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Living somewhere on a tourist visa isn't the same as knowing how to migrate to Europe permanently. Tourist status (Albania, Georgia - 1 year visa-free for Americans) is great for testing a location or buying time. But it's temporary. No path to residency. No path to citizenship. No long-term security. If your goal is actual immigration - putting down roots, building toward a passport, establishing permanent legal status - you need residency, not just prolonged tourism. Residency = legal right to live there long-term, eventual path to citizenship, ability to integrate properly. The actual most affordable paths for Americans trying to migrate to Europe: 1. Albania - Lowest income requirements, path to citizenship (7 years total) 2. Portugal - Mid-range costs, established program, 5years to citizenship (But laws are in process to extend to 10 years) 3. Lithuania - Americans have special privileges, 10 years to citizenship but stable EU country All three offer: legal residency that counts toward citizenship, ability to work/live/integrate, eventual passport. Not: indefinite tourist extensions that leave you in legal limbo with no future permanence. Link in bio for detailed requirements on legal pathways to European residency and citizenship. ๐Ÿ†˜๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ #TikTokCreatorSearchInsightsIncentive

@nomadveronica
813 views59 likes2:05ENMay 27, 2026
357 words1915 characters19 sentencesReadability: High School

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If your goal is to migrate to Europe and eventually get a passport in Europe, then you're going to want to come over to Europe on a residency visa. You've probably seen a lot of my videos where I talk about how you can just plop yourself down in Georgia or Albania, and that's just basically on a long-term tourist visa. You can go there and settle in and stay there for a year and then extend that, but that is not a residency visa. So assuming you want to get citizenship in the future, you need to start securing your legal residency in Europe as soon as you can. And there's three extremely cheap options in order to do that. The first one is Albania. Albania actually has an option for a remote worker visa that would allow you to start getting that residency if you have $890 US dollars in remote income. The second option would be in Portugal. That's the D7 visa. It's the passive income visa, which is the one I currently live in Portugal on. And that only requires about $1,068 US dollars to earn in passive income in order to secure residency here. And then the final option would be Lithuania. Lithuania has a digital nomad visa that you can secure for about $1,200 US dollars in remote income. But that's freelancing remote income. It can't be for a corporate job. It has to be you being self-employed only. Having the opportunity to transition your residency into future citizenship is a major goal of a lot of my clients, because they're looking for a second option of other than just their American passport and being able to secure that by getting a legal residency is the path to that citizenship. If you're ready to start exploring where in the world you might fit, I do exit plan consultations. The link to work with me is in my bio and I will take your situation and match it to hundreds of visa programs around the world so we can find you the right country to get out of the chaos of America.

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