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Where to Live with Caribbean Citizenship

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Where to Live with Caribbean Citizenship

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All over the world, people look for places where they can enjoy the perks of life after they retire. It’s actually one of the reasons why immigration has increased over the past few years.
If you are looking for a peaceful place to settle, then the Caribbean is a suitable place for you.

The Caribbean Islands are known for their peaceful and beautiful demeanor. They are all a bunch of aesthetically appealing islands with crystal blue sea, clear skies, and fresh air. It is the perfect break to take from life.

The perfect escape anyone could look for. You can make these islands your permanent home or retirement destination and have it just the way you want it to be. The Caribbean has a series of islands to choose from.

Apart from this, getting visas for many countries is free. For instance, if you get Dominica citizenship by investment, you can travel to 146 countries without a visa. Traveling around can be extremely fun.

You can execute all the travel plans which you have had over the years. With a Caribbean passport, you can move around the Schengen countries without a visa, open your own business in the USA or Great Britain, register a company and assets with a second passport, and open currency accounts in foreign banks.

00:00 Start
0:18 St Lucia Citizenship By Investment
1:58 Living in the Dominican Republic
5:03 Golden Visa
6:12 Living in the Caribbean
7:55 Living in Mexico
8:29 Living in Panama
9:16 Real Estate Overseas
9:52 Living in Australia

Andrew Henderson and the Nomad Capitalist team are the world’s most sought-after experts on legal offshore tax strategies, investment immigration, and global citizenship. We work exclusively with seven- and eight-figure entrepreneurs and investors who want to “go where they’re treated best”.

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Andrew has started offshore companies, opened dozens of offshore bank accounts, obtained multiple second passports, and purchased real estate on four continents. He has spent the last 12 years studying and personally implementing the Nomad Capitalist lifestyle.

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DISCLAIMER: The information in this video should not be considered tax, financial, investment, or any kind of professional advice. Only a professional diagnosis of your specific situation can determine which strategies are appropriate for your needs. Nomad Capitalist can and does not provide advice unless/until engaged by you.

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47 COMMENTS

  1. I’m a Canadian and Where can you life outside of Canada and the USA the political garbage that is happening here is crazy Time to bale out ✌️👍🇨🇦
    Let’s go Trudeau Let’s go Brandon 👎

  2. I would love for you to do a video on the Caribbean nations that are free per government injections, testing, quarantines etcetera. This is all about freedom and healthy living ie wealth, so it would be great!

  3. So I am wondering where residency should be based if I am currently a UK Citizen and have UK businesses and earnings, but have invested in Barbados and live there for over 9 months a year?

  4. Ok but l have asked this question before: what countries will be least affected when, not if, (IMO) the USA spirals down into chaos and dysfunction? If you have a passport or permanent residence in a country that follows the US down the tubes… you see my point? Also, what happens to your permanent visas when, not if
    (IMO) the US passport becomes toxic?

  5. Love the picture of you in the hat. Reminds me of the Rodney Dangerfield line in Caddyshack "I'll bet if you buy this hat you get a free bowl of soup".

  6. How ironic the hardest countries to get citizenship in are the most socialist, crazed liberal, tax hungry, government overreach hell holes. I have quite a few U.S. and Canadian friends who've relocated to South America, Thailand, Ghana, Rwanda, South Africa etc. And looking at the politics in Australia, and how they're imposing their will on the citizenry, who in their right mind would want to relocate there?.🤦🏾‍♂️🤷🏾‍♂️🤷🏾‍♂️🤷🏾‍♂️🤷🏾‍♂️

  7. It's amazing how clearly untraveled persons come to an experts platform to spew ignorance. And she smeared Dominican Republic not knowing just like everywhere else in the world you have your great areas and less safe areas. I've been to the D.R. several times and have never had an issue. This woman is concerned about the 6 figure cost so maybe she's not qualified for citizenship by investment in any country. And oh yeah, here in the U.S. violent crime is rampant daily. I didn't see one incident if violence in the D.R… does it happen? I'm sure. But I didn't witness any.🙏🏾♥️☮️

  8. As to why a Canadian would move to Australia? I mean Andrew it's obvious. The weather. Yes summer in the part of Canada where most Canadians live isn't generally oppressively hot nor too cold, but the winters are a lot worse than Australia, for a very similar tax regime, and very similar society overall. Maybe the Aussies aren't quite as polite, but sunshine and warm weather are more in abundance in Australia than Canada.

  9. It is not just wealthy Americans who have decided the juice is not worth the squeeze here. Plenty of Americans from every socioeconomic class, racial, and ethnic background are moving to Latin America, Southeast, South, and Southwest Asia, Africa, and Europe because the cost of living, access to healthcare, and lifestyle in general is more amenable to a comfortable life than life in the US because the cost of living and healthcare are more affordable elsewhere. Dollar for dollar the US is punching well below it's weight these days and thanks to the Internet Americans have figured that fact out.

  10. Sorry a lot of this doesn't ad up. If you live in the US and making money in the US then how will you save money if you move to St Lucia? You can't move to St Lucia and continue to make an income in the US and expect to lower your taxes. Any income made in the US will still be taxed at US rates. If you want to lower your taxes you will have to move and also make your income outside the US. I would love to hear from others who know more than me on this subject because Andrew is obviously ducking this very important part!

  11. Having a Caribbean(English and Dutch) passport allows you to live in any member state of CARICOM. Not just the countries you mentioned but, from the Bahamas down to Trinidad (which also includes Guyana & Suriname). I'm from Jamaica. There are some minor restrictions.

  12. I think it would be a nice addition to your video series if you make a vedio about investment in British overseas territories like Cayman Islands, British Virgin Islands, Montserrat,.. etc. to get British citizenship

  13. If you don’t want to talk about this I will understand. First off I am a straight Christian. But several of the Eastern Caribbean island countries are anti-Gay in fact some it is illegal to be openly Gay. I remember back 40+ years ago going to Jordan before going to Israel because I didn’t want to have the Israeli stamp on my passport while in Jordan. In 1984 I went into China by way of Hong Kong and was escorted back to the border because I had Christian tracks in Mandarin. If you are a Christian in China you do it underground. Then when I went to South Korea I was question about the Chinese stamp on my passport. Later in the late 90’s I flew to Cancun on my US passport then with my French passport I flew to Havana Cuba for a few days. So when I came back into the US no one was the wiser.

  14. What happens if you get Mexican residency as a US citizen, get Caribbean citizenship then renounce US citizenship? Will you then need a visa or different citizenship to get into Mexico

  15. Andrew, you said that St. Lucia has a 9 fold increase in applicants. That's an astounding figure. I'm almost complete with obtaining Dominica citizenship. At this point I'm approved and just waiting for the passport to arrive. I'm a single applicant and have been waiting 5 months since starting the process. I'm wondering if you know whether Dominica has seen a similarly large increase in applicants this year versus previous years.

  16. I'm as expatriated as could be with one European Union citizenship. My pension is completely unpredictable in the hands of malevolent and shameless gangsters meaning I can't get retirement visa anywhere on the planet. Just realized that means I've escaped the ponzi scheme – not in the way I planned to. However, the upleveling when it comes to integration of health and financial security is quite interesting. The European citizenship means they have an ID they really shouldn't have. Renounce/replace with Vanuatu. Moreover, another citizenship makes a lot of sense. Probably St Kitts & Nevis. There are other cool options like Roatan.

  17. Dual US/Irish citizenship is a bit more diversified than you might imagine. My impression is that Irish citizens have more of a chance to beat extradition to the US than say, UK citizens, with the UKs lopsided extradition treaty with the US. (I'm dual US/UK and have never felt very well diversified. Not that I expect ever to be the subject of an extradition request. But you never know!)

  18. I live outside the US 10-11 months a year on fixed SSI; less expensive than trying to “retire” in the US! In many of the countries I visit I live extremely well; equal or better than the US. I obviously earn way less than $1M+ a year but follow Andrew for practical advice that is valid for everyone in many cases.

  19. My problem with CBS and similar programs is that once you paid the country you basically are not worth anything for them as soon as the political tied changes you might sit there without the passport minus a substantial amount of money. Further, I have a first world passport that is enough to travel wherever necessary for me. I don't see the situation as pessimistic within my country. When I take on a new nationality I want to identify with that country rather than just using the passport.

  20. People always think their limited view of the world is how the world works. It's probably the biggest reason people make bad decisions: thinking you know everything about a situation.

  21. Always interesting videos. However, one should be aware of the ethnic and cultural tensions in these countries. For ex, there are strident racial tensions and resentment in St Lucia and other islands. Caveat emptor.

  22. Yeah move to the Caribbean but you still have to pay for your living expenses like your house, condo, insurance, healthcare, even transportation cost. They all add up. You have already paid for your house in Canada or USA, why move? Lol. Dumb advice. No matter where you are, uncle Sam will find you.

  23. I make a little more than $100k and thanks to your videos and following your tips I have 3 residencies (one European) and I’m currently expanding my business thanks to that.

  24. Andrew has made it clear that he is addressing people who earn more than $1million per year. He’s not addressing “The Average Joe”. Living in the Places outside the USA is very expensive. It’s not for people that earn less than $100k/yr (single) or more than $200k/yr(family)

  25. 《Your videos are always the best I do receive a notification each time you post a new video. We will have regrets for things we did not participate in. Investments should always be on any creative man's heart for success in life and I'll advise you do a little glimpse of that on your next video….💯

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