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News and data on Americans abroad, in your inbox weekly. Subscribe.

9,600 US Citizens Moved to Ireland, Nearly Doubling Previous Figures

News and data on Americans abroad, delivered to your inbox weekly. Subscribe.

Why American Families Are Relocating To Russia Amid U.S Conservative Challenges

A Surge in Americans Applying for Residency in the Netherlands Amid New U.S Presidential Reforms Threatening Liberal Values

What to Know As U.S Citizens Planning to Relocate to Sweden After Elections

Tax Pressures Drive Wealthy Americans Moving Cash to Switzerland

Close-up of Portugal and the European Union flags waving on a clear day. Symbolizing Portugal's place among the top European digital nomad visas.

Portugal Tops 5 European Digital Nomad Visas on Cost, Income and Speed

Portugal ranks first among many American expats when comparing European digital nomad visas, ahead of Spain, Hungary, Romania and Montenegro. The rise of remote work continues to reshape where and how people live. More professionals are trading traditional offices for sunlit cafés and coastal co-working hubs across Europe, thanks to an expanding range of digital nomad visas that make living and working abroad easier than ever. Portugal: The clear front-runner With its affordable digital nomad visa (priced between €90 and €120) and a manageable monthly income requirement of €3,280, Portugal tops the list. Cities like Lisbon and Porto, and island destinations such as Madeira’s Funchal, are thriving hubs for global freelancers and a small but growing American expat community. Reliable infrastructure, accessible transport, and proximity to nature offer the ideal work-life balance that remote professionals crave. Spain: Flexibility meets lifestyle Spain secured second place, thanks to its generous visa terms.

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The Independence Arch of Independence Square of Accra, Ghana at sunset. Symbolizing the hope of African Americans moving to Ghana , or at least considering it.

African Americans moving to Ghana: 3 fast-moving months of policy change

African Americans moving to Ghana have a new high-profile face. On Jan. 28, Foreign Minister Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa announced his ministry had approved a Ghanaian passport for IShowSpeed, the American YouTuber whose “Speed Does Africa” tour had spanned 20 countries and drawn tens of millions of livestream viewers. Born Darren Jason Watkins Jr. in Cincinnati, the 21-year-old was the only creator on the tour to walk away with formal citizenship

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US Citizenship Renunciation Fee Cut by 81%

The State Department has reduced the cost of US citizenship renunciation from $2,350 to $450. A final rule published in the Federal Register on March 13, 2026 makes the change effective approximately April 12, 2026. The fee returns to where it stood between 2010 and 2014, before a surge in renunciation requests led the government to begin charging at full cost. That surge was not coincidental. It tracked the rollout

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An American and Mexian flag symbolizing Mexico US dual citizenship

Over 125,000 People Obtained Mexican American Dual Citizenship in 2025

Mexican American dual citizenship is on the rise. More than 125,000 people obtained Mexican nationality through consulates in the United States in 2025, a 153% increase over 2024 and more than the combined total of the three preceding years, according to Mexico’s Secretariat of Foreign Affairs. The vast majority are U.S. citizens or long-term residents who had a Mexican-born parent but had never formalized the connection on paper. Both times

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“Years in Limbo”: Foreign Residents Describe the Nightmare of Italy’s Residency Permit System

Expats across Italy recount years-long waits, vanished paperwork, and unanswered calls as the country’s permesso di soggiorno backlog deepens into a nationwide crisis. Italy’s permesso di soggiorno—the residency permit required for foreigners to legally live in the country—has become a source of mounting frustration and despair among residents who describe years of waiting, missed communications, and Kafkaesque bureaucracy. As the administrative backlog worsens, foreigners report that simply obtaining or renewing the document has

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