You don't need perfect career or dream business or passion-aligned income stream to move abroad. You need income that qualifies for visas and you need it within next 3-6 months, not 3-6 years from now. Most people approaching remote income building are asking wrong question. They're asking: what do I want to do, what am I passionate about, what would make me happy long-term as career. Those are fine questions for 5-year career planning. They're terrible questions when your goal is relocating internationally as soon as possible. The right question is: what can I start billing clients for this month that will generate consistent income I can document for visa application 3-6 months from now. Not sexy. Not inspiring. Not about finding your purpose. About identifying services businesses already pay for, offering those services competently, getting contracts, documenting income, qualifying for visa. Then you're abroad. Then you have breathing room to figure out what you actually want to do long-term. But you're figuring it out from position of safety instead of position of stuck. The people who move abroad fastest aren't the ones who spent year building perfect business around their passion. They're the ones who identified quickest path to qualifying income and executed it. Bookkeeping, writing, virtual assistance, customer service, social media management - unsexy, straightforward, services businesses need, skills you probably already have, clients you can land within weeks if you actually pitch them. You don't need to love it. You need it to generate income consistently for few months so you have documentation proving to immigration authorities you have sustainable remote income. That's the bar. Meeting that bar in 3 months with work you're neutral about beats spending 3 years trying to build dream business you're passionate about while staying stuck in America. Once you're abroad, you can pivot. You can build the thing you actually want to build. You can explore other income streams. You can figure out long-term career direction. But you're doing all of that from place where your income goes further, your family is safer, your stress is lower, and you have actual space to think about what you want instead of just surviving. The complexity people add - needing perfect business model, wanting to only do work they love, requiring career to be meaningful and aligned - is just sophisticated procrastination. It's making simple process complicated so you have excuse to delay. Simple process: identify service businesses pay for, pitch that service to potential clients, land 3-5 clients, do the work, get paid, document income for 3-6 months, apply for visa, relocate. Not complicated. Just requires doing uncomfortable thing of pitching services to strangers and accepting that work doesn't have to be your passion to fund life you're passionate about. What's stopping you from pitching clients this week? ๐๐บ๐ธ
@nomadveronicaTranscript
In order to get approved for a remote income visa, you generally only have to prove three to six months of that visa qualifying income already happening. So you can actually get these visas approved quite quickly if you do some sort of unsexy business where you're just getting contracts with clients to do services for them. You can become a freelancer in a variety of things like bookkeeping, freelance writing, social media management, customer service, virtual assisting. Any of these unsexy telecommuting kind of jobs where you gather individual clients and have contracts with them can qualify you to go live abroad within three to six months. And as long as you have that proof of a few months back and then that you have a contract going forward, then you're in. And I know that that's not the fancy way to do things and you're thinking, oh, I need to have Bucco bucks in the bank. You don't. You just need to have consistent qualifying income for remote income visa. If you don't know me, I'm Veronica and I help Americans move abroad. I can help you with 95 different countries that would allow you to live there if you have this kind of remote income. And I do that with exit planning. Book a consultation with me and we can meet one-on-one where I can understand your situation and match you to visa programs around the world that would allow you to use that income to qualify and go move there so that you can get out of the chaos of the United States.
Download Transcript
Related Videos

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