Six months isn't a long time. But it's long enough to completely change your financial structure. And here's why that matters for moving abroad: Most visa applications require 3-6 months of income history. So if you start building passive income streams today, by the time you're ready to apply for a visa, you'll have the documentation you need. You don't need to earn more money overall. You need to earn it differently. Instead of all your income coming from active work, you need streams that continue whether you're working or not. That's what visa officers want to see. Proof that your income will continue after you move. The Americans who successfully move abroad aren't necessarily the ones making the most money. They're the ones who restructured their income to be location-independent. Six months. That's your timeline to shift from "I can't afford to move" to "I qualify for visas in multiple countries." Link in bio for consultations on building income streams that qualify you to move abroad. ๐๐บ๐ธ #creatorsearchinsights
@nomadveronicaTranscript
Here are three ways that you can start earning passive income in the next six months so that you can qualify for passive income visas around the world. Hi, I'm Veronica and I live currently in Portugal on a passive income visa. So I want to teach you the easiest ways in which you can do the same. First is the way that I do it, which is taking the home that you currently live in, one that you already own, and turning it into an Airbnb. But wait, it's not what you think. It's not a nightly rental. I turned my entirely furnished house that I moved out of into a corporate rental. So my number one clients are insurance companies that are putting up families that have had terrible things happen to their house. A tree fill on it, a fire, a flood, something where they had to get a huge renovation in their house. So the insurance company is paying for it. The second way to start earning passive income would be to reallocate your investment portfolio, redo things so that you actually have most of your stocks invested into dividend producing stocks. That income each month can be used as passive income and then it won't be actually affecting the principal amount that you have invested in the market. But you're just going to be reallocating it to a way where you are earning those dividends on everything that's in there and that can be used as you move abroad for your passive income. And the third way would be to create digital products. I personally created ebooks, worksheets, e courses, all to sell knowledge online. Now the creation of the product itself doesn't take very long, but the marketing to the right people is what's going to take your entire six months. So take your knowledge and create a product then start using your knowledge to create an audience online. Once you're able to match your audience with the products you've created, then you've got passive income to be able to use to move abroad. One of the huge benefits about passive income visas around the world versus a remote income visa is that passive income visas often have lower thresholds for income than the remote visas. So currently here in Portugal, I live on a passive income visa and the monthly requirement was somewhere around 880 euros per month to prove in passive income, which is quite low. Whereas the remote digital nomad visa here in Portugal was something like over 3,000 euros per month to prove in income. So that's quite a discrepancy. If you're able to start creating a moderate amount of passive income, then you're able to use that money to go move abroad at a much quicker rate than the remote income visas. If you don't know me yet, I'm Veronica and I've used remote and passive income to live out of the United States for the last five years with my family of four. And now I teach other Americans how you can do the same. If you're ready to leave the United States, there's links in my bio for how you can work with me.
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If picking a new country was as easy as comparing crime statistics and educational outcomes, than obviously that country would be overrun with expats. The best countries to move to are not one size fits all. Before you get your hopes up about any particular country, I suggest you take a step back. Determine your visa eligibility first. Some countries are trying to attract retirees. Other countries are welcoming digital nomads. And there are countries only looking for wealthy expats. Your income type and amount will determine what countries will take you. Schedule your exit plan call if youโre ready to stop daydreaming and start packing. #creatorsearchinsights

You say you want to leave America for another country, but you never do. Here is exactly where you can go, an island paradise with friendly English speaking people and no paperwork required. Yet, you still wonโt go. Weโve gotta change your mindset about leaving America. Itโs not healthy to just keep saying you want to leave but never doing what you say you want. You can absolutely move to another country and I will show you how. ๐๐บ๐ธ #TikTokEncyclopediaContest #creatorsearchinsights

There are a lot of people who love the idea of moving abroad. There are fewer people who are actually ready to make it happen. If you have been stuck researching how to move abroad from the US, how to leave America, where to live overseas, or how to move abroad with kids, but you still do not have a plan, this page is for you. A lot of smart people get trapped in analysis paralysis. They keep consuming more content because it feels productive. But more information does not always create movement. Sometimes it just creates more confusion. You do not need fifty more tabs open. โจYou need the right order of steps. โจYou need a strategy that fits your life. โจYou need someone who understands how to move from vague dream to actual plan. I help Americans who are tired of researching moving abroad and ready to start taking action. Follow if you want practical guidance, realistic next steps, and a clear path toward living abroad. ๐๐บ๐ธ

The life you've built in America isn't the life you wanted. It's the life you could scrape together under constraints of: wages that don't cover basics, healthcare tied to employment, housing costs consuming half your income, constant financial stress, survival mode as default state. You didn't choose misery. You chose best option available within impossible constraints. But those constraints are geographic. Change geography, change constraints, change what's possible. The apartment you can barely afford in America becomes the nice place with breathing room abroad. The paycheck that barely covers survival in America becomes the income that allows saving abroad. The constant stress about one emergency destroying you financially becomes manageable situation where emergencies are expensive but not catastrophic. Same income. Same skills. Same person. Different location. Completely different life. You're not stuck because you lack resources. You're stuck because resources you have don't work in location you're in. Move those resources to location where they work better, and you're not stuck anymore. But moving requires: tolerating uncertainty about how things will work out, being uncomfortable while figuring out new systems, releasing familiar patterns even when familiar is miserable, trusting you can build better life from scratch. Most people choose familiar misery over unfamiliar uncertainty. Devil you know feels safer than devil you don't, even when devil you know is grinding you down. This is why people stay in: jobs they hate, relationships that don't work, locations that don't serve them, lives that feel like slow suffocation. Because at least they know how to survive current misery. Unknown is terrifying even when unknown might be better. But what if you're not choosing between misery and uncertainty? What if you're choosing between: familiar misery that will continue indefinitely, or temporary uncertainty that leads to actually building life you want? When you're in survival mode, you're making choices based on: what's cheapest, what's fastest, what gets you through next month, what keeps crisis at bay. Not what you actually want. What you can manage given constraints. Those choices compound into life that doesn't reflect your preferences. Reflects what you could piece together while drowning. But when you move somewhere your income works better, you're not in survival mode anymore. You have breathing room to choose based on: what you actually want, what serves your family, what creates life you're proud of. That's not small difference. That's the difference between life you're enduring and life you're choosing. Living in America isn't default you're stuck with. It's choice you're making every day by not choosing differently. And choosing differently is available to you. Link in bio for people ready to choose. What would you choose if survival wasn't consuming all your energy? ๐๐บ๐ธ