Afleveringen
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Asia is one of the most popular regions in the world for digital nomads — but the real question is not simply where is cheapest.
It is: which version of daily life can you actually sustain?
In this episode of DigitalWealthMap, we look at five Asian countries worth considering as practical bases for digital nomads and globally mobile professionals in 2026: Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, Japan and Taiwan.
This is not a ranking, and it is not a visa guide. It is a practical lifestyle-base analysis focused on how each country actually works as a place to live, work and build a sustainable remote lifestyle.
We cover:
Thailand — The Established Nomad Ecosystem Base
Indonesia — The Creative Island Lifestyle Base
Malaysia — The Balanced English-Friendly Base
Japan — The Premium Short-Stay Base
Taiwan — The Smart Underrated Base
Thailand and Bali may get most of the attention, but Taiwan might be the most interesting surprise for digital nomads looking for infrastructure, safety, food, urban quality of life and a more practical long-term base.
DigitalWealthMap publishes practical finance and lifestyle strategy for expats, digital nomads and globally mobile professionals.
New episodes every week.
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Europe is one of the most attractive regions for digital nomads and globally mobile professionals — but choosing a base is not just about sunshine, cost of living, or visa options.
In this episode, we look at five European countries worth considering as long-term bases: Portugal, Spain, Greece, Malta, and Estonia.
Each one offers a different version of daily life.
Portugal is strong for community and ecosystem.
Spain is built around social rhythm and cultural depth.
Greece offers space, light, and a slower Mediterranean pace.
Malta provides an English-speaking EU island base.
Estonia is the outlier — colder, quieter, more digital, and built for focus.
This is not a ranking and not a visa guide. It is a practical lifestyle comparison for people trying to choose a European base that actually fits the way they want to live and work.
DigitalWealthMap — Smart money for people who live beyond borders.
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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Most expats assume that spending fewer than 183 days in a country means they are no longer tax resident there.
That assumption can be expensive.
In this audio guide, we explain what tax residency actually means, why the 183-day rule is only part of the picture, and what other factors can keep you connected to a country’s tax system after you leave — including your home, family, income, registrations, and economic ties.
We also cover what happens when two countries both consider you tax resident, how double tax treaties work in basic terms, and the key checks to make before moving abroad.
You will learn:
• Why the 183-day rule is useful, but not enough
• What tax residency actually means
• Why citizenship, nationality and tax residency are not the same thing
• How home, family and economic ties can affect your position
• What dual residency means
• How double tax treaties can help resolve conflicts
• The Tax Residency Exit Check before moving abroad
Useful resource:
SafetyWing — travel medical insurance for people living or travelling abroad: [affiliate link]
Some links in this description may be affiliate links. The channel may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.
DigitalWealthMap — Smart Strategies. Global Freedom. Real Wealth.
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You send money abroad. The transfer is confirmed. But less arrives on the other side.
In this audio guide, we explain where money can disappear during an international transfer — from visible transfer fees to exchange-rate markups, intermediary bank fees, receiving bank fees, funding methods, and timing.
You will learn why the advertised fee is not always the real cost, why the exchange rate matters more than most people realise, and why the final amount received is the number you should compare before sending money across borders.
We also walk through a practical international transfer checklist you can use before moving savings, paying rent abroad, sending money home, or supporting family in another country.
You will learn:
• Why the visible transfer fee is only part of the cost
• How exchange-rate markups work
• Why SWIFT transfers can involve intermediary bank fees
• Why SEPA transfers are usually simpler inside the euro area
• How transfer method and timing can affect the result
• Why you should compare the final received amount, not just the fee
• The 5-step International Transfer Checklist
DigitalWealthMap — Smart Strategies. Global Freedom. Real Wealth.
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Moving abroad can break your banking setup faster than you expect.
Your card may be declined. Your bank may send a verification code to an old phone number. A transfer may be delayed. Your home account may still be needed for tax refunds, direct debits, financial records, or payments you forgot about.
In this episode, we cover five common banking mistakes expats make abroad — and how to avoid building your financial life around a single point of failure.
We cover:
• Why relying on one bank account is risky
• Why you should not close your home account too early
• How standard bank cards can quietly cost you money abroad
• When a local bank account may become necessary
• Why every expat needs a backup plan
• The Expat Banking Stack: a five-layer framework for building a more resilient setup
The goal is not to find one perfect bank. The goal is to build a system that keeps working when one part fails.
DigitalWealthMap — practical finance for people who live, work, and invest across borders.
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Most people spend months planning where to live, what to pack, and how to get there.
But almost no one spends enough time sorting out their money before moving abroad.
In this episode, we go through the essential financial checklist every expat, digital nomad, and person planning to move abroad should review before leaving — from emergency funds and banking setup to international cards, insurance, tax residency, currency exchange, subscriptions, and backup plans.
DigitalWealthMap — practical finance for people who live, work, and invest across borders.
New video every Thursday on YouTube.
Podcast episodes every Friday.
Some links mentioned by DigitalWealthMap may be affiliate links.
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In this episode of DigitalWealthMap, we compare Wise, Revolut and Payoneer to help expats, freelancers and frequent travellers choose the right account setup.
We cover:
- why traditional banks are expensive for international transfers
- where Wise is strongest
- when Revolut makes sense
- who should use Payoneer
- why many expats use more than one account
For the full visual version, search for DigitalWealthMap on YouTube.
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Welcome to DigitalWealthMap — a podcast for people who live, work, earn, save, or invest across borders.
In this short introduction, we explain what DigitalWealthMap is, who it is for, and what kind of topics future episodes will cover.
This podcast is the audio companion to the DigitalWealthMap YouTube channel, where we go deeper with visual breakdowns, comparisons, charts, and practical finance topics for expats, digital nomads, remote workers, international freelancers, and globally mobile people.
Topics we will cover include:
- International banking
- Global investing
- Currency risk
- Expat finance
- Payment platforms
- Tax awareness
- Practical money decisions for life across borders
The next episode will compare Wise, Revolut, and Payoneer — three tools many expats and international freelancers use to manage money across countries.
For the full visual versions, search for DigitalWealthMap on YouTube.
Follow the podcast and subscribe to the YouTube channel for weekly practical finance content.