what about Panama ?meze99 said:
In Chile you can get a Visa de Residencia Temporaria/visa permanencia without a lot of paperwork and large expenses. I heard that locals are very friendly and can help you with paperwork if you don't want to engage a local lawyer to help you.
You won't get a permanent residence if you don't stay there though. I'm not sure if you need a certificate of good conduct from your country, you should ask google about it (usually embassy websites contain a list of all the documents you have to provide for an immigration visa)
Here is the summary of steps you have to do to move to Chile:
Step 1. You need to get the documents that prove some fixed income in your home country (it can be a rental contract with 3-4 transactions that shows you receive income for renting your property abroad), or documents about receiving money from any freelance market system (I guess with a bank statement as well).
Step 2. Then you come to Chile and apply for a Cedula National Identity Card (ID). (It will give you a right to stay in Chile long term, but not work for a local company in Chile)
Step 3. Once you have a local ID you get access to local public services (Clave Unica) and you should register online as self-employed and open an account in the pension fund AFP.
Step 4. Show (declare) the self-employment income of 1500 USD/month for 6 months (it obliges you to pay taxes + insurance about 150 USD/month). This way you can change your residence permit type (self-employed) to a local work visa/permit (so you can get a job there), as self-employed are allowed to do so. In another year after this transition you can get a permanent residence permit for 5 years and 5 or 6 years later you can apply for citizenship (if you live in the country).
If you need just a local temporary residence permit for some reason, Paraguay is a popular choice. It costs about $3000. However they require a lot of documents with an apostille including certificate of good conduct (if you have a criminal record, they won't approve your request)
You can request a Remote Work Visa in UAE online (total costs about $500 in Dubai). If they like the scanned copies of your documents they approve your visa and you don't have to show them any other documents later. This may work for you if don't need a right to work in the country.
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Panama is GREAT...as long as you don't get involved with the less-well-to-do locals, local law/lawyers/law enforcement/public servants, religion, or politics. 😉
Andorra is perfect for that, if you have EEA passport.banafinfodafuggiano said:
Can someone make a list of the Best residencies (which ultimately lead to permanent residency) in countries where you only need to spend a few days to a few weeks in order
to sort everything out, OR that can be completed remotely?
I'm aware of Armenia and Mexico.
What other countries apply?
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dumb question maybe... can you point couple of use cases of such a residency one can practically benefit from outside Palau?Konstanz said:
Cheap option - Republic of Palau residence: rns.id - Web 3.0 Digital ID
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You still have to find address for your utility bills etc. Maybe rent something. To be able use it in banks , exchanges etcvoid said:
dumb question maybe... can you point couple of use cases of such a residency one can practically benefit from outside Palau?
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No, unlike Estonia, the Palau residency actually allows you to stay in Palau 180 days on top of what your on arrival visa gives you (which is 90 days for most western passports). The Estonian e-residency gives no residency rights in Estonia at all.bibing said:
Please don't mention the Palau thing when speaking about residencies.
That is just a dumb card like the e-Residency in Estonia. They are just cards. not real residencies
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I totally agree. Estonian e-residency is nothing more than "electronic signature" device to be able to identify yourself. In fact it has no real connection to "residency".Cloudbanck said:
No, unlike Estonia, the Palau residency actually allows you to stay in Palau 180 days on top of what your on arrival visa gives you (which is 90 days for most western passports). The Estonian e-residency gives no residency rights in Estonia at all.
And Palau, unlike Estonia, has a territorial tax system that unlike Latam territorial systems has no ambiguity about effective control and management from Palau - if you live in Palau and manage a company abroad you pay no tax in Palau period.
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that's great but unfortunately in western world literally nobody will believe you're actually living in Palau and will ask for another "real" IDCloudbanck said:
I spend a lot of time in West Africa, and there is really no difference between the Palau ID and other IDs. Palau ID makes it possible to go out and leave all other IDs at home.
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i totally agree. Palau is maybe for some low profile person, moving from country to country, trading crypto or doing online marketing.void said:
that's great but unfortunately in western world literally nobody will believe you're actually living in Palau and will ask for another "real" ID
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Oh well, one may just not go to the western world then. Has little to offer anyway and staying away greatly improves personal safety and financesvoid said:
that's great but unfortunately in western world literally nobody will believe you're actually living in Palau and will ask for another "real" ID
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oh well, outside Europe I'm just fine with my current passport... the real challenge is to obtain something equally plausible in the eyes of western degeneratesbenbao said:
Oh well, one may just not go to the western world then. Has little to offer anyway and staying away greatly improves personal safety and finances
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Has anyone successfully used their Palau residency/ID card to open accounts on exchanges/banks/EMIs????OCT2023 said:
This website seems to indicate you can add-on a mailing address and utility bill to the Palau program. Palau Digital Residency Program - Requirements and Filing Steps
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I just sent an inquiry to a Forex Exchange about the Palau ID and they said as long as there is an ID, a mailing address, and a recent utility bill, it would be accepted. The other question (for an attorney) will be can this be accepted as a valid Tax Residency.jafo said:
Has anyone successfully used their Palau residency/ID card to open accounts on exchanges/banks/EMIs????
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