Video Briefing

Nomad Capitalist: The First Step is the Hardest

Oct 17, 2019Video Briefing9:29Watch on YouTube

The biggest obstacle for people pursuing a Nomad Capitalist lifestyle is the fear and hesitation around making their first offshore investment. Overcoming that barrier usually comes down to two simple principles: being honest about what you can comfortably invest and taking a concrete first step—often opening a foreign bank account or buying a modest property.

Be Honest with Your Own Capacity

 Don’t assume you will invest a large portion of your net worth just because you have the means.
 Identify the amount you can realistically allocate without compromising your comfort level.
* Use that figure as the “gateway” investment that will let you test the process and build confidence.

Start with a Foreign Bank Account

Opening a bank account in the target country is an effective low‑risk entry point:

  • It can often be done remotely, though many banks now prefer in‑person verification.
  • A modest deposit (as little as $100) is enough to get the account active.
  • The account provides a tangible connection to the offshore environment, making subsequent steps—such as wiring funds for a property purchase—feel less abstract.

Choose a Small, Tangible Asset

A modest property purchase works well as a first offshore deal. Real‑world examples illustrate how this approach unfolds:

Country Purchase Price Payment Method Key Takeaway
Georgia (Tbilisi) $22,000 Cash, withdrawn from a local bank Demonstrates that a small cash transaction can be completed safely with local legal support.
Serbia Not disclosed Negotiated purchase, power of attorney used Shows that once you have a standard operating procedure, the process becomes routine.

These cases share common elements:

  • Clear contract terms – after a few deals, contracts become familiar and straightforward.
  • Local legal support – working with a trusted attorney reduces risk and handles logistics (e.g., cash withdrawal, security concerns).
  • Incremental scaling – after the initial $22 k purchase, the investor moved on to larger deals ($53 k, $76 k, etc.), each building on the confidence gained from the previous one.

Build Momentum Through Repetition

The principle “doing begets doing” applies strongly in offshore investing:

  1. Complete the first task (open the account, sign the purchase agreement).
  2. Assess the outcome – most investors find the process less daunting than anticipated.
  3. Scale up – use the experience to tackle larger investments, such as higher‑value properties or diversified assets.

Practical Checklist for the First Offshore Investment

  • Define your comfort investment amount (e.g., $20 k–$30 k).
  • Research banks in the target country; verify remote opening options and required documentation.
  • Select a property that fits your budget and offers a straightforward purchase process (cash deals are common in emerging markets).
  • Engage a local attorney to review contracts and handle on‑the‑ground logistics.
  • Arrange funding through your new bank account; keep a small reserve for incidental costs.
  • Execute the purchase and record the transaction for tax and residency purposes.

By treating the first offshore move as a manageable, low‑stakes experiment, you reduce psychological resistance and lay the groundwork for more substantial wealth‑building strategies abroad.