Nomad Capitalist

The 2025 Nomad Passport Index just dropped and in less than 48 hours, it’s already been featured by CNBC, Forbes, Business Insider, and more.

Ireland took the #1 spot this year. Greece surged. The U.S. is still stuck in the middle thanks to citizenship-based taxation.

See the full 2025 Nomad Passport Index here: nomadcapitalist.com/nomad-passport-index/

It’s the most strategic ranking in the world, built for investors, entrepreneurs, and global citizens who care about:

✅ Visa-free travel
✅ Tax obligations
✅ Personal freedom
✅ Dual citizenship rights
✅ Global reputation

And if you’re planning to get a second passport or choose where to live, bank, or invest it’s essential intel.

But here’s the part most people miss:

The passport alone isn’t the strategy.

It’s the starting point.

Nomad Capitalist Live is the only event in the world where we show you exactly how to use the Passport Index.

We go beyond rankings and headlines.

· We show you how to actually use this data to build your action plan.
· Which passports pair best with low-tax residencies.
· Where to get citizenship while keeping your privacy intact.
· How to protect your freedom, assets, and options—long term.

The wrong passport could cost you millions.

Come to Nomad Capitalist Live to avoid that.

⬇ Join the waiting list and see exactly what you will get at the event of the year ⬇

nomadcapitalist.com/live/

3 weeks ago | [YT] | 340



@TT-zl7ir

It’s a strange system we have. Looking at the challenges facing Ireland, something is going to break.

3 weeks ago | 18

@VidSelector

Hypothetical: Where would the US passport rank if the US got rid of citizenship-based taxation?

3 weeks ago | 4

@conor7179

Best passport, 12.5% corporate tax and universal healthcare. Terrible weather tho 🤦‍♂

3 weeks ago | 15

@CringeBasedDuality

bro why Singapore drop so many places?

3 weeks ago | 0

@mavenwander2374

Both Ireland and Switzerland have 175 visa free countries. How did you come to 176?

3 weeks ago | 3

@VoiceOfThe

I’m currently living in Cyprus on my way to gaining permanent residency, but, have now decided after several years I don’t want to live here permanently. I’m hoping to gain the residency so I can freely travel within Europe… but, then I’d have to maintain a presence here. So, I’m wondering whether to cut ties and start the process again in Greece. I would use your services if I was a seven figure individual. I’m not quite there. I would like a tax optimised set-up / strategy as a U.K. expat to live half the year in Greece and the remainder in Thailand. From my research it would be more beneficial from a tax residence perspective to be answerable to Thailand, rather than Greece which surprised me. Getting this all set-up properly is the headache.

3 weeks ago (edited) | 5

@egreeno

Well, I hold Spanish and Panamanian citizenship, alongside Canadian and American, so I'm not sure how strict "Spaniards and Panamanians are strictly forbidden from holding dual citizenship" is. 😂

3 weeks ago | 4

@trianglehat6994

Ireland is cooked

3 weeks ago | 0

@nikolaosantifakos8057

ΚΑΛΗΜΕΡΑ

3 weeks ago | 0