As a Brazilian, I agree that having a children is easy and very simple, but raising one is another story. If you think of raising a child and live as an expat settler here, you should go look out for countryside cities in rich regions, such as São Paulo and Minas Gerais. Those city are often safer and quiet, and rather cheaper than the touristic sites or international cities. I recommend the city of São Caetano do Sul and Santos, their houses are big and mostly affordable, not to mention that their walkability is way better than any city in the US. Raising a children is also something the government wants you to do it, after your third child, the government puts you in the Bolsa Família program, where it gives you an extra aid income to help raising the children, this is why most rich families in Brazil have way more children than the west, they want to have children.
Thanks for sharing insights and good info! Clients often ask me for good places to stay and I constantly keep exploring new areas. I’ll probably take a trip down there sometime in the near future.
@@daishoo It's applied if the richer family are Brazilian citizens and can't afford to get their children basic necessities. Reminder that corrupt politicians allowed dead and very rich people to receive the amount for twelve children in this program during lava jato investigation.
@@ethandouro4334 I do not understand your definition of richer, in this case. Perhaps your refering to families whose income is slightly above the rules for the program? I do not think class A or B families are eligible no matter how many children they have, but if it is so, it may be a good thing provided it is not abused.
@@daishoo Yeah I'm refering to those types of "Rich" families, that even though has a decent income, can't raise their children that much with their income and live in expensive cities like São Paulo or Rio de Janeiro. Not to those families that have those huge houses in Goiânia that are rich enough to raise not only their own children, but others children, lol.
Smart man. And Brazil is also multicultural. You can see some Japanese Brazilians, Black brazilians and Indian Brazilians. For instance, look closely at Romario. Their passport is one of the most travel friendly of all latam. The only issue is the language. I wish they spoke Spanish like everyone else. Portuguese is so hard to write but even more to speak for non natives and the language is not taught in western schools. If you can manage that incredibly hard language, then you have won the game and your kids are free
Thanks! & good point - True, very multicultural, something a lot of outsiders prefer, some don’t factor this in when choosing a residency. Language is always a tricky one - what all does one learn - Spanish, French or Portuguese…
@@GoodlifeInvestorSpanish first. It's the most widely spoken of the three. And, once you are fairly proficient, it's not too hard to pick up the others.
didn`t see anyone talking about this but one thing that would keep me from having birth in the US is the insane amount of money I would be charged by the hospitals for the pure act of giving birth. in that case brazil is an easy win because the public healthcare is 100% free for everyone, even if you`re a foreigner
You should do more of these poll based videos. Nice change from the usual self. Also IMO this setup looks much much better than your other one with the mirror
The best one is Portugal. A brazilian can apply to be treated the same way as a Portuguese but only inside the portuguese territory and holds no validity in the european union and still needs the same 5 years of residency to obtain citizenship as everyone else. With the new changes to the portuguese citizenship law portugal offers the best possible cost/benefit. If a turist gives birth here is 100% free of charge and way better quality than Brazil. Futhermore the child and the parents have right to a residence permit through article 122 B SEF minor born in Portugal Once the residence permit of baby and parents arrive home you can apply immediately for the child ´s EU passport. And a portuguese passport gives you the right to a brazilian passport after just one year in Brazil but not the opposite and gives you an easier right of abode in macau wealthiest per capita gdp on earth.
No citizenship eligibility for parents after one year, unlike Brazil. Residency permit in Portugal is easy don’t need birth for it. Apart from that a lot of folks don’t like to enter the EU tax net and avoid other hassles.
@@GoodlifeInvestor The baby will be eligible for immediate citizenship as soon as the residence permit arrives home. If the child is not born in Portugal then needs the parents to get the citizenship first which will take 5 years of legal residency (excluding all the time spent waiting TRC so about 2 years more that most people spend waiting for TRC ( unless they have a child in the country them they can legalize immediately through a special procedure article 122 B) 7 years plus the processing time and the processing time is exploding thanks to huge requests from sephardic jews. Think ahead if you give birth in Portugal you can legalize immediately via a special procedure as soon as the permit arrives home you can apply for the child´s portuguese passport and it will be approved very fast because it has priority in aproval article 6.2 minor born in Portugal is given priority treatment compared to 6.1 citizenship by residence then guess what you can move to Brazil very easily thanks to a deal to boost movement among portuguese speaking countries we even have the CPLP Visa and the CPLP residence permit now and apply for your child´s passport after just one year in brazil ( portuguese ciizens have right to a passport from brazil after one year there) then the parents become the parents of a brazilian- portuguese citizen and guess what they can also claim a brazilian passport after one year. All you need is to spend one year in brazil apply for the child´s and then once the child´s come out apply for yours ( because you become parent of a brazilian and have been in brazil for more than one year). Congratulations
@@GoodlifeInvestor the right to brazilian citizenship for portuguesse citizens is written inside the constitution of BRAZIL iteself and not on the nationality law (just like the one for parents of brazilians). ONLY 2 CRITERIA CAN BE DEMMANDED TO PORTUGUESE CITIZENS RESIDENCE FOR ONE YEAR IN BRAZIL AND MORAL INTEGRATY. No mention on age so if you arrive in brazil with a portuguese son and you apply for a CPLP residence permit after one year the kid becomes brazilian once his citizenship is ready the parents qualify as parents of a brazilian. Congratulations.
portugal has high unemployment .also portugal is not a good choice for buisness.brasil is now again on the right path.soon europe wont be a good choice
What about if someone has kids and wants to give birth to another child say in Brazil , will the siblings also be awarded PR and have citizenship opportunities also ? Along with mum and dad ofcourse
@@ayo_6466 you're eligible to apply after 1 year. You'll need to be a tax resident for that year. I'm in no rush to apply for citizenship. Perhaps several months or a year later.
@@urgg1 Excellent private hospitals. Citizenship for the child. Immediate residency for parents and ability to apply immediately for citizenship. No military service requirement for male child. More secure environment and higher standard of living for your dollar if family plan to spend time there. Spanish speaking. Brazil would be a close second but Argentina is a just a better option in my humble opinion.
@@bennyboysanctus Argentina doesn’t provide immediate citizenship for parents? Also, where do you find that it provides immediate PR either? I never saw any such provision…
@@bennyboysanctus Greetings bro, I appreciate your contributions here and sincerely I'm interested in that Argentina . Please do you live in Argentina? Can I have your contact or Instagram please ?
As a Brazilian, I agree that having a children is easy and very simple, but raising one is another story. If you think of raising a child and live as an expat settler here, you should go look out for countryside cities in rich regions, such as São Paulo and Minas Gerais. Those city are often safer and quiet, and rather cheaper than the touristic sites or international cities. I recommend the city of São Caetano do Sul and Santos, their houses are big and mostly affordable, not to mention that their walkability is way better than any city in the US.
Raising a children is also something the government wants you to do it, after your third child, the government puts you in the Bolsa Família program, where it gives you an extra aid income to help raising the children, this is why most rich families in Brazil have way more children than the west, they want to have children.
Thanks for sharing insights and good info!
Clients often ask me for good places to stay and I constantly keep exploring new areas. I’ll probably take a trip down there sometime in the near future.
Bolsa Familia isn`t applied to richer families, and only to brazilian citizens.
@@daishoo It's applied if the richer family are Brazilian citizens and can't afford to get their children basic necessities. Reminder that corrupt politicians allowed dead and very rich people to receive the amount for twelve children in this program during lava jato investigation.
@@ethandouro4334 I do not understand your definition of richer, in this case. Perhaps your refering to families whose income is slightly above the rules for the program? I do not think class A or B families are eligible no matter how many children they have, but if it is so, it may be a good thing provided it is not abused.
@@daishoo Yeah I'm refering to those types of "Rich" families, that even though has a decent income, can't raise their children that much with their income and live in expensive cities like São Paulo or Rio de Janeiro. Not to those families that have those huge houses in Goiânia that are rich enough to raise not only their own children, but others children, lol.
Smart man. And Brazil is also multicultural. You can see some Japanese Brazilians, Black brazilians and Indian Brazilians.
For instance, look closely at Romario.
Their passport is one of the most travel friendly of all latam.
The only issue is the language. I wish they spoke Spanish like everyone else.
Portuguese is so hard to write but even more to speak for non natives and the language is not taught in western schools.
If you can manage that incredibly hard language, then you have won the game and your kids are free
Thanks! & good point - True, very multicultural, something a lot of outsiders prefer, some don’t factor this in when choosing a residency. Language is always a tricky one - what all does one learn - Spanish, French or Portuguese…
@@GoodlifeInvestorSpanish first. It's the most widely spoken of the three. And, once you are fairly proficient, it's not too hard to pick up the others.
There's a lot of Russian mothers going to Brazil to have their babies too 😮
didn`t see anyone talking about this but one thing that would keep me from having birth in the US is the insane amount of money I would be charged by the hospitals for the pure act of giving birth. in that case brazil is an easy win because the public healthcare is 100% free for everyone, even if you`re a foreigner
You should do more of these poll based videos. Nice change from the usual self. Also IMO this setup looks much much better than your other one with the mirror
Thanks, that’s the plan! : )
Well people from all over the world giving birth in Mexico 🇲🇽 over 3 million foreigners living in Mexico
Do you know any companies who help with the process ?
I believe that answer depends on where you are from and where you believe future lies. I won't complain as I have both USA and US Mexico passports.
Good passports!
The best one is Portugal. A brazilian can apply to be treated the same way as a Portuguese but only inside the portuguese territory and holds no validity in the european union and still needs the same 5 years of residency to obtain citizenship as everyone else.
With the new changes to the portuguese citizenship law portugal offers the best possible cost/benefit. If a turist gives birth here is 100% free of charge and way better quality than Brazil. Futhermore the child and the parents have right to a residence permit through article 122 B SEF minor born in Portugal Once the residence permit of baby and parents arrive home you can apply immediately for the child ´s EU passport. And a portuguese passport gives you the right to a brazilian passport after just one year in Brazil but not the opposite and gives you an easier right of abode in macau wealthiest per capita gdp on earth.
No citizenship eligibility for parents after one year, unlike Brazil. Residency permit in Portugal is easy don’t need birth for it. Apart from that a lot of folks don’t like to enter the EU tax net and avoid other hassles.
@@GoodlifeInvestor The baby will be eligible for immediate citizenship as soon as the residence permit arrives home. If the child is not born in Portugal then needs the parents to get the citizenship first which will take 5 years of legal residency (excluding all the time spent waiting TRC so about 2 years more that most people spend waiting for TRC ( unless they have a child in the country them they can legalize immediately through a special procedure article 122 B) 7 years plus the processing time and the processing time is exploding thanks to huge requests from sephardic jews.
Think ahead if you give birth in Portugal you can legalize immediately via a special procedure as soon as the permit arrives home you can apply for the child´s portuguese passport and it will be approved very fast because it has priority in aproval article 6.2 minor born in Portugal is given priority treatment compared to 6.1 citizenship by residence then guess what you can move to Brazil very easily thanks to a deal to boost movement among portuguese speaking countries we even have the CPLP Visa and the CPLP residence permit now and apply for your child´s passport after just one year in brazil ( portuguese ciizens have right to a passport from brazil after one year there) then the parents become the parents of a brazilian- portuguese citizen and guess what they can also claim a brazilian passport after one year. All you need is to spend one year in brazil apply for the child´s and then once the child´s come out apply for yours ( because you become parent of a brazilian and have been in brazil for more than one year). Congratulations
@@GoodlifeInvestor the right to brazilian citizenship for portuguesse citizens is written inside the constitution of BRAZIL iteself and not on the nationality law (just like the one for parents of brazilians). ONLY 2 CRITERIA CAN BE DEMMANDED TO PORTUGUESE CITIZENS RESIDENCE FOR ONE YEAR IN BRAZIL AND MORAL INTEGRATY. No mention on age so if you arrive in brazil with a portuguese son and you apply for a CPLP residence permit after one year the kid becomes brazilian once his citizenship is ready the parents qualify as parents of a brazilian. Congratulations.
@@carolinavarela1572So Tourist can Born Baby in portugal and immidiatly can apply Childs passport and Parents PR?
portugal has high unemployment .also portugal is not a good choice for buisness.brasil is now again on the right path.soon europe wont be a good choice
Thank you😊
If you adopt a child in Brazil, will you get brazilian citizenship?
It’s good for people with the right intentions of adopting. Not everyone is able to take the responsibility.
O Ceará tem a melhor educação do Brasil 😊
Brazil then Mexico
What about if someone has kids and wants to give birth to another child say in Brazil , will the siblings also be awarded PR and have citizenship opportunities also ? Along with mum and dad ofcourse
Yes. Family reunification. I went through the process. Quite simple.
@@thedatasagedo they give citizenship after one year of living in brazil with a brazilian child? And did u get it if it was easy?
@@ayo_6466 you're eligible to apply after 1 year. You'll need to be a tax resident for that year. I'm in no rush to apply for citizenship. Perhaps several months or a year later.
A
Argentina better all around option in my opinion.
He is talking about child birth…What does Argentina provide?
@@urgg1 Excellent private hospitals. Citizenship for the child. Immediate residency for parents and ability to apply immediately for citizenship. No military service requirement for male child. More secure environment and higher standard of living for your dollar if family plan to spend time there. Spanish speaking. Brazil would be a close second but Argentina is a just a better option in my humble opinion.
@@bennyboysanctus Argentina doesn’t provide immediate citizenship for parents? Also, where do you find that it provides immediate PR either? I never saw any such provision…
@@urgg1 Argentina provides the legal right to apply immediately for both PR and citizenship to the parent of an Argentine.
@@bennyboysanctus Greetings bro, I appreciate your contributions here and sincerely I'm interested in that Argentina . Please do you live in Argentina? Can I have your contact or Instagram please ?