The Nomad Passport Index ranks nearly 200 passports each year using a multi‑dimensional framework that goes beyond simple visa‑free counts. The index evaluates:
- Visa‑free travel – number of countries that can be entered without a visa or with a visa‑on‑arrival.
- Tax treatment of citizens – whether the state taxes worldwide income, imposes wealth or inheritance taxes, or offers tax incentives for non‑residents.
- Global perception and treatment – how citizens are viewed abroad, including ease of opening bank accounts and doing business.
- Dual‑citizenship policy – the ability to hold additional passports without losing the original one.
- Personal freedoms – civil liberties, mandatory military service, and the risk of being compelled to act against one’s will.
2026 Rankings (selected)
| Rank | Country | Notable attributes |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Malta | EU member, low‑tax, pro‑business, no mandatory military service, “exceptional merit” citizenship program for high‑net‑worth investors. |
| 2 (tied) | Greece, Ireland, Romania | EU members with tax incentives (Greece), non‑dom regime (Ireland), expanded visa‑free travel and strong EU representation (Romania). |
| 5 | Cyprus | Tax‑friendly EU jurisdiction. |
| 6 (tied) | Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Italy, New Zealand | Moderate travel freedom, relatively laissez‑faire regulatory environments. |
| 10 (tied) | United Arab Emirates | No personal income tax, but limited dual‑citizenship and emerging restrictions on civil liberties. |
| 20 (tied) | Germany, Croatia, Liechtenstein, Singapore | High travel freedom, but Singapore and Liechtenstein restrict dual citizenship; Germany’s large tax burden for residents. |
| 43 | United States | Wide visa‑free access but worldwide taxation, high incarceration rate, and growing regulatory constraints. |
| 50‑64 | Uruguay, Mexico, Paraguay, St. Vincent & the Grenadines, Grenada, Dominica, Israel | Citizenship‑by‑investment or residency pathways; lower tax burdens; varying degrees of personal freedom. |
Key Takeaways
1. Anglo‑Saxon passports are structurally capped
The United States (43rd), United Kingdom (35th), Canada (tied), and Australia (26th) rank in the upper‑quartile but lag behind many EU and smaller nations because of worldwide tax obligations, mandatory reporting, and limited personal freedom.
2. Dual‑citizenship restrictions diminish a passport’s utility
Countries that forbid or heavily restrict holding another nationality—e.g., Singapore, Japan, Monaco, the UAE (for native citizens), South Korea, Malaysia—score lower despite strong travel freedom. The inability to combine passports reduces optionality for globally mobile individuals.
3. Tax‑free status alone no longer guarantees a top ranking
The UAE’s slip to a tie for 10th place illustrates that the absence of personal income tax is outweighed by emerging corporate taxes, limited dual‑citizenship, and concerns over civil liberties.
4. EU passports benefit from collective bargaining power
EU member states enjoy reciprocal visa‑free access worldwide and a unified stance that prevents individual countries from discriminating against other EU citizens. This boosts the rankings of Malta, Greece, Ireland, Romania, Cyprus, and others.
5. “Prestige” passports are losing relevance
Historical perception of passports from the United States, United Kingdom, or other former colonial powers does not translate into higher rankings when personal freedom, tax burden, and dual‑citizenship are considered.
Practical Considerations for Building a Passport Portfolio
- Ancestry routes – Many European countries (e.g., Ireland, Italy, Hungary, Latvia, Bulgaria) allow citizenship by descent. Tracing grandparents or great‑grandparents can provide a low‑cost entry point to an EU passport.
- Investment‑based programs – Malta’s “exceptional merit” scheme, Portugal’s Golden Visa, and Caribbean citizenship‑by‑investment programs (St. Vincent & the Grenadines, Grenada, Dominica) grant passports in exchange for substantial financial contributions or real‑estate purchases.
- Residency‑to‑citizenship pathways – Countries such as Uruguay (citizenship after three years of residence) and Mexico (residency leading to citizenship) offer relatively quick naturalization without large financial outlays.
- Tax implications – Holding a passport from a jurisdiction that does not tax non‑resident worldwide income (e.g., Malta, Cyprus, UAE) can dramatically reduce personal tax liability, especially for high‑net‑worth entrepreneurs and investors.
- Military and civil obligations – Avoid passports that impose mandatory conscription or allow the state to dictate travel (e.g., certain Eastern European nations, South Korea). Such obligations can turn a travel‑friendly passport into a liability.
- Banking and investment access – Some passports (e.g., Malta, Cyprus, certain Caribbean nations) facilitate opening offshore bank accounts and participating in international investment vehicles that may be restricted for U.S. citizens.
Decision Framework
When selecting a second (or additional) passport, weigh the following:
| Criterion | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Visa‑free reach | Reduces travel friction for business and leisure. |
| Tax regime | Determines ongoing fiscal obligations on worldwide income and assets. |
| Dual‑citizenship policy | Enables portfolio diversification without renouncing existing nationality. |
| Civil liberties | Affects personal security, freedom of movement, and risk of state‑mandated service. |
| Geopolitical perception | Influences ease of obtaining visas, opening bank accounts, and conducting cross‑border transactions. |
A balanced portfolio might combine a high‑ranking EU passport (e.g., Malta or Romania) for EU access and tax advantages, a tax‑neutral jurisdiction (e.g., UAE) for income‑tax relief, and a residency‑based passport (e.g., Uruguay) for regional flexibility. The optimal mix depends on individual travel patterns, business interests, and tolerance for regulatory exposure.





