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 you’re ready to stop daydreaming and start packing. #creatorsearchinsights
@nomadveronicaTranscript
You're asking the wrong question. You keep googling where the best countries to move to, but that's the wrong starting point. The best country for you is the one that will take you. They won't just take you because you saw a list online. You have to figure out your eligibility first, and then from that list, you can choose the country that best suits you. I'm Veronica, and five years ago, I left America for a global lifestyle, and I'll help you to make that jump too. I work with three different kinds of clients. Clients that earn retirement income, passive income, or remote income. With one of those kinds of incomes, we can find a visa option that works for you. There might be six visas available to you with a kind of income that you earn. And if that's true, then you have six options to look at. But maybe there's only one with your income level and income type. And then your research just got a whole lot easier. There are not unlimited options, and not every country will take you. That's why I put together a list of 19 countries that will accept you with $1,500 of income or less. Definitely comment below and let me know if that's a list that you want to see me do some videos about. I suggest instead of spending months researching and daydreaming about a country that's not even going to take you, you start with the practical route of figuring out where will take you and go from there.
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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 won’t go. We’ve gotta change your mindset about leaving America. It’s 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. 🆘🇺🇸 #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. You need the right order of steps. You need a strategy that fits your life. You 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. 🆘🇺🇸

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? 🆘🇺🇸

Replying to @auglocqnuk The obstacles you describe as preventing you from moving abroad are real. They're just not immovable. They're uncomfortable to move. Different thing. Massive barrier sounds like: immigration laws preventing you, government blocking your exit, literal impossibility of leaving. Those would be immovable obstacles outside your control. What most people call massive barriers are actually: would have to cancel subscriptions, would have to sell car, would have to live with less stuff, would have to change spending patterns, would have to do uncomfortable things for period of time. Those aren't barriers. Those are choices you're not willing to make. Valid to not want to make those choices. But be honest that you're choosing comfort over change, not that change is impossible. The test is simple: if someone offered you $50,000 to relocate within 6 months, could you do it? If yes, then obstacles aren't preventing you. Your unwillingness to be uncomfortable without payment is preventing you. Most people can identify exactly what they'd need to do differently to create financial room for relocation: cut discretionary spending drastically, sell possessions, downgrade housing/car, eliminate subscriptions, build income stream, redirect every available dollar toward exit fund. They know the pathway. They just don't want to walk it because walking it means: temporary significant discomfort, doing things differently than everyone around them, being judged for choices that look extreme, tolerating deprivation while building toward goal. So instead of saying "I don't want to be that uncomfortable," which sounds like choice, they say "there are massive barriers," which sounds like external constraint outside their control. One is owning that staying is choice. Other is absolving themselves of responsibility for that choice by framing it as impossibility. But you have more control than you're claiming. You're just not willing to exercise that control because exercising it requires doing things you really don't want to do. American system is designed to keep you comfortable enough that you stay while uncomfortable enough that you keep consuming. That narrow band of tolerability is trap. Breaking out requires either: getting so uncomfortable you can't tolerate it anymore, or choosing temporary extreme discomfort to escape permanent mild discomfort. Most people stay in the band. Tolerable enough that leaving feels unnecessary. Uncomfortable enough that they're constantly stressed. Never quite bad enough to force change. The obstacles you're facing are: your own choices about what you're willing to sacrifice, your attachment to current comfort level, your unwillingness to do things that feel extreme, your resistance to being uncomfortable even temporarily. All of those are within your control to change. You're choosing not to change them. That's a valid choice if you own it. But stop calling it massive barrier when it's actually preference. Link in bio for people ready to move obstacles instead of declaring them immovable. What obstacle is actually a choice you're unwilling to make? 🆘🇺🇸