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

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

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

LGBTQIA+ Americans Claiming EU Citizenship by Ancestry

Transgender Healthcare in Europe: The Best Places for Gender-Affirming Care

Marriage in Denmark: A Pathway for International Couples

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

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The Expat’s Playbook: How to Pick the Right Business Structure and Slash Your U.S. Tax Bill

From sole proprietors to corporations, the way Americans abroad set up their businesses can dramatically reshape their tax bill, reporting load, and personal risk exposure. Running a business as a U.S. citizen overseas opens doors to new markets and international clients, but it also locks you into one of the world’s most complex tax systems. Unlike many countries, the United States taxes citizens on their worldwide income, which means the business structure you choose while living abroad can either streamline your obligations—or multiply them.​ At the heart of this decision are three main structures: sole proprietorships, limited liability companies (LLCs), and corporations such as C-Corps and S-Corps. Sole proprietorships are the most straightforward, folding business income directly into your personal return but leaving your personal assets on the line if something goes wrong. LLCs add a layer of liability protection and offer flexibility, since they can be taxed as pass-through

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Nations Respond to U.S. Travel Bans by Banning Americans

As Washington widens its blacklist, nations from West Africa to the wider Global South are slamming the door on U.S. passport holders, signaling a new age of reciprocal restrictions and shrinking mobility. For decades, American travelers have been used to breezing past immigration desks, their blue passports opening doors in most corners of the world. That era is now beginning to fray, as more countries move to curtail entry for

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The New Luxury Status Symbol: A “Plan B” Passport

As anxious Americans hunt for escape routes and tax breaks, a booming second-citizenship industry is turning ancestry, fast-track residencies, and million‑dollar “golden visas” into the most coveted insurance policy money can buy.​ Why Second Passports Are Suddenly Hot For a certain set of affluent Americans, a second passport has become less of a vanity accessory and more of a psychological safety net—“Plan B” against political whiplash, border closures, and the

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America on Alert: Inside the Quiet Revolt of Women Who Want to Leave

Across kitchen tables and group chats, a quiet question is surfacing among American women: What if we just left? It’s not a fantasy of palm trees or European cafés—it’s a question born out of fear and fatigue. A recent Gallup poll found that 40 percent of U.S. women aged 15 to 44 want to move abroad permanently, double the rate of the general population. For many, the reason is simple and staggering: they no

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