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Country Match

Find the country that
fits your life

Answer 10 questions about your finances, lifestyle, and priorities. We score 82 countries against your answers and explain exactly why each one fits and where it falls short.

10 questions About 2 minutes 82 countries analyzed No signup required
Start Country Match → Your answers are not stored or shared.
Top Match · Example
Portugal
93% Match Score
Healthcare rated 9/10: universal coverage
Very high English proficiency (617 EF EPI)
Digital Nomad Visa available
Strong purchasing power advantage vs the US
180 days visa-free on a US passport

Sample result (yours will reflect your specific answers)

If you're seriously asking which country should I move to from the US, you're probably already past the Pinterest boards and Reddit threads. You've got a shortlist, maybe Portugal or Mexico or Thailand, and each one sounds plausible until you try to compare them honestly. That's where most people stall. They pick based on what a place feels like in February when they visited for ten days, or because a friend made it work, or because they saw a YouTube video about $800 rent in Medellín. None of that tells you whether the place actually fits your financial life, your tolerance for bureaucracy, or what happens when you need a specialist and don't speak the language.

The quiz on this page takes a different approach. Instead of asking whether you prefer beaches or mountains, it gets into the specifics that actually determine whether a move works: your income sources and whether they qualify for a passive income visa, your savings runway, how much healthcare friction you can absorb, and whether you need English to function professionally or just to get by. A retired couple with $4,000 a month in Social Security has a completely different set of viable countries than a 38-year-old freelancer with inconsistent income and no employer. Portugal requires proof of roughly $1,500 a month per person for its D7 visa. Mexico has no such threshold but also no public healthcare for foreigners. Those numbers matter more than the aesthetic.

The trade-offs most people don't think about until they're already committed: slow bureaucracies in countries that otherwise look great on paper, banking restrictions for non-residents, property ownership limits, school quality if you have kids, and the very real psychological weight of living somewhere your personal and professional network doesn't exist. Spain offers excellent public healthcare but its visa process is notoriously slow and inconsistent by region. Colombia offers a fast, flexible visa and low cost of living, but safety varies enormously by neighborhood and city, not just by the country label. The quiz surfaces those friction points before you book a one-way flight.

A good country match isn't the place that sounded best at dinner. It's the one where your actual income covers your actual life, where the visa path is realistic given your documentation, and where the daily realities align with what you genuinely need rather than what sounds romantic. People who stay abroad long-term tend to say the same thing: they chose somewhere that fit their life, not just their fantasy. That's what answering which country should I move to from the US actually requires, and it's exactly what the next ten questions are designed to figure out.