe I might be missing something but aren’t those some great cheap alternatives for visa-free travel across the world?
Turkish cities are hotter than ever. Denizli Pamukkale 47 degrees centigrate during June 2024, Mersin 45 degrees centigrate, İzmir 40 degrees, Manisa has got 5 magnitude earthquake yesterday 43 degrees, Ankara has 37 degrees weather conditions.
How about Belgium. How can a nearly retired age person get citizenship without having worked 400 months or whatever their requirement is? Especially without investment money.
Ireland is having a massive immigrant/invasion problem aided and abetted by the Irish government. The Irish are fighting back, but we have to see how it works out.
@@Garcia061it’s what the WEF wants. Dilute the social ladder of the populous aswell as the homogeneity of it. Top down euro feudalism again. That’s what they want and it’s fucking clear when you see bus loads of MEN coming in EVERDAY on the borders. My mothers friend is a teacher in Folkestone UK, she says EVERYDAY 1-7 busses of MEN come into the uk and get shipped all over the country. This is VERY real.
Come here to Canada and have the authentic experience of having your bank account frozen!
Why people are leaving Canada: ruclips.net/video/FVRSXWb5Fs4/видео.html
Courtesy of the dainty dictator
Ouch
😅😅😅😂😂😂👍👍
And clapping a SSNazy official😢
France has the best tax treaty with the US for retirees. Zero taxes on your US pension and zero taxes on capital gains. After three months of residing continuously in France, you are then eligible to apply for the public health system in which you only pay 27 euros to see a general practitioner.
And if you become a French citizen you can never tax advantage of tax residency in Andorra or Monaco, not even if you renounce French Citizenship. Just something to keep in mind.
@@matthewnirenberg dont you have to get a monaco citizenship?
@@falconellirk901 The only way for a person to get citizenship to Monaco is for them to have had PR (easy to get if you can buy property/apartment/open a giant bank account - takes 3yrs due to wait list) for 10-20yrs and to renounce all other citizenships once they've been told they'll become a citizen of Monaco after having applied. Monaco doesn't permit dual/multi nationality.
Literally most people in Monaco have PR which is all you need to live forever in Monaco without having to renounce citizenships.
France is the last country here in the EU i would go to!!! Islamic violence, the nogo zones in every big city, they also have the biggest debt in the EU...And if i may, stay away from West-Europe, at least in the US you have weapons to defend you when things turn evil, here we have nothing!!! If you want to leave the US and renaunce your citizenship, go to Namibia, south African country.
@@lucarmyfool4800 fake debt due to the Rothschild law
If I have to spend a ton to get an Egyptian passport...I want something big in return ...like a pyramid...
😅😅😅😅😅
I'm sure someone will sell you one
Egyptians don't even want an Egyptian passport!
one of the worst countries on earth
And it isn’t even allowed to climb the pyramids, as it was 100 years ago. Pathetic.
Grenada. 150K non-returnable and you don’t even have to go there. Or buy an approved property starting from 250K and own it for at least 5 years.
As an Egyptian, you definitely do NOT want an Egyptian passport, literally one of the weakest in existence with no tangible benefits and only a bunch of drawbacks
It's the ultimate Pyramid Scheme... Sorry.
Ha ha ha. Funny.
@@kevinadams9468 criminally underrated comment
@@kevinadams9468 👍 🤣🤣🤣
well, yeah, but if you allready have a strong first world passport, that's a non issue, you're not buying it for visa free travel,
Please advise your viewers NOT to move to Costa Rica. This country is EXTREMELY expensive. It’s more expensive than many countries in Europe. We call it Monaco of Central America. We are returning to US with plans to move somewhere else after living here in Costa Rica for 4 years.
Many Canadians are still under the misguided perception that it’s a great place to go in terms of tax and property values. My husband’s family is from there and we were there 30 years ago and it was expensive then. During the 2008-09 mortgage bust in the US many Americans went down and prices rose very quickly. Problems with cartels. Small police force that can’t handle the crime and no army for back up either.
We’re considering moving to Costa Rica. Please change our mind? We’re a family of 3 (young child 2 years old). I hear that food and real estate is expensive, but so is America.
We found it hard to spend less than $400/week on groceries in the US, and everyday life is so expensive ($12/hr for parking, $80 for nails minimum…). Add to it income and property taxes… and it’s insane. I feel like even if Costa Rica was twice the price in food and similar real estate prices, the savings in taxes (nothing on foreign income) would still be greater than the increase in grocery bill.
What do you think? Please prove me wrong, as I’d rather not move my entire family in the wrong direction.
Try Ecuador . It’s cheaper . Many expats, or Panama. I know someone that bought a house and wants it as a second home but not live there.
She has so many regrets. She put a lot of money into it wants to sell it very bad.
@@forcenaturelle605$80 for nails... What are you doing?? Just stop that shit. Immediately. Come onnn
@@TheAblackb2 That's not me, I'm a dude. But we were just visiting the US and my partner went to a nail salon with her friend, it was $80. And supposedly that was cheap. Other places charged $120. I mean... that wasn't the most surprising, what shocked me most was paying $12/hr for parking in downtown of a small city, or $50 for the most basic lunch with sandwiches (+ tax + tip)
THIS, is the content i subscribe for. You are awesome Andrew, Thank you again!
My son is applying for Italy. My wife came from Italy as a teenager, and my grandparents came from Italy (1912). So I think he has some chance, but it is a long process.
Tell him to buy a cheap house in Italy, he can get automatic residency if he owns property. My best friend is doing it now.
@@kaisailor1absolutely untrue. Property ownership in Italy is not a path to residency on its own
You can take the citizenship ..be aware that Italy is a complicated tax country
Wishing your son, the best of luck. I was born here my mother was born in Greece. My father was born in Cyprus. Well, I went to the consulate here and they said that my parents who got married in Cyprus did not have their marriage officially registered in Greece. And that someone would have to go to Greece to register it before I could think about going ahead with applying for citizenship.
My son says he has a Turkish Passport. Interesting to understand how he did it. It came as a shock as the only other person from the family that went there was blown to bits at Gallipoli. It is so surprising how things change in subsequent generations.
Turkey is facing economic turmoil too, hehehehe good luck
@@RajanKumar-ui5yr I wouldn’t mess around there. It’s another country where nosey reporters end up in “car accidents” while looking under rocks they shouldn’t.
Turkey is on its way to becoming rich. Gold backed digital Lyra. Precious metals and partners with Ripple and positioning as a crypto hub and working with rich mineral countries in Africa and are not viewed as a threat like the European countries
@@killbaal4149 in the uk and UK they just hold you hostage for over 10 years
Churchill's fault
To get Turkish citizenship, you need to invest at least $400,000 in real estate, which can be residential, commercial, or land, and hold it for at least three years. Alternatively, you can deposit $500,000 into a Turkish bank or buy government bonds for three years. Note that 2,200,000 Turkish lira, around $65,000 USD, isn’t enough for citizenship. The process can take six months to a year.
How do you buy the government bonds?
"Plan C,D,F"...I'll probably have to take plan F since that was my most common letter during school...
😂
You give a very laboured briefing to get across a few points.
That’s just how “intellectuals” speak. 😅
@@Blueskies1180 He's not an intellectual/intelligentsia. It's privileged/sheltered/ and/or nepo-baby speak -- i.e., a privileged, *hyper*-capitalist pitchman. Occasionally, the information is useful to working and middle-class folks, but most of it is for billionaires and very wealthy multi-millionaires. It would be fine, if he had some consideration of the negative impact of some of his "advice" and actions on "regular" people, particularly the local residents.
@@lovely_pariah You sound even more pretentious than him so much so that I had to laugh at the irony.
@@hako8358 Not pretentious, just overly-educated, under-employed and decidedly working class. I was a teacher for a good part of my life.
@@lovely_pariah You being a teacher is meaningless. Every parent is a teacher. It takes very little education to be a teacher.
Sometimes a permanent residence in a country might be better than citizenship.
In what way?
@@id9139 You most likely won't get drafted into the coming WWIII.
@@id9139 sometimes there are restrictions that come with citizenship. Like forfeiting your US passport or having to pay taxes. The goal is to have freedom, flexibility, options and mobility.
@@ruralsquirrel5158if WW3 arrives, we’ll all be dust in the stratosphere by dinner time
@@id9139 tax
It is easy in Brazil. Just go there, look for a simple job and ask for your visa to be changed. Live there for 5 years and you get a passport.
Only if you survive those 5 years.
It's not true. To get a Brazilian passport it's necessary to be a citizen. It's not easy to get Brazilian citizenship. There is a set of exceptions for refugees and foreign people without documents.
@@alchemira, stop watching news from Rio (unsafe place, despite the wonderful landscape). South Brazil is an amazing place to live. Also, half of the Brazilian Southeast is rich and developed, with a dozen good cities between 500K to 1 million people.
No one talks about language. Unless a person is over 60 years of age, it is mandatory to learn the de facto/official language for citizenship.
Individuals seeking Brazilian citizenship need to speak Portuguese.
Brazil is new jack city
Stack up 6 or 7 figures and you will acquire second citizenship pretty easily in a handful of caribean nations. The other way around is to pile humongous amount of money into a business or stocks to reap dividends before getting naturalized.
Facts
Almost anywhere in the world
Curious - Ireland - isn't there lots of issues over there? Tight housing? Employment issues? Wouldn't moving their add to their problems (supply of housing) for the locals and push prices even more?
They are being invaded by "migrants" just like the U.S. and low availability of housing.
No employment issues in Ireland, however there is a huge shortage of housing.
Problems with diversity and criminal behaviour are increasing.
Given how easy it is to get a passport in Ireland the value of the passport and it's reputation will fall.
Just come from there recently and left for the very reasons you mention in your comments.
Interestinly, Jordan does not only come with a citizenship program, but also with a permanent residency program for property investment as low as usd 200'000. As the passport is not powerful anyway, maybe the residency program is the better option for retirees.
For me Akaba is a high end place to live, with all amenities given and a great tax regime (only local income is taxed and due to special economic zone, goods are duty free and consumer prices are very affordable). And the property prices are considarably low for such a prime place with perfect year around climate.
I just wonder why is this option not more famous?
I'm Jordanian, I don't recommend citizenship by investing unless you want to live there, and you you have a better passport that you can go to Europe buy what you need without high taxes. And if you make money outside Jordan.
As for Amman and Aqaba, air traffic connectivity is very bad (prob only or mostly shitty Rj) compared to Cairo, Istanbul or Bangkok etc. I am more than two decades-long expat in the ME, I don’t mind to retire in the region but Aqaba is def. not in my list, way too small & trapped.
As a Turkish citizen by birth I am confused: you want to come in, while we want to get out (and apparently can't)?
Turkey is nice. Not for Turks. Free and good Healthcare, good beaches, big cities, lower cost of living. List goes on. But that's possible if that you have western money. If not you are destined to live like 13th century peasant.
@@ErtugrulK The fact that all of those points are true is so tragic.
Turkey is a beautiful country and culture the only problem is earning money in Türkiye is impossible and the lira is worth nothing with constant inflation. If you have to make money in Türkiye and aren't already wealthy and connected you are like a slave or peasant.
If you are making good money in euro or dollar remotely from a business or remote work you will live like a sultan in Türkiye.
@@impyrobot It breaks my heart that it's true.
@@ErtugrulKsell shit to Americans
6 months away from being able to naturalize in Mexico. Well worth the 5 years to live here.
Where in Mexico? I've always feared that country with all of the crime I hear about.
@@ZuniMountainNM Tijuana - one of the highest murder rates per capita in the world! But the weather is great.
@@ZuniMountainNM Mexico is a very dangerous and unstable country. However , in any country, there are pockets that don't experience the regular criminality and violence.
Can you make a video on what residence permits with a path to citizenship that you can get by being in certain in demand fields without needing a work visa supported by a company in the foreign country necessarily? For example, I am looking into moving to Colombia and found out I qualify for residency through the independent professional visa option. I think I’ve seen a similar program for Ireland who needs people from certain skilled professions (ex. I’m a speech-language pathologist) or El Salvador that’s offering their free 5,000 passports to skilled professionals. Would be another interesting “free” residence/passport option that I believe some countries offer but it’s not a highly discussed option
I have all my paperwork finished for Italy through my grandfather but dang it seems impossible to get an appointment with the consulate.
Get residence at a commune over there
@@tipr8739 i need to finish in the states (Houston) right now I’m unable to leave my animals for very long.. 😕.
Feel free to reach out via help@nomadcapitalist.com.
Or use nomad capitalist to file an “Against-the-queue” case
Are all these “for free” options investment based, and therefore still only for millionaires?
I don't always agree with everything that's said in these videos, but I admit that they're always interesting and deal with important and useful topics that, in everyday life, no one talks to us about.
Nobody likes to fly Turdkish Airlines. I had the misfortune and would not repeat. They took money for seat upgrades on 4 different flights, then didn't provide it ANY of the flights. When this incontrovertible fact was brought to their attention they refused to refund the money. We had numerous staff lie to our faces when we tried to confirm the seats after first discovering the issue. And rude, let's just say that if doing some unscheduled dental work for other people was not likely to get one sent to lock-up, there would have been some very happy Turkish dentists. If given the choice in future, I would choose to walk rather than fly with T/A.
I’m Australian and both my grandparents on one side, 1 is from Belgium the other from Croatia. I tried to apply for a European visa but because my mother was actually born here not overseas I got denied. Found that quite annoying. Just to save anyone anytime your parent must be born in the country for you to be eligible.
Do you wish to join a real estate investment company
My husband's grand father was Lithuanian and my mother -in law is born in Australia,so is my husband but he managed to obtain that passport and I think he got it for him mother as well..I think he said it was a pain but he got it done all while he was living in Australia...there were restrictions to apply (birth year of the grandfather....etc etc) but he managed to get it years ago....maybe worth looking into it or check with a lawyer...hope you will find a way...
I live in Sharm el Sheik (Red Sea) and I love it. After 25 years in S.E.A I\m happy here. Red Sea cities are very relaxed and western woman wear European clothes. Weather is fantastic, although summer is hot.
I also heard that if you want to visit Saudi Arabia, you just wait for a Jewish prophet to part the waters and take a stroll towards the east...😉
I’m visiting Sharm El Sheik for a whole month soon. Really looking forward to it!
90% Ukrainians and Russians there
And the sharks are hungry.
@@johannkriz5138 No, many Italians and British.
I want a long term residence permit in Mauritius, what is the investment required??
In Türkiye, although you could probably avoid it if you come to the country at an old enough age, all of your male children would have mandatory military service unless they renounced their Turkish citizenship.
Mark my words - any country that thinks they can "appease" the EU or the USA is utterly delusional. The only thing that will truly appease the EU or the USA is the abolition of all CBI. Raising prices has simply now made all of the Caribbean programs (except St Kitts & Nevis) pointless as they are way overpriced for what you get. Other than St Kitts & Nevis, the only remaining program that's worth the money is Vanuatu.
💯
Cbi?
@@Sam-ip6co CBI = Citizenship By Investment
@@Sam-ip6cocitizenship by investment.
@@Sam-ip6co CBI = Citizenship By Investment
I have a Brazilian and Irish Passport.
Where should I go next?
ISRAEL. By far the BEST PASSPORT in the world. FREE HEALTHCARE, FREE COLLEGE, AND IN AMERICA YOU WILL GET AN ORGAN TRANSPLANT BEFORE AN AMERICAN GETS HIS.
@@2ASHKENAZI and money too + ukrainian passport you will get everything for free
@@2ASHKENAZI LOL
Idk about the best place it's like most the world controlled by an oligarchy either the west or the east. Plus you have to be Jewish to get citizenship.
@@2ASHKENAZI Yes. The best thing about israeli citizenship is you get money straight from the American tax payers. How nice is that !!!! You will also get a free house in some cities in the OCCUPIED West Bank (like In Hebron or Jerusalem). You just pick a house and get some IDF to come with you and you just move in. They'll clear out the house of its Palestinian owners and you can just claim it right then and there ! Oh, how do you get israeli citizenship ? You just say your grandfather or grandmother are jewish. No DNA test or nothing.
You my friend have absolutely no idea that the income tax in Ireland is higher than that in France.
Great post. I definitely would not want an Egyptian passport. Many countries make it very difficult to visit with one.
I have the Venezuela, uruguay and spain passports ❤
🤛
What about a North Korean one?!
How did you get a passport for Uruguay?
@Profoundillumination my parents are from there
My grandmother was born in Germany. A German citizenship would get me into the EU w the opportunity to travel Europe w less drama than my American passport affords. But I want to move to Asia, and I am obviously not Asian!
Are there any benefits to getting a Jamaican
Passport? My father was born in Jamaica so there is an opportunity to obtain dual British and Jamaican nationality .
I'm Jamaican by descent too. You'll need an INFINITE supply of patience to deal with that government!
Jamaican passport is useful in the Caribbean I guess, plus is superior to a UK passport in Ghana and Russia.
ganga mon!!!
If there isn't any military service requirement you should get one
Jamaicans are starting to wonder if separating from UK was a mistake. Don't deal with the gov't there
It depends. Do you hold British nationality? A Jamaican passport affords you the opportunity to move around the Caricom states with ease, but jobs are scarce
Turkiye, Malta, and Ireland are my faves so far.
This is amazing thank you so much Andrew 👏
Glad you like it!
Jordans program sounds interesting you could do a video on that
I’m a citizenship collector :) USA 🇺🇸, Argentina 🇦🇷, Germany 🇩🇪 and little beautiful Serbia 🇷🇸
I think I have east and west 🎉🎉🎉🎉
Only 4? Almost anyone i know has 4 passports (mom country, dad country, country was born in and the current country lives in). Easy.
Boom!
@@einnnor How many do you have?
How
@@dadada396 enough.
Coming back to your country of birth, having all German roots, speaking the language, looking German, but only having a Canadian passport (due to German regulations at the time) makes you eligable for a stay in Germany for up to 90 days. That's it!
I hear you. But then would you go back to Germany to live there? Not cheaper, apartment living with Germans can be cruel. Very nosy and watch over your coming and goings .
I left Germany over 50 years ago . I followed my heart ,no retreats but unforgettable did not understand or wanted to understand what it means to give up your birthright . To late know. I might go to Germany for one more visit for way less than 90 days.
As everyone gets older and visits become a burden for long stays.
You must apply for refugee status there you get financial support free housing and health care
Just supply your mothers birth certificate and your birth certificate and you should get a passport. Unless, you have given up your citizenship voluntary.
@@shekel-w5c German Citizenship was removed at the time when he got Canadian Citizenship. He can try to come back and seek permanent status like any other foreigner. Therefore needs proof of financial independance which is basically correct. He would be much better off if coming from another state than Canada. Whole different story then.
left Germany 43 yrs ago for canada they took my citizenship way from me, why would I go back after the way they treated me
that country sucks they still haven't learned how to treat people
Turkish and Egyptian citizens are subject to conscription. Jordan conscripts some citizens.
Turkey is also part of NATO and seems like Erdogan wants to make Turkey great again. 😮
@@samuelzamozny763 Right but a passport bro or his sons could be made to be part of the project.
I’m not sure about Egypt, but if you receive Turkish citizenship after the age of 22, you don’t need to do military service. However, your children will still be required to serve, just like any other Turkish citizen. But you can pay for an exemption, which costs about 5,000 euros.
@@ahm0301being able to pay for exemption is crazy 🗿
Can you use 23 and Me to get the 2nd or 3rd citizenship? 😅
Great questiom
I’ve been thinking about it for years. When I was eight years old I remember thinking how convenient it would be. If I ever get enough money I will reach to you to get that chance for my hole family.😊
Thanks for sharing!
I heard that 93 (dont count me on that exact figure) want to join BRICS. It would be interesting to see what happens to countries economies and property prices if and/or when they actually start signing up.
I have a great great grandparent from Ireland that immigrated. We have all the documents. None of the next descendants were registered. Is it possible to get an Irish passport?
Please email help@nomadcapitalist.com and Peter will be happy to review this.
In my research, Ireland stops at a great grandparent as far as obtaining citizenship by descent in the country.
If I heard you correctly, you said your company can help with citizenship by descent as an ala carte service. Where can I find your fee range for this on your website?
You can email help@nomadcapitalist.com for a quote.
Egyptian, Turkish and Jordanians are running away due to the limited opportunities in their counties. Why would recommended getting a passport in one of these poor counties and they are like Tier 4 passport wouldn't get you to even 80 countries and Tier 3 for Turkey (+120 Countries).
Saint Lucia health care and job market not as good as US or even Europe. True, their passport are like Tier 2 with access to almost 150 counties but that's all. So if you already have Tier 1 (+170 Countries) or Tier 2 (+150 Countries) there is no point of getting it. Unless you're Like Tier 5 passport with below 50 counties then it will be an advancement for you.
You do amazing work! Can you make a video or a short clip that talks about (besides the US and Israel), where Jews are treated best and feel safest (physical safety) to invest and live in? Thank you in advance!
Done: ruclips.net/video/vZtoYHdqQQs/видео.html
Where are they treated poorly?
Even in countries where you may think that Jewish people would not be safe, such as South Africa for example, many, many Jewish people still live there with ease and have a good life!
Thanks for your work, another very interesting video. Is there actually a video in which the Palau ID is discussed?
Great content as always
If you are paying 300k for five year no interest bonds, your citizenship is not free because a savy investor could easily double their money in 2-3 years in the stock market. So in effect you are paying 500k even after getting the original 300k back.
Before the war, Ukraine gave Passports out for 5k USD bribe to the right Person.
How you do it if you have a customer from a country like Germany. Germany does not Accept Dual Citizenship. I have a friend he married in Australia and got Afterwards the Australian Passport. Faster than he could think, Germany took off his German Passport.
I have a German Passport, but I could have also another one because of Family line. There was a time in my life, nov 2017 to Feb 2018, where I had to go to an Office (Bürgeramt) and sign a paper that I only have one Citizenship.
How do you do this with those customers, how high is the risk that the other country find out the Person has a second Passport?
Are there any disadvantages to getting a second passport? I have been going through the process of renewing my British passport. They ask if you have a second passport but the way they frame the questions makes t seem as if they will give you less support in a crisis if you have dual nationality -- like they will shift responsibility to the other country.
No the UK has no limit. I was born here but have 3 nationalities. Never been an issue in the UK. Was actually more useful in some cases.
I have the Colombian passport by birth and the Jordanian one by marriage which was very easy to obtain, my husband though couldn’t get the Colombian passport only because the citizenship test has gotten very difficult to pass
Thank you Andrew
What about the Dominican Republic?
Don't know if u knew this or not but the supreme Court in the states just banned foreign spouses from entering the country😬
Are you sure? I think the ruling was that foreign spouses don't have right to due process, so the US can bar their entry for any reason, or for no reason.
Hi , I am looking for getting europian passport my mom side great grandfather is european and father is buddhist indian but no paperwork only dn proof genetics I have , I really want european citizenship, Please guide on this Thank you
I have a Great Grandfather who was born in 1859 in the Liguria region of Italy. He emigrated to the US in 1881 and married a US citizen of Italian descent. As of the 1910 US census, two years before my grandfather was born, he was still listed as being unnaturalized. I do not think he had ever revoked his Italian citizenship since he was a US citizen through marriage. Of course my search ends at his birthday and place of origin. His father, who had the same name, was the only name listed. I do not know who his mother was. The other problem is tracking down a birth record if it still exists. Churches in that region would have those records and most are not digitized as far as I know. The other issue is that I have only three data points on tracking down his birth record - birthday, father’s name and region. The problem is that the first and last name is extremely common in that region.
Feel free to reach out if you need help: help@nomadcapitalist.com.
If you have any mormon friends, you can ask if they have a family history search library in your area. The library has volunteers that can help and access to many resources that usually are not available for free.
Would you be willing to do a Future Video on the Strongest Passports Available with the Requirements to access them?
We did: ruclips.net/video/74nlLWTvIDk/видео.htmlsi=ev_7HOHtlJbgFMW-
I have a question that may seem silly, but I’m curious-why does this gentleman keep claiming that Ireland is a tax haven? I moved to Ireland 2.5 years ago and am halfway through the naturalization process. The tax rate here is 40% on income over €44,000 per year and 20% on income below that.
If someone could explain this to me, I would be very grateful.
We have an article that will help How to Pay Low Taxes in Ireland as a Non-dom: nomadcapitalist.com/finance/pay-low-taxes-in-ireland/
My grandfather emigrated to the US from Scotland. Would it be advantageous in any way to have this passport without planning to move there? Or would I be subject to taxes there and would it end up being a hassle?
I wish I could get citizenship by discent in Italy, but unfortunately, my great great grandfather became a US citizen before they were allowed to have dual citizenship
Grrrr
I've heard that Turkey has a great investment opportunity in the resort village of Burj Al Babas. As a matter of fact, if you enjoy peace and quiet and to not be bothered by pesky neighbors, it's the perfect place!
Could you do a video on the best places to go to live, lowering your foreign income on way to getting their citizenship?
If you're married do you have to double your donation in all these places?
I was considering getting a second passport and because I’m a naturalized US citizen who was born in Canada I thought that might be a good one to get, but then I started thinking about Trudeau and put that idea on the back burner.
If you move to another country, you will still have to pay the US for all income taxes gained in any country in the world, as an American citizen. If you pay taxes in the other country already, and if that country has a tax treaty with the US, then you only need to pay the remainder of the balance between the taxes owed to the US.
For Canadians, Canadians can declare to be a non resident for tax purposes (satisfying a bunch of conditions), and thus, only need to pay the taxes to the country where they live.
Trudeau will not be the Prime Minister ever. Your decision on citizenship is usually for the long term. It's funny that you made a decision based on a political situation that eventually will end one day (and cycle).
So my grandma and great grandma is from Mexico. I bought a penthouse over 9 months ago in Bucerias. My grandpa is is from Ireland. I also am looking at HUA hin or Curacao or Back to Belize. In cash around 700k. I'll either keep 3x2 in Clearwater or keep the penthouse in Bucerias. I can keep both for portfolio, but I think I should lose one to put on next investment?
Are these pay in full or through consistent long term payments?
yeah, sure, turkey, jordan and egypt. I don't think they would let me live very long in one of those countries. I'd rather pay the 200-300K for a nice, friendly place to live.
Yeah, I don’t think they’re welcoming my ethnic/religious identity.
Are you allowed to Rent the property?
What’s the minimum down payment
If one were to buy a condo in Turkey, is there a minimum cost you need to spend to qualify for citizenship by investment?
US$400,000
@@nomadcapitalist thank you!
I’ve seen that lamp in the last 25 videos. Sometimes it’s on, sometimes it’s off, sometimes you can see its reflection.
💡
So, you can't move to the Caribbean as a resident, and lower your foreign income on way to getting their citizenship?
Thank you for sharing!!!
Thanks for watching! 😊
What happened with Malta CBI program? Is there program going away soon ?
Mella
I live in the USA now but was born in former Yugoslavia. I am a Croatian. I still have a permanent legal resident card here as I have been here since 1990. My parents, aunts and uncles have passed away. How would I go about getting a Croatian passport and citizenship reinstated there again?
Some of my family came from germany, very hard place to move to. Croatia is about the same, I looked it up. It say you must get copy of your birth certificate and have a valid ID. Also get any proof that your mom or dad was from Croatia. Then apply at your local Croatia embassy.
Please contact our team which specializes in citizenship by descent cases through this link: nomadcapitalist.com/products/citizenship-by-descent/
@nomadcapitalist 50 employees. You don't have to waste $1000000 dollars to move to another country. Love your work, Nomad capitalist. You inspired me to go places out of America!
@@Escape_The_Mundane I actually was born there but getting my records was an issue due the records department being destroyed in the war
@anteperic2836 That should be illegal, my friend. I know many ukraine and russian they went to America.
These prices are they per person ? I have. 20 yr old and an 18yr old. Anything I want to do for me I would need to include them so they have options also due to the automatic draft coming down the pipeline
Some countries include children up to 21 or even 25. Different programs vary. Do your research
@@plizak that’s why I am asking here as I am starting my research
Feel free to email help@nomadcapitalist.com for assistance.
What about getting a simple US Passport if you live in Canada?
why would you want a US passport if you live in Canada? you will be forced to file taxes in US every year no matter how much or where you make you money)))) US passport is only good if you want to live there.
I already have 3 passports. Two in North America and one from EU.
Thanks for sharing 😊
Who wants to move to France? The country with the highest taxes. Sure. But what do you get in return? Social and medical services. Retirement pensions.
You can move to France and move to Ireland if you miss the English language. EU Schengen zone.
It’s a very common perception that there are medical services in these socialist countries. Until you actually need an MRI or a surgery.
😂
Is it llegal to travel to different countries with 2 Passport that 1 supports dual citizenship and the other Don't support dual citizenship.
Beautiful painting in your Turkey house.
Thank You!
Is St. Nevis tax-free and do they pay any coupon for holding their 5 years bond? What is the cheapest tax-free country? Ideally for buying a property. I mean the income tax for profits from crypto trading and staking and other DeFi activities
Lovely painting in that apartment at 5.34. Who was the artist?
Andrew - since most nations in Europe have declining populations, will they be encouraging new immigrants from the US?
Which countries are those? All those I have checked have increasing populations. The birth rate has slowed in many European countries but immigration numbers are increasing so much.
@@alibali672 If that is true, then that is good. They need to immigrants since ladies are not having babies.
I think I am a descendant from Ireland. My last name Amos tracks back there and I know for a fact does not originate from the Caribbean. However, tracing that back has proven difficult, is this something you could do?
We generally get hired to handle more difficult citizenship by descent cases. Email help@nomadcapitalist.com and we can see.
Irish citizenship by descent only goes back to Grandparents. So unless one of your Grandparents has an Irish (or British on the island of Ireland) birth certificate then you don’t qualify. If you have an Irish great grandparent though, the naturalization time goes from 5 years to 3 years.
@@tipr8739 okay thanks for the info.
What about seeking asylum? My home country (US) is abusive… and I am seriously afraid for my son and grandsons especially.
That's not likely as most countries will not agree with your assessment of the need for asylum. Instead, be flexible as a family. Are any of your kids or grandkids getting ready to have a baby or talking about it? If so, pool your money to pay for them to have that baby in Mexico or Brazil. Both of which grant citizenship to the baby at birth and permanent residency to the parents and grandparents. My wife and I are about to have our first in Mexico to give most of our family a plan B.
@@flowbrandz316 Won't work - those paths have been closed mid-late last year. The only options anyone has are citizenship by descent or to do CBI.
How is it abusive?
If you donate to the Democrat party the government will abuse you less. Heil Biden!
@@matthewnirenberg which paths exactly? Please cite government sources
Hi bro as a foreigner can i set up my youtube adsense to Georgia ? How would i file taxes from utube income ... any ideas ?
www.nomadcapitalist.com/apply
Ecuador? DR? Vanatau? I hope this wasn’t an exhaustive list because maybe I might be missing something but aren’t those some great cheap alternatives for visa-free travel across the world?
Go to their website, he's done a lot of videos on those countries
Turkish cities are hotter than ever. Denizli Pamukkale 47 degrees centigrate during June 2024, Mersin 45 degrees centigrate, İzmir 40 degrees, Manisa has got 5 magnitude earthquake yesterday 43 degrees, Ankara has 37 degrees weather conditions.
if u have to buy bonds or property then re sell them it s not free anymore, u have to have that capital to begin with
Excellent!
Are Latin America citizenship by marriage child birth still applicable?
So no ways to work somewhere and get 2nd citizenship?
Almost everywhere does that. You have to get in, then naturalize
That's not what his channel is about. His market is for rich businessmen who wont work for companies
Guess first thing is to get rich then
This channel is not for normal people
How about Belgium. How can a nearly retired age person get citizenship without having worked 400 months or whatever their requirement is? Especially without investment money.
It's now become much more difficult, and no longer 3 years, now 5...
@@grant5059 for working or for residence requirement?
SAUDI Arabia stop using the petro dollar. Can you do a video on that???
Ireland is having a massive immigrant/invasion problem aided and abetted by the Irish government. The Irish are fighting back, but we have to see how it works out.
Agree I don’t see this ending well. Big polarity of wealth in Ireland and not much in the middle- which is never great for anyone
@@Garcia061it’s what the WEF wants. Dilute the social ladder of the populous aswell as the homogeneity of it. Top down euro feudalism again. That’s what they want and it’s fucking clear when you see bus loads of MEN coming in EVERDAY on the borders. My mothers friend is a teacher in Folkestone UK, she says EVERYDAY 1-7 busses of MEN come into the uk and get shipped all over the country. This is VERY real.