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Most people think they need six-figure incomes before they can move abroad. So they never learn how to make money remotely because the goal feels impossible. That's backwards. The barrier isn't earning enough. It's earning in the right way. $75k salary in America = trapped. Can't relocate without employer permission. Income disappears if you leave. $1,500/month remote income = 19 different countries you qualify for. Income travels with you. Location-independent. People waste years trying to "save enough" or "earn more" when the actual requirement is much lower than they think. You don't need to be rich. You need to be remote. $1,000-1,500/month in remote income unlocks more visa options than most Americans realize. That's not unattainable. That's 20 hours/week of freelance work. That's one retainer client. That's passive income from one well-managed asset. The question isn't "how do I afford to move abroad?" It's "how do I make money remotely at levels that qualify me for visas?" Once you reframe the target - modest remote income vs high total income - the path becomes obvious. Link in bio for guidance on building visa-qualifying remote income. ๐Ÿ†˜๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ #TikTokCreatorSearchInsightsIncentive

@nomadveronica
474 views35 likes2:58ENMay 27, 2026
509 words2681 characters21 sentencesReadability: High School

Transcript

You do not have to be rich to move abroad. You simply need to earn enough money remotely that you can go to a new country that has a much lower cost of living and have a nice life based on how much things cost there. Your perception of how much things cost because you live in the United States is all whacked out. In the new country, you're going to have such a different outlook on expenses. You might cut your transportation costs to almost nothing because you don't have to have a car in that place. You're going to cut your healthcare costs to almost nothing because you're likely going to be on their socialized medicine plan or on an international medical plan that's going to be significantly cheaper like in the couple hundred dollar range instead of in the thousand dollar range. You're going to be able to have a nice place to live on several hundred dollars a month instead of several thousand dollars a month. So these major expenses that you're going to have in the United States do not translate to the new country. And that is why instead of having to earn many, many thousands of dollars to have a comfortable life, you could actually be earning maybe $1,500 and have a comfortable life. There are remote visa programs that you can move to with about six or eight hundred US dollars in income. If you adjusted the way that you live to a much more local type of lifestyle instead of trying to create your American life in the new country, if you lived how a local lived, you simply could live off of that little amount of money if you can qualify for the visa. But there are 19 different countries that I have talked about, add nauseam on this channel that you can live on for under $1,500 per month. So instead of imagining that you need to save up some bulk amount of income, focus more on creating recurring monthly income. And that amount of recurring monthly income does not have to be as much as you think it would be. If you can create $1,500 of remote income, then you can move to 19 different countries and have a nice life. So for all of you naysayers claiming you need tens of thousands of dollars to move out of the United States, stop comparing some perfect Western European lifestyle to what someone actually needs in order to escape the United States. I left the United States with my family of four with $3,000 in the bank. That was five years ago and we've now lived on three different continents because you don't need to be rich in order to do this. You just need to be savvy and you need to have a plan and you need to be gritty and you need to be able to pivot. But none of it means you have to be rich in order to move abroad. That is a myth.

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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 youโ€™re ready to stop daydreaming and start packing. #creatorsearchinsights

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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? ๐Ÿ†˜๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

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