Travel
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FAQ
"How much does traveling cost?"
Cost of living(rent, utilities, data/wifi, groceries) is $500 USD per month for most countries, $1000 for most others.
"Health care and insurance?"
Health care and insurance abroad are both pennies on the US dollar for the highest quality of medical care
"What about visas?"
You usually don't need them; when necessary, visas are almost all entirely online: a fifteen minute e-form and nominal fee offset in your first day by the drastically lower cost of living abroad.
"How do you make money while abroad?"
Any job that nets you $500+ a month works. There are almost 2 billion English students globally right now, so native English speakers have lucked into a guaranteed job on or offline.
"What qualifications do I need as an English teacher?"
Some countries and schools require a TEFL certificate or prefer candidates with an associate's degree depending on the position, but if you want to teach English, all you need is to be a fluent English speaker.
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I'm conflicted. On the one hand, If we keep circulating US currency around the world it would make it harder for other countries to get off USD as a reserve currency. Meaning those retirees have a better chance of maintaining their retirements abroad.
On the other, the United States is a rogue state.
Those four guys from the post were spending about $600 USD a month renting a house and getting artisan beer and sushi 4 times a week. Each house was about $150 per month. For two of them, a few more hundred per month went to medical treatments they couldn't get in the States that literally would have killed them back home.
The US should learn its lesson and people can still retire abroad.