RusLand Have you ever heard anyone naturalizing as a Serbian? I went when visiting Liberland in 2015 and fell in love. Is this something you would be able to help with for a non-7 figure entrepreneur? Willing to spend the time and learn srbska
The Mexican passport is the only passport with both 6 months visa free access to the UAE and Japan. There’s only a handful of countries with 6 month visa free access to Japan and only Mexico with 6 month visa free access to UAE.
I was surprised not to see Turkey. I had been planning on going to Malaysia to live and was awaiting them getting their MM2H visa act together, but when they raised the amount of income required by over 300%, I decided to go to Turkey this year instead. Not only is Turkey much more reasonable and is actually inexpensive, but I can become a citizen! Please do a video on TURKEY.
@@kennethroth6757 I don't think citizenship is necessary in Turkey either. Because you can get residency (not work permit) easily as long as you dont work there.
@@kennethroth6757 it says ............How to Obtain Permanent Residence (Residence) Permit in Turkey? Persons who have resided in Turkey for at least eight years uninterruptedly and with a residence permit can apply for a long-term (permanent) residence permit. Requirements for a Long Term Residence (Residence) Permit: • You must have resided in Turkey uninterruptedly and with a residence permit for at least eight years. • You must not have received any assistance from the State in the last 3 years. • You must have a monthly income that is self-sufficient and sustainable. • You must have valid health insurance • You must not pose any threat to society or public safety.
1. I finally bought the Nomad Capitalist book and I can't wait to dig deeper into it. 2. I was doing some research about the central American citizenships and it looks like they are restrictive on whom can get it. For example, if you're from that area then you qualify dual citizenship. Unless this is one of the rules that isn't practiced or carried out.
I mean...obviously most countries expect you to be a resident for citizenship. NC talks like its something you deserve just because you put some money into a country, but citizenship is supposed to, in part, be about loyalty and culture
@@DM-wk3gz well he appeals to many people that have the money to do that. Since I don't I would have to go a cheaper route by staying in a country or going to one with some lax immigration laws.
Hong Kong passport is descent as well, it has visa free access to the UK, EU, Canada, most parts of Asia (including Russia, mainland China and Iran, where a visa is required for most western passport holders) and a descent amount of East and South African countries. However, you need both Chinese citizenship and Hong Kong PR to apply for a Hong Kong passport, which are difficult and time consuming to get.
Thank you for providing information. I live on a sailboat with the sole purpose of being able to nomad or geo-max. Many men in the six figure range wish to relocate. Having been cleaned out from the lawyers and bad relationships, we seek out a more traditional life.
yes and no afaik as schengen area members are busy with change to ETIAS it is a no brainer; almost nobody (except the usual EU and EFTA countries) will be entitled to visa free access to schengen soon_ish anymore. St. Kitts will move on the same rank as USA; both will need ETIAS clearance. still better than lot of countries which need a schengen visa still.
I don't know if they have made changes to the law in Uruguay but I know that the "naturalized" citizens or, as they call them, "legal citizens" are basically treated as Uruguayan within the borders of Uruguay but are given Uruguayan passports that indicate their original citizenship in the field for "nacionalidad" and that affects their visa-free travel.
This is almost true, and no, it hasn't changed. Naturalized citizens receive almost the same benefits as native born citizens within the country. It also depends if your parents were citizens prior to 2012 I believe. The passport they give is essentially a permanent resident book, since it doesn't state them as Uruguayan citizens. So, no. Naturalized Uruguyan citizenship as of the last 8-10 years is not the same as naturalized citizenship in every but 1 other country
Why would this affect their visa free travel? It shouldn't matter. If you have a passport, you're a citizen, whether born there or not. You enjoy the sane rights as a "native" of that country.
Very interesting video Andrew, I find it interesting that even less well off EU countries have much better passports than other countries that are far richer but from watching your video you explain your reasoning very well 👍
It fascinates how investors pull through this in the investments space When stocks n coin at a time Inflate and deflate without notice, for me I would have had a heart attack.
As a Honduran, I can confirm our passport is quite decent, and getting a US Visa is not that difficult if you can prove you have a reason to come back to HN. We do have to get a visa to go to Mexico, but if you already have a US visa you get a waiver. Almost all of Europe is visa-free travel. You just have to show that you have the means to stay there and some travel insurance. Taxation is on domestic earnings only, for the most part. The banking system is the state of the art, with electronic payments and cheap and instantaneous ACH transfers inside the country.
What about Belize , i have heard all you need to do is just to come as a tourist , extend the stay as long as you want and after 3 years you can apply for citizenship , is that true ?
6:37 "You can go as a Chilean to the US, Canada, Australia" Note that Chilean citizens cannot go to Australia visa free (ineligible for Electronic Travel Authority or eVisitor)
This is Tyler here from the original Viking Traveler channel. Eventually I would like to potentially obtain a Serbian passport and most certainly a St. Kitts and Nevis passport or another Caribbean passport. My goal is to obtain at least one of these within the next 3 years. I also can appreciate Serbia is actually a neutral country and this is clearly seen right now with the Ukrainian Russian conflict. Many countries claim to be neutral but suppling weapons for a cause is like an "accessory to a crime" whether for better or worse that is not a neutral position. Fortunately places like Serbia or Caribbean islands are actually neutral in the most sincere way.
10:00 doesnt Uruguay make distinction between born and naturalised citizens and only natural citizens, those born as Uruguayans, are also Uruguayan nationals and the legal citizens, those naturalised later in their life, will have marked in their passports the country of their birth citizenship as their nationality and that visa requirements for Uruguayans differ based on that?
Yes you are correct. Naturalized citizens gain citizenship in Uruguay, but they do not receive Uruguayan nationality, and it says it on the passport. Customs agents WILL have questions for you if you try to use the passport, and you may be required to get additional visas depending on how scary your original nationality is (it will be where you are born). I have no idea why a Uruguayan passport would be on this list, it shouldn't be until the Uruguayan government changes this law - and they aren't in a hurry. Uruguayan permanent residency may be worth it, the passport, no.
Andrew can you also mention we Mexicans are the only ones who can get a B1B2 border crossing card for the US. It is true we don't have visa free access to the US, but once approved for our US visa we get a pretty good visa in exchange with BCC included. 😉🇲🇽🇺🇸
Not to mention the ability for Mexicans to obtain an APEC Business traveler's card that gets visa free access to Southeast Asia, New Zealand, China, Russia, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, Australia, Chile, and Peru, and the ability to get access under the NAFTA replacement treaty to get a special worker visa available only to Mexicans, Canadians, and Americans in each other's countries.
just curious on what combination of least number of passport will give access to every single country in the world... might seem simple but it's difficult to find. i tired
It would be nice to know just out of curiosity but the knowledge wouldn't be that valuable since the situation is always changing, and least of all now when the world is about to change so markedly with regards to how it thinks about globalism and governance.
A point not mentioned about Uruguay is that if you naturalize you don't get a real Uruguayan passport. It is a Uruguayan passport, but under the nationality field you will always get the country code where you were born. So if you were born in the USA and naturalize in Uruguay the nationality would still say USA not Uruguay. With that the visa restrictions of the USA would apply to you and not the Uruguayan ones, as other countries check for the nationality field and not the passport per se.
Thank God, I have Spanish and Mexican Passport, so I have all the benefits from EU but I live in Mexico as I feel more Freedom and Happiness here Hello from Cozumel, Quintana Roo, Mexico
@Krishna Hello Krishna, I was born in Mexico City, at 15 move to The USA live there for 10 Years California and Virginia, back to Mexico City 3 years, then move to Europe for 9 years and finally back to Mexico 8 years ago, I Had never been in an assault in Mexico, I don't do drogs or any of my close familly do, I don't know what or how it feels to be high, work in Hotel and Restaurants always, I have never been assaulted in Mexico, I had some arguments and problems but to tell you the first time I was robed was in LA, had to scape from California to Virginia because it was too violence there, had many rough fights there one time they send me to the Hospital in Coma, I was robed again in Washington DC as I was going there to renew my Mexican Passport and they took everything from me had to call a friend to send me money to go back to Charlottesville, in Europe I was in Estepona Malaga life is nice and calm, moved to Barcelona, 2 times I came back to my Apartment and it was broke in, took everything just left the furniture. I can see many foreigners coming to where I live now at the Riviera Maya South of Mexico and get in trouble because they are looking for bad stuff like drugs, it depends the circle that each of us is living and experiencing if you stay away from bad people and situations and choose the Town and City correctly after research it is the happiest time of my life ever
@Krishna At some Point before coming to Mexico I was studing the posibility to move to the North or East of Europe, as I say I have Spanish Nationality also so I can live anywhere in the Schengen Countries but there was many things I dont like, one is the Depression of People because of the Weather and other factors, nice and Calm countries but such life is not for me
One thing to keep in mind is that visa free travel to a place you never want to go has no value. I have lived in Panama for the past 22 years and became a citizen 9 years ago. I can travel to Europe and throughout Latin America with my Panamanian passport . I still have my American passport if I need to return to the US for some reason such as to use my Medicare. Another consideration is that I personally wouldn't want citizenship in a country where I couldn't speak the language but I guess some people wouldn't mind,
After the Barberic behavior of the Police and government for the past two years I will never recommend the place if one values personal freedom in the least.
As of 2022 Argentine passport ranks 4th in the Americas and second in Latin America after Chilean passport according to Henley Passport Index. It has significantly more visa free access countries than uruguayan or mexican passport. Altough usually understimated "because you cant renounce citizenship in Argentina" by foreigners. Fun fact: you can renounce citizenship in Argentina AS LONG AS you are naturalized (not born in Argentina and not Argentine by option, i.e, children of argentines born abroad). May have to hire a lawyer for that but it can be done in a couple of months. Great country to live if you have foreign currency and is very likely that will do full dolarization at some point in the next 5 years (probably not so good for remote workers but a little bit more stable inflation wise).
I would say Mexico is arguably better. Pretty similar to Argentina but if you value Canada, it’s a big leg up. Yea Argentina has Mercosur which is great and a few others but I guess it depends how you value Canada. But yes Argentina is a excellent passport
Been watching your videos for years, but here is a slight nit-pick. That light oscillation is visible. May you change this to perfect the production please?
@@pathslesstrampled9906 Yep. Its such a tiny detail that doesnt show up until you watch the video, but knowing how pro the rest of the channel is, it sticks out a bit.
@@gordonpi8674 I certainly do not believe everything Pinochet did was good. However I do believe he saved the country from becoming a second Cuba. The new communist government he overthrew was getting ready for a blood bath. He did return the country back to the people.
Yeah the left has control over the executive power for 3 more years... But the opposition has mayority in the Senate... So they won't go that far with their politics. In fact, the Left is been too much open border right now, probably the next government its not going to be that kind... Let's hope.
We're hear in Canada and seriously looking into moving and purchasing property in Costa Rica and applying for there residency. Do you think this is a good option?
I have to say Ireland is still quite easy to grant citizenship, thousands are granted per year and even open for illegal immigrants to obtain temporary residency that will eventually count for citizenship application.
@@collettezimmerman1008 it is good for work. Europeans come to work in general services to make money. The rents are too high and the country is trying to solve housing crisis. I wouldn’t say it is good for retiree’s, unless you have extra sources of income, the weather is bad and we have short summers, so people here retire and go to Spain and Portugal, much cheaper over there.
@@madewithrealdiamonds I would recommend not reading fearmongering websites on the Internet and instead read the Nationality Act of Japan (国籍法) for yourself and discover the truth that there are no penalties, adverse dispositions, etc. for merely having multiple nationalities under Japanese law.
Depends on the country, Germany and Norway don't allow dual citizenship, however US does. As long as the other country allows it you can have as many as you like AND it's legal 😉
Good video. Thinking about Mexico and Honduras for a while. Is it true that you can reduce the amont of time needed to obtain Mexican citizenship from 5 to 3 years by investing in estate sth like 250.000 us dollars or more? Or it is just some realtors fake?
Am surprised you have excluded Turkey.Great place to reside with low cost of living and you can get citizenship in 8 months on an investment of US$250k
I believe I can qualify for a Ukrainian passport; my father and his parents were born there. But unfortunately they don’t allow multiple citizenship as I understand. And there’s that minor political/military problem they’ve got going on with Russia right now. But I’m so ready to burn my Canadian passport.
Ukraine doesn't allow but doesn't exactly punish either. I know several people with both Canadian and Ukrainian passports. Perhaps citizenship by investment would be quicker + some taxes are better like capital gains tax is static.
I appreciate your sarcasm, buddy :-) friend of mine is sitting in the basement, while heavy caliber artillery is working about 10 km from his home. I can hear it in his phone as we speak. So if you want to trade your Canadian passport, I can make it happen really quickly ;-)
@@peterboon8280 wait a minute, Patton told you not to die. We are not hiring mercenaries here, just shopping for alternative passports, weeding out damaged goods, so we could reaffirm hard earned freedoms and turn tables on our own governments once in a while. Salute for Jan 6 ;-)
You'll have a hard time crossing borders currently with a Ukrainian passport. The border agent will assume you are going to overstay your tourist visa because Ukraine is a warzone currently. You'll be perceived as a refugee and not a tourist.,
Multi billionaires don't need you to get situated in a foreign country they can figure out a way to meet the president or the minister of department of foreign affairs of the country they wish to become a citizen of if that really makes a huge difference in their lives
I understand the point of this article but I would disagree with the Us being 41st. Generally speaking as soon as you take out a us passport, there is a lot less hassle. Granted it’s not perfect and I’ve had my fair share of questioning but overall it’s a document everyone is familiar with and you basically are just a “number” and no one really looks twice at you. But of course it comes with a bunch of baggage, which is the point of this channel.
I always see that foreigners say that the current Chilean President it's a leftist just because the Chilean Communist Party was part of his goverment coalition. That's very dar from the truth, in fact, I would say Boric (the chilean president) is more a progressive than a leftist, he has criticized the leftists regimes of venezuela and nicaragua quite a lot (unlike the other leftists presidents like Fernandez and Lula), he's actively sending support to Ukraine and recently he had a lot of political backlash after being very heavy on criticism of the human rights violations in China
Is Estonia still viable? I'd like to see a video on places in Eastern Europe you once recommended, but not 'doable' any more under the current situation. I would think these places are getting slammed with immigrants so their policies have changed.
Have you been to Roatan? A nice Caribbean island in Honduras usually outside the hurricane zone where ENGLISH is spoken. Dont write off an entire country until you investigate it. Put to gther a travel list and start exploring. Sitting in the USA knowing nothing about anynother cou try it is so easy to dismiss the rest of the worl...you are only cheating yourself. I could happily live in half a dozen countries I have explored..I just picked the one best for me. Quite often it is possible once you live in a foreign country to find ways of geting things done knowing the right people or with local inside information...the printed rules often are NOT the real rules.
it doesnt matter where youre at, once digital ID is launched they have full control over your ID, bank accounts, passport, utilities, everything. talk to me about a solution. i have one
Obviously, it is part of his business... but sheesh, if you cannot see the benefit of multiple citizenships and/or residencies after the past five years or so, I don't know what to tell you.
Oz is a train wreck! They did not even allow their own citizens to return home in 2020-2021. No way I would consider citizenship there, which is sad because I love my Aussie friends and the country is fascinating.
Lolz how utterly bloody pointless. You can travel without a visa cost but you either pay almost a million euros or have to live in a country for 5 years, I mean wow imagine the minimal savings you can make. First World problems, how utterly ridiculous 😒
Anyone & ANYWHERE is better than Canada!!!! I am an American fleeing to a third world country (MAZATLAN) in the middle of a brutal drug war, IT IS SO BAD IN COMMIfornia! The line to beat it the hell outta HELL is LOOOOOONNNNNG to get into Mexico! Go Brandon!!!
What is the country you want to go to visa-free but can not?
Nigeria
Everywhere!
Mexico
@@ИванБезменов-с9м Fg USA
RusLand
Have you ever heard anyone naturalizing as a Serbian? I went when visiting Liberland in 2015 and fell in love. Is this something you would be able to help with for a non-7 figure entrepreneur? Willing to spend the time and learn srbska
The Mexican passport is the only passport with both 6 months visa free access to the UAE and Japan. There’s only a handful of countries with 6 month visa free access to Japan and only Mexico with 6 month visa free access to UAE.
Japan has travel-banned all foreigners due to Covid and Liberia has 180 days visa-free access to the UAE as well
@@shiva_689 There goes my plan A for where to move to once out the frick from Canada. Good thing I had a plan B in mind beforehand.
Not only Mexican but Albania passport has same UAE 180 days visa free check on Google
Thank you for hearing us.
Saw the comment that day about the importance of ease of obtaining.
Also I thank all nomadcapitalist team.
That is a good report on multiple passports posiblities, the cons and pros so well and briefly preseented. Very helpful. Thank you.
I was surprised not to see Turkey. I had been planning on going to Malaysia to live and was awaiting them getting their MM2H visa act together, but when they raised the amount of income required by over 300%, I decided to go to Turkey this year instead. Not only is Turkey much more reasonable and is actually inexpensive, but I can become a citizen!
Please do a video on TURKEY.
@@kennethroth6757 I don't think citizenship is necessary in Turkey either. Because you can get residency (not work permit) easily as long as you dont work there.
@@kennethroth6757 it says ............How to Obtain Permanent Residence (Residence) Permit in Turkey?
Persons who have resided in Turkey for at least eight years uninterruptedly and with a residence permit can apply for a long-term (permanent) residence permit.
Requirements for a Long Term Residence (Residence) Permit:
• You must have resided in Turkey uninterruptedly and with a residence permit for at least eight years.
• You must not have received any assistance from the State in the last 3 years.
• You must have a monthly income that is self-sufficient and sustainable.
• You must have valid health insurance
• You must not pose any threat to society or public safety.
Your kids will have to attend Turkish schools and must also do a stint in the Turkish army. Not something they tell you upfront.
1. I finally bought the Nomad Capitalist book and I can't wait to dig deeper into it.
2. I was doing some research about the central American citizenships and it looks like they are restrictive on whom can get it. For example, if you're from that area then you qualify dual citizenship. Unless this is one of the rules that isn't practiced or carried out.
I mean...obviously most countries expect you to be a resident for citizenship. NC talks like its something you deserve just because you put some money into a country, but citizenship is supposed to, in part, be about loyalty and culture
@@DM-wk3gz well he appeals to many people that have the money to do that. Since I don't I would have to go a cheaper route by staying in a country or going to one with some lax immigration laws.
Your video production values are now at their best!
Speaking of beginners, what is needed is focus and determination. Building a successful account takes processes.
Hong Kong passport is descent as well, it has visa free access to the UK, EU, Canada, most parts of Asia (including Russia, mainland China and Iran, where a visa is required for most western passport holders) and a descent amount of East and South African countries. However, you need both Chinese citizenship and Hong Kong PR to apply for a Hong Kong passport, which are difficult and time consuming to get.
Thank you for providing information. I live on a sailboat with the sole purpose of being able to nomad or geo-max. Many men in the six figure range wish to relocate. Having been cleaned out from the lawyers and bad relationships, we seek out a more traditional life.
I heard yesterday that st.kitts don't have Schengen anymore because of that buy by investment.
yes and no afaik
as schengen area members are busy with change to ETIAS it is a no brainer; almost nobody (except the usual EU and EFTA countries) will be entitled to visa free access to schengen soon_ish anymore.
St. Kitts will move on the same rank as USA; both will need ETIAS clearance.
still better than lot of countries which need a schengen visa still.
I don't know if they have made changes to the law in Uruguay but I know that the "naturalized" citizens or, as they call them, "legal citizens" are basically treated as Uruguayan within the borders of Uruguay but are given Uruguayan passports that indicate their original citizenship in the field for "nacionalidad" and that affects their visa-free travel.
This is almost true, and no, it hasn't changed. Naturalized citizens receive almost the same benefits as native born citizens within the country. It also depends if your parents were citizens prior to 2012 I believe. The passport they give is essentially a permanent resident book, since it doesn't state them as Uruguayan citizens. So, no. Naturalized Uruguyan citizenship as of the last 8-10 years is not the same as naturalized citizenship in every but 1 other country
Why would this affect their visa free travel? It shouldn't matter. If you have a passport, you're a citizen, whether born there or not. You enjoy the sane rights as a "native" of that country.
Glad I am working on my Mexican residency 💃🏽💃🏽💃🏽
Very interesting video Andrew, I find it interesting that even less well off EU countries have much better passports than other countries that are far richer but from watching your video you explain your reasoning very well 👍
Chile!! Mexico!! Uruguay!! Honduras!!
Timor Leste is surprisingly strong - they have access to Europe and the UK despite being a new country. Their state department must be awesome. haha
It fascinates how investors pull through this in the investments space When stocks n coin at a time Inflate and deflate without notice, for me I would have had a heart attack.
You need to have a brief of what you wanna invest carefully before going in.
Proud to be Luxembourgish 🇱🇺
Say hi to the other 5 people there. 😂
@@midlifecrisis7888 they're all gathered around the TV watching this together
As a Honduran, I can confirm our passport is quite decent, and getting a US Visa is not that difficult if you can prove you have a reason to come back to HN. We do have to get a visa to go to Mexico, but if you already have a US visa you get a waiver. Almost all of Europe is visa-free travel. You just have to show that you have the means to stay there and some travel insurance. Taxation is on domestic earnings only, for the most part. The banking system is the state of the art, with electronic payments and cheap and instantaneous ACH transfers inside the country.
Great summary thanks!
How to get honduras passport ?
Have you been to Roatan?
@@mattball7074 No. I'm not a beach lover. And I certainly don't dive, so no. I live in the capital and have a preference for the mountains.
Aren't Honduran passports restricted to people living in that area? I thought Americans or other westerners couldn't get them.
What about Belize , i have heard all you need to do is just to come as a tourist , extend the stay as long as you want and after 3 years you can apply for citizenship , is that true ?
6:37 "You can go as a Chilean to the US, Canada, Australia"
Note that Chilean citizens cannot go to Australia visa free (ineligible for Electronic Travel Authority or eVisitor)
Yes, all of them four banana republics are total hell holes 😂
Australia basically requires passports from all non Anglo/European countries.
@@midlifecrisis7888
Citizens of Malaysia, Brunei, Hong Kong, South Korea, Japan, and Singapore are also eligible for Electronic Travel Authority
Another great video. I was wondering what is the "best and easiest" passport to get from Asia countries ? Thank you.
This is Tyler here from the original Viking Traveler channel. Eventually I would like to potentially obtain a Serbian passport and most certainly a St. Kitts and Nevis passport or another Caribbean passport. My goal is to obtain at least one of these within the next 3 years. I also can appreciate Serbia is actually a neutral country and this is clearly seen right now with the Ukrainian Russian conflict. Many countries claim to be neutral but suppling weapons for a cause is like an "accessory to a crime" whether for better or worse that is not a neutral position. Fortunately places like Serbia or Caribbean islands are actually neutral in the most sincere way.
10:00 doesnt Uruguay make distinction between born and naturalised citizens and only natural citizens, those born as Uruguayans, are also Uruguayan nationals and the legal citizens, those naturalised later in their life, will have marked in their passports the country of their birth citizenship as their nationality and that visa requirements for Uruguayans differ based on that?
Yes you are correct. Naturalized citizens gain citizenship in Uruguay, but they do not receive Uruguayan nationality, and it says it on the passport. Customs agents WILL have questions for you if you try to use the passport, and you may be required to get additional visas depending on how scary your original nationality is (it will be where you are born). I have no idea why a Uruguayan passport would be on this list, it shouldn't be until the Uruguayan government changes this law - and they aren't in a hurry. Uruguayan permanent residency may be worth it, the passport, no.
Andrew can you also mention we Mexicans are the only ones who can get a B1B2 border crossing card for the US. It is true we don't have visa free access to the US, but once approved for our US visa we get a pretty good visa in exchange with BCC included. 😉🇲🇽🇺🇸
Not to mention the ability for Mexicans to obtain an APEC Business traveler's card that gets visa free access to Southeast Asia, New Zealand, China, Russia, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, Australia, Chile, and Peru, and the ability to get access under the NAFTA replacement treaty to get a special worker visa available only to Mexicans, Canadians, and Americans in each other's countries.
just curious on what combination of least number of passport will give access to every single country in the world... might seem simple but it's difficult to find. i tired
Would be interested to hear this answer
It would be nice to know just out of curiosity but the knowledge wouldn't be that valuable since the situation is always changing, and least of all now when the world is about to change so markedly with regards to how it thinks about globalism and governance.
Any updates on a Colombian passport? My wife has a Colombian passport. Love the climate and cost of living very fair
Czech Republic is so high? Shit... I can apply for one literally now. 😶😶😶
Need to look into this
so awesome I’m among her clients, she’s good and her strategies works like magic.
A point not mentioned about Uruguay is that if you naturalize you don't get a real Uruguayan passport. It is a Uruguayan passport, but under the nationality field you will always get the country code where you were born. So if you were born in the USA and naturalize in Uruguay the nationality would still say USA not Uruguay. With that the visa restrictions of the USA would apply to you and not the Uruguayan ones, as other countries check for the nationality field and not the passport per se.
Largest advantage of the Mexican passport is access to the TN visa to live and work in the USA. Same as Canadians
Thank God, I have Spanish and Mexican Passport, so I have all the benefits from EU but I live in Mexico as I feel more Freedom and Happiness here
Hello from Cozumel, Quintana Roo, Mexico
i got harassed by the police for not wearing a mask out in the wide open near no one on cozumel a year ago
@Krishna Hello Krishna, I was born in Mexico City, at 15 move to The USA live there for 10 Years California and Virginia, back to Mexico City 3 years, then move to Europe for 9 years and finally back to Mexico 8 years ago, I Had never been in an assault in Mexico, I don't do drogs or any of my close familly do, I don't know what or how it feels to be high, work in Hotel and Restaurants always, I have never been assaulted in Mexico, I had some arguments and problems but to tell you the first time I was robed was in LA, had to scape from California to Virginia because it was too violence there, had many rough fights there one time they send me to the Hospital in Coma, I was robed again in Washington DC as I was going there to renew my Mexican Passport and they took everything from me had to call a friend to send me money to go back to Charlottesville, in Europe I was in Estepona Malaga life is nice and calm, moved to Barcelona, 2 times I came back to my Apartment and it was broke in, took everything just left the furniture. I can see many foreigners coming to where I live now at the Riviera Maya South of Mexico and get in trouble because they are looking for bad stuff like drugs, it depends the circle that each of us is living and experiencing if you stay away from bad people and situations and choose the Town and City correctly after research it is the happiest time of my life ever
@Krishna At some Point before coming to Mexico I was studing the posibility to move to the North or East of Europe, as I say I have Spanish Nationality also so I can live anywhere in the Schengen Countries but there was many things I dont like, one is the Depression of People because of the Weather and other factors, nice and Calm countries but such life is not for me
One thing to keep in mind is that visa free travel to a place you never want to go has no value. I have lived in Panama for the past 22 years and became a citizen 9 years ago. I can travel to Europe and throughout Latin America with my Panamanian passport . I still have my American passport if I need to return to the US for some reason such as to use my Medicare. Another consideration is that I personally wouldn't want citizenship in a country where I couldn't speak the language but I guess some people wouldn't mind,
After the Barberic behavior of the Police and government for the past two years I will never recommend the place if one values personal freedom in the least.
What country are you talking about? There are so many of them that jumped on board to violate rights, do oppression & tyranny, etc.
@@debbiedogs1 Chile
Canada
Australia
there are changes in Bulgaria, Caraïben country's, just let u know....
I got my Luxembourg citizenship after 5 happy years living here. It was easy and at least we pay less tax than our neighbours.
If Serbia offered a CBI, I would seriously consider it. Love the place.
Cyprus ❤️
Any word on the Kenya citizenship by investment program that I have heard is in the works?
Poland (another EU country) doesn’t have visa-free access to the US either
As of 2022 Argentine passport ranks 4th in the Americas and second in Latin America after Chilean passport according to Henley Passport Index. It has significantly more visa free access countries than uruguayan or mexican passport. Altough usually understimated "because you cant renounce citizenship in Argentina" by foreigners. Fun fact: you can renounce citizenship in Argentina AS LONG AS you are naturalized (not born in Argentina and not Argentine by option, i.e, children of argentines born abroad). May have to hire a lawyer for that but it can be done in a couple of months. Great country to live if you have foreign currency and is very likely that will do full dolarization at some point in the next 5 years (probably not so good for remote workers but a little bit more stable inflation wise).
I would say Mexico is arguably better. Pretty similar to Argentina but if you value Canada, it’s a big leg up. Yea Argentina has Mercosur which is great and a few others but I guess it depends how you value Canada. But yes Argentina is a excellent passport
My preference is for Brazil. Please let's compare the two as I promote Brazil. With the current situation both have their advantages.
Who would want to go to Canada these days with that tyrannical regime
@@RC94332 I will probably never set foot in that Trudouche hell hole again
Dollarization is not such a good thing in my view
Been watching your videos for years, but here is a slight nit-pick. That light oscillation is visible. May you change this to perfect the production please?
He just needs to change the camera’s video frame rate to account for the local voltage/hertz. That’s what causes video flicker
@@pathslesstrampled9906 Yep. Its such a tiny detail that doesnt show up until you watch the video, but knowing how pro the rest of the channel is, it sticks out a bit.
I seek Citizenship by two shares so kindly suggest a suitable plan for me
Mrs Lillian Dora is really making name for herself and company recommendations are high.
A merit based ranking system. Who would have thought of such an idea.
Please speaking of investment trading. What does that mean ?
Keep the great content coming Andrew and the team. Don't forget Leave The West
Does NC have a Canadian office or agent? Direct contact.
. Am a new and I want to learn!
I grew up in Chile. Stunning country, however very sad to see their political state.
After watching their Barberic lockdowns they entered my no no list. It was like living in a WWII hell and is still miserable to enter.
@@DavidDavid-mm7gb agreed.
@@gordonpi8674 I certainly do not believe everything Pinochet did was good. However I do believe he saved the country from becoming a second Cuba. The new communist government he overthrew was getting ready for a blood bath. He did return the country back to the people.
Yep that puts me off and as soon as he said left politics I was hell no. Every country that has the left in had gone authoritarian regarding Covid.
Yeah the left has control over the executive power for 3 more years... But the opposition has mayority in the Senate... So they won't go that far with their politics.
In fact, the Left is been too much open border right now, probably the next government its not going to be that kind... Let's hope.
We're hear in Canada and seriously looking into moving and purchasing property in Costa Rica and applying for there residency. Do you think this is a good option?
@debbie a Costa Rica is the better of Central American countries and direct flights from BC or at least used too
I have to say Ireland is still quite easy to grant citizenship, thousands are granted per year and even open for illegal immigrants to obtain temporary residency that will eventually count for citizenship application.
Is Ireland a good Country to retire to (or move to). I have a EU Passport.
@@collettezimmerman1008 it is good for work. Europeans come to work in general services to make money. The rents are too high and the country is trying to solve housing crisis. I wouldn’t say it is good for retiree’s, unless you have extra sources of income, the weather is bad and we have short summers, so people here retire and go to Spain and Portugal, much cheaper over there.
@@lroche3262 Thank you for the reply. With a EU passport can you just move to Spain or Portugal and retire?
@@collettezimmerman1008 indeed, as they are part of EU.
My Japanese passport is way better than my US passport in terms of visa-free travel, banking, taxes, etc.
as far as I know, Japan does not recognize dual citizenship, and you must choose one by age 23
@@madewithrealdiamonds I would recommend not reading fearmongering websites on the Internet and instead read the Nationality Act of Japan (国籍法) for yourself and discover the truth that there are no penalties, adverse dispositions, etc. for merely having multiple nationalities under Japanese law.
J K, and I'm sure Countries are more welcoming to you with the Japanese Passport vs the United States Passport?
@@youtubeuserzzzz Absolutely.
I can by heritage get an Italian passport what does it rank ?
11 see 0:56
So this is all new to me. Can you have more then one? I’ve heard dual citizenship but how many passports can you have?
Depends on the country, Germany and Norway don't allow dual citizenship, however US does.
As long as the other country allows it you can have as many as you like AND it's legal 😉
If you ask me I think forex has something big for the world but having a good expert to mentor you is the best.
I have heard that Serbia is going to be in European Union,so I think that it will increase its power soon.
It is not worth to spend almost a $million just to get a Malta passport
Good video. Thinking about Mexico and Honduras for a while. Is it true that you can reduce the amont of time needed to obtain Mexican citizenship from 5 to 3 years by investing in estate sth like 250.000 us dollars or more? Or it is just some realtors fake?
Don't go, both countries are full of savagery and extreme trivial violence. I'm trying any legal avenues to leave Mexico, and you want to come in.
@@GoodlifeInvestor Thank you! I had a strong feeling it is a fake.
@@GoodlifeInvestor i will, tnx
Have been trading offshore, I’m yet to make my first 100usd...😔😔 Any recommendable expert to trade with?
10:35 serene peaceful life in Uruguay? Come on, man!
Uruguay is pretty chill.
Any thoughts on Dominican Republic, relocating there, taxes? Any comments are appreciated
What are your thoughts about a Romanian passport?
If you like organized crime go to Romania.
I was told by a Romanian that they pay up to 45% in taxes
It is 10%.
since when serbia is in eastern europe?
Geographically.
Not politically.
Hey I'm messaging from UK
Am surprised you have excluded Turkey.Great place to reside with low cost of living and you can get citizenship in 8 months on an investment of US$250k
He got whole video about Turkey passport
Dominica 🇩🇲 👌
●Honduras
●Mexico
●Saint Kitts and Neves
●Cypress
I believe I can qualify for a Ukrainian passport; my father and his parents were born there. But unfortunately they don’t allow multiple citizenship as I understand. And there’s that minor political/military problem they’ve got going on with Russia right now. But I’m so ready to burn my Canadian passport.
Ukraine doesn't allow but doesn't exactly punish either. I know several people with both Canadian and Ukrainian passports. Perhaps citizenship by investment would be quicker + some taxes are better like capital gains tax is static.
They are going digital id while this is happening..
I appreciate your sarcasm, buddy :-) friend of mine is sitting in the basement, while heavy caliber artillery is working about 10 km from his home. I can hear it in his phone as we speak. So if you want to trade your Canadian passport, I can make it happen really quickly ;-)
@@peterboon8280 wait a minute, Patton told you not to die. We are not hiring mercenaries here, just shopping for alternative passports, weeding out damaged goods, so we could reaffirm hard earned freedoms and turn tables on our own governments once in a while. Salute for Jan 6 ;-)
Just leave fucked up Canada some of us are stuck here due to family or living constraints been in Canada
Wondering why the perception of Ukrainian passports is so low (even lower than Russian). How it was estimated?
You'll have a hard time crossing borders currently with a Ukrainian passport. The border agent will assume you are going to overstay your tourist visa because Ukraine is a warzone currently. You'll be perceived as a refugee and not a tourist.,
Russian passport is the last one you want - trust me! Speaking as a Russian Canadian here.
They don't allow dual citizenship
@@bearskyshebearsky No fucking way lol. There's wayyyy worse.
@@bearskyshebearsky except if you want to visit serbia
investment trading is investing in Bitcoin either by trading alone or using an investment company to trade .
Hello everyone. I’m actually looking for a good trader that can help me trade and make good profit... but is very hard to see trusted one.. any idea?
Cuba
Ni interest in living in Europe after the past two years
I'm definitely looking at a citizenship by dissent. What's my best choice?
not much choice, it is your anchestry you are entitled to pick from.
Descent is not dissent.
It all comes down to your family history.
@@8d4o0c4 I don't agree. My family is filled with argumentative bastards.
Multi billionaires don't need you to get situated in a foreign country they can figure out a way to meet the president or the minister of department of foreign affairs of the country they wish to become a citizen of if that really makes a huge difference in their lives
Yes you’re right forex is a very lucrative investment .
million dollars for Malta?
I'll just check down the back of the sofa🙄
I cannot beleive on your chart that greece and canada have the same (freedom, taxation and travel ) ????????
Honduras is cool because territorial tax system
Let me give her a try no matter what I’ll do much appreciate if someone can drop her contact. I will love to start now .
I understand the point of this article but I would disagree with the Us being 41st. Generally speaking as soon as you take out a us passport, there is a lot less hassle. Granted it’s not perfect and I’ve had my fair share of questioning but overall it’s a document everyone is familiar with and you basically are just a “number” and no one really looks twice at you. But of course it comes with a bunch of baggage, which is the point of this channel.
I think it's list ranked because of taxation
I always see that foreigners say that the current Chilean President it's a leftist just because the Chilean Communist Party was part of his goverment coalition. That's very dar from the truth, in fact, I would say Boric (the chilean president) is more a progressive than a leftist, he has criticized the leftists regimes of venezuela and nicaragua quite a lot (unlike the other leftists presidents like Fernandez and Lula), he's actively sending support to Ukraine and recently he had a lot of political backlash after being very heavy on criticism of the human rights violations in China
Is Estonia still viable? I'd like to see a video on places in Eastern Europe you once recommended, but not 'doable' any more under the current situation.
I would think these places are getting slammed with immigrants so their policies have changed.
My God, ** who in the hell wants to spend time in Honduras, you must be joking?
Have you been to Roatan? A nice Caribbean island in Honduras usually outside the hurricane zone where ENGLISH is spoken. Dont write off an entire country until you investigate it. Put to gther a travel list and start exploring. Sitting in the USA knowing nothing about anynother cou try it is so easy to dismiss the rest of the worl...you are only cheating yourself. I could happily live in half a dozen countries I have explored..I just picked the one best for me. Quite often it is possible once you live in a foreign country to find ways of geting things done knowing the right people or with local inside information...the printed rules often are NOT the real rules.
I was reading in comments that people want to get a Russian passport...There are always people who don't know what they are talking about.
Have you been to Honduras? I'm an American and love Central America
I started with $2500 and my account is looking so juicy🤮, getting my profit tomorrow noon.
I should have stayed in Ireland
it doesnt matter where youre at, once digital ID is launched they have full control over your ID, bank accounts, passport, utilities, everything. talk to me about a solution. i have one
What is your solution?
Yeah, it's very easy to get just 750000 $
El Salvador? come on bitcoin city!
Why the obsession with passports? It's almost like you're incentivised somehow
it is matter a lot
Obviously, it is part of his business... but sheesh, if you cannot see the benefit of multiple citizenships and/or residencies after the past five years or so, I don't know what to tell you.
*LillianDora*
The highest of investment platform deals mainly with Bitcoin and forex trading...
Invest wisely .
Trading forex is a good business one can think of doing.
knowing someone here also trade with expert Mrs Lillian Dora .
You didn't mention Australia... that's the best passport to have. It must be half of China has one.
Oz is a train wreck! They did not even allow their own citizens to return home in 2020-2021. No way I would consider citizenship there, which is sad because I love my Aussie friends and the country is fascinating.
You can only appreciate a person who tries to teach everyone how to invest and making profit on multiple ways in forex investment.
A million bucks down the toilet, because as soon as the EU goes to shite, so will Malta's flexibility.
@Koru They always have. Why would they start doing anything different now?
Lolz how utterly bloody pointless. You can travel without a visa cost but you either pay almost a million euros or have to live in a country for 5 years, I mean wow imagine the minimal savings you can make. First World problems, how utterly ridiculous 😒
Just say you don't get it. That's OK, there are plenty of kitty cat videos to watch.
Anyone & ANYWHERE is better than Canada!!!! I am an American fleeing to a third world country (MAZATLAN) in the middle of a brutal drug war, IT IS SO BAD IN COMMIfornia!
The line to beat it the hell outta HELL is LOOOOOONNNNNG to get into Mexico!
Go Brandon!!!
This guy is crazy lol. Honduras? Check the crime rate there
Totally!
I don't think he is even remotely interested in residing there. Just looking at the benefits of having their passport