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🧳 Relocate & Live

Curated by Vinod Kumar Jain & Amit Jain · free to browse · updated 2026-07-05

Relocate & Live is the practical engine for moving abroad — country-by-country intelligence on the visas, money, and daily-life questions that decide whether a move actually works. Where Explore tells you what a place is, this section tells you what it takes to live there.

Each country runs its own set of sub-engines. Digital-nomad visas and tax residency answer the legal question: can you stay, and what will it cost you in April. Banking access, insurance, and real estate cover the money you'll move and the roof you'll put over it. Healthcare, safety, and climate look after your wellbeing; cost of living, food, education, and language & culture handle everything that turns a destination into a home.

The relocation checklist ties it all together — a step-by-step sequence from first paperwork to first grocery run. Whether you're a nomad chasing a two-year visa, a family planning schools, or a retiree comparing healthcare systems, the aim is the same: fewer surprises after landing.

Explore Relocate & Live

Digital Nomad Visas23 pagesTwenty-three per-country guides to digital nomad visas, including eligibility, income thresholds, and application steps.Tax Residency20 pagesTwenty per-country guides explaining tax-residency rules, day-count tests, and filing obligations for movers.Banking Access16 pagesSixteen per-country guides to opening bank accounts as a foreigner, covering documents, eligibility, and process.Healthcare Access16 pagesSixteen per-country guides on healthcare access and insurance options for people relocating abroad.Relocation Checklists25 pagesTwenty-five step-by-step relocation checklists covering visas, tax, banking, and cost planning for specific country-to-country moves.Insurance13 pagesThirteen per-country insurance guides covering health, home, vehicle, and liability cover for expats.Real Estate13 pagesThirteen per-country guides to property buying and renting rules for foreigners.Safety13 pagesThirteen per-country safety profiles covering crime, common risks, and practical precautions for newcomers.Climate13 pagesThirteen per-country climate guides describing seasons, temperatures, and weather to expect year-round.Infrastructure13 pages13 country profiles detailing infrastructure quality, investment, and development priorities.Cost Of Living12 pagesTwelve per-country cost-of-living breakdowns spanning rent, food, transport, and monthly budgets.Food13 pagesThirteen per-country food and cuisine guides covering staple dishes, eating customs, and grocery basics.Education12 pagesTwelve per-country guides to schooling and higher-education options for relocating families and students.Language Culture12 pagesTwelve per-country language and culture guides covering key phrases, etiquette, and social norms.Startup Ecosystem12 pages12 country profiles mapping local startup ecosystems, funding, and founder support.Stock Markets12 pages12 country guides explaining local stock exchanges, listing rules, and market access.Sustainability12 pages12 country guides on sustainability and ESG regulation, reporting, and practice.Living96 pages'Living' guides — relocation/lifestyle pages per place.Medical Tourism5 pagesMedical-tourism guides.Business Formation13 pages13 company-formation guides walking founders through incorporating in top global jurisdictions.

Frequently asked

Which countries have relocation engines?

Coverage is built country by country, starting with the destinations people actually move to — digital-nomad hubs, tax-friendly jurisdictions, and the major expat economies. Every country profile in Explore links to whatever relocation intelligence exists for it, and the map keeps filling in.

Is this only for digital nomads?

No — nomad visas are one sub-engine among thirteen. The same country pages serve retirees comparing healthcare, families weighing schools and safety, and investors sizing up real estate and banking access. Start with the relocation checklist and skip whatever doesn't apply.

Is this legal or tax advice?

No — it's structured intelligence to help you ask sharper questions and shortlist options before you pay a professional. Visa and tax-residency rules change often and hinge on your personal situation, so confirm specifics with a qualified advisor before you act.