Americans Were Asked Which Country They'd Move To If Money Wasn't A Factor—Which Country Would You Move To?

Americans Were Asked Which Country They'd Move To If Money Wasn't A Factor—Which Country Would You Move To?


June 15, 2026 | Jack Hawkins

Americans Were Asked Which Country They'd Move To If Money Wasn't A Factor—Which Country Would You Move To?


The Expat Dream Is Having A Moment

Ask Americans where they’d move if money were no obstacle, and the answers say a lot about what people crave: calmer politics, better healthcare, more vacation days, cheaper living, and, yes, better pastries. Recent surveys show the “someday” move abroad is starting to feel less like fantasy and more like a backup plan.

Rss Thumb - Moving Out Of AmericaFactinate Ltd

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Canada

Canada is the runaway favorite, and it makes sense. It’s close, familiar, beautiful, and comes with a reputation for healthcare, safety, and work-life balance. For many Americans, Canada feels like moving abroad without needing to totally reinvent daily life.

View of Toronto skyline from Toronto Harbour.  Toronto Island ferry in foreground.  Toronto, Canada.John Vetterli, Wikimedia Commons

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United Kingdom

The United Kingdom offers an easy soft landing: shared language, deep history, cozy pubs, and enough castles to make errands feel cinematic. Surveys place it near the top, especially for Americans who want Europe without tackling a new language on day one.

Skyline, Birmingham, England, UK - view from the northArne Museler, Wikimedia Commons

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Australia

Australia ranks high because it feels adventurous but not impossible. Americans picture beaches, sunshine, wildlife, laid-back cities, and a healthier work-life rhythm. The distance is dramatic, but so is the reward: a whole new hemisphere with familiar language and big-sky energy.

The skyline of Adelaide and the River Torrens in December 2022Ardash Muradian from Australia, Wikimedia Commons

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France

France has the dream baked in: long lunches, beautiful villages, stylish cities, and a slower relationship with time. Americans drawn to France often aren’t just choosing a country; they’re choosing a mood. Think fresh bread, walkable streets, and weekends that actually feel like weekends.

Eiffel Tower from the Tour Montparnasse, Paris.David McSpadden from Daly City, United States, Wikimedia Commons

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Italy

Italy is the emotional pick. In Talker Research’s poll, Italy ranked second, with cuisine and culture among its biggest draws. That tracks. If money truly didn’t matter, plenty of Americans would happily relocate to a place where dinner can last three hours and nobody apologizes for it.

Roma / Rome - Lazio - Italia / ItalyBert Kaufmann from Roermond, Netherlands, Wikimedia Commons

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Japan

Japan has huge pull with younger Americans, especially those drawn to design, food, transit, safety, and pop culture. Gallup found Japan tied with Italy and New Zealand behind Canada among younger American women’s preferred destinations. It’s practical, fascinating, and endlessly photogenic.

Tokyo SkylineNryate, Wikimedia Commons

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Mexico

Mexico is already home to many Americans abroad, and its appeal is obvious: proximity, warmth, food, culture, and more affordable daily living in many areas. From Mexico City to Mérida to beach towns, it offers variety without cutting the cord completely.

Drone capture of Toluca de Lerdo, showcasing historic architecture and urban landscape.Andres DG, Pexels

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Spain

Spain checks nearly every fantasy box: late dinners, sunny plazas, beaches, art, and a pace of life that seems allergic to burnout. It also shows up in relocation interest because it offers Europe with warmth, social life, and a more relaxed everyday rhythm.

Barcelona, Spain, view over the city towards the coast with Torre Agbar, which is illuminate at night in the colours of the “F. C. Barcelona”frank muller, Wikimedia Commons

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Germany

Germany appeals to the practical dreamer. It has strong infrastructure, efficient transit, good public services, and cities that balance culture with order. For Americans craving stability, walkability, and a life where trains are more than decorative, Germany makes a strong case.

Historical city centre of Frankfurt (Germany) with Frankfurt Skyline behindThomas Wolf, www.foto-tw.de, Wikimedia Commons

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New Zealand

New Zealand is the “disappear somewhere beautiful” answer. Gallup found it among the top preferred destinations for younger American women who want to leave. It offers dramatic landscapes, English-speaking ease, outdoor living, and the feeling of being very far from the noise.

View of Auckland SklylineSsiyamalan, Wikimedia Commons

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Ireland

Ireland has charm in ridiculous quantities: green hills, literary history, friendly pubs, and a familiar language wrapped in a very different culture. Monmouth found Ireland among Americans’ top overseas wish-list destinations, and as a relocation fantasy, it feels warm, social, and storybook-like.

Dublin, IrelandGiuseppe Milo from Dublin, Ireland, Wikimedia Commons

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Switzerland

Switzerland is what happens when “money is no object” enters the chat. It’s expensive, yes, but also clean, safe, organized, and absurdly scenic. For Americans dreaming of mountain trains, chocolate, lakes, and precision-level public services, Switzerland is a polished fantasy.

Basel, by the river Rhine, is the 3rd largest and populous city of Switzerland. It is regarded as the art and cultural capital of the country, as well as hub of architectures and pharmacy industry. The city is calm yet lively with various activities and eDghosal, Wikimedia Commons

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Costa Rica

Costa Rica is a long-running favorite for Americans chasing sunshine, nature, and a gentler pace. It showed up in Talker’s top relocation picks, helped by its beaches, biodiversity, and “pura vida” reputation. It’s the kind of place that makes stress feel optional.

San José skyline at dawnJpczcaya, Wikimedia Commons

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Portugal

Portugal is a modern expat darling, even when it doesn’t top every U.S. poll. Americans are drawn to its coastline, food, historic cities, and comparatively approachable lifestyle. Lisbon and Porto have become shorthand for a life with sunshine, cafés, and better balance.

500px provided description: Lisbon skyline [#sky ,#city ,#sunset ,#water ,#reflection ,#river ,#travel ,#architecture ,#cityscape ,#building ,#evening ,#skyline ,#panoramic ,#outdoors ,#horizontal ,#dusk ,#no person ,#Expo ,#Lisbon ,#Portugal]Luis Ascenso, Wikimedia Commons

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Netherlands

The Netherlands appeals to Americans who secretly want to bike everywhere and live in a postcard. It offers canals, efficient cities, strong English fluency, and a culture built around practicality. For people tired of car-dependent life, Dutch daily living can feel revolutionary.

Skyscapers in/Skyline of The Hague, Province of South Holland, NetherlandsZairon, Wikimedia Commons

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Sweden

Sweden’s appeal is less flashy but deeply tempting: clean cities, nature, parental leave, design, and a culture that takes downtime seriously. Americans who choose Sweden in the imagination are often choosing calm, fairness, and the possibility of living somewhere that feels thoughtfully built.

Kvarnholmen from Prins Eugens Waldemarsudde / Djurgården – Stockholm, SwedenTony Webster from Portland, Oregon, United States, Wikimedia Commons

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Denmark

Denmark has mastered the art of making ordinary life look enviable. Cozy interiors, bike lanes, public trust, and excellent pastries are a powerful combination. For Americans chasing happiness rankings and low-drama living, Denmark is the sleek, candlelit version of the dream.

The Rundetaarn, or Rundetårn (Round Tower in English), is a 17th-century tower located in central Copenhagen, Denmark. One of the many architectural projects of Christian IV, it was built as an astronomical observatory. It is most noted for its equestrianJorge Lascar from Melbourne, Australia, Wikimedia Commons

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Norway

Norway is for the outdoor romantic with a practical streak. Fjords, mountains, safety, and strong social systems make it a natural fantasy destination. It’s not cheap, but this whole question removes money from the equation, which gives Norway a very unfair advantage.

Skyline of downtown Oslo NorwayTim Adams, Wikimedia Commons

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Greece

Greece appears in American travel wish lists, and it is easy to see why it becomes a relocation fantasy. Islands, history, blue water, olive oil, and sunshine do a lot of persuasive work. It’s the “what if life looked like vacation?” option.

Monastiraki Square and Acropolis in Athensdronepicr, Wikimedia Commons

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Austria

Austria offers elegance without shouting about it. Vienna regularly attracts attention for quality of life, and Americans dreaming of Austria picture music, cafés, mountains, and orderly beauty. It feels cultured, comfortable, and just far enough from home to count as a reinvention.

Vienna, Austria at sunsetPierre Blache from Paris, France, Wikimedia Commons

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Scotland

Talker’s poll listed Scotland separately, and while it is part of the United Kingdom, it deserves its own daydream. Americans love the romance of Edinburgh, the Highlands, coastal villages, and weather that practically demands sweaters, whisky, and dramatic personal reflection.

Skyline of the city of Edinburgh in ScotlandAndrew Colin, Wikimedia Commons

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Iceland

Iceland is not the obvious everyday choice, but it is a powerful fantasy pick. Safe, strange, starkly beautiful, and full of hot springs, it appeals to Americans who want a life that looks like another planet but still has excellent Wi-Fi.

Oct 2009allen watkin from London, UK, Wikimedia Commons

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South Korea

South Korea draws Americans interested in city life, food, technology, beauty culture, music, and transit. Seoul especially has the kind of energy that makes New York look under-caffeinated. For younger movers, it offers speed, style, and a totally different daily rhythm.

Seoul, South KoreaAndrew and Annemarie, Wikimedia Commons

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Thailand

Thailand is a classic “if money didn’t matter” answer for sunshine seekers, food lovers, and remote-work dreamers. Beaches, temples, street food, and lower living costs all add to the appeal. It’s not just a vacation fantasy; for some, it’s a lifestyle reset.

A spectacular sunset in Bangkok, showing the skytrain and modern skyline down Thanon Naradhiwas Rajanagarindra, taken from the corner of Thanon Silom, with the Empire Tower and the Chong Nonsi BTS Station at the left side.User:Diliff, Wikimedia Commons

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Argentina

Argentina has been gaining attention among globally minded Americans, especially those drawn to Buenos Aires, café culture, architecture, steak, wine, and a European feel at a very different price point. It’s passionate, complicated, beautiful, and ideal for people who like cities with soul.

Buenos Aires, Argentina SkylineMichelle Maria, Wikimedia Commons

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So, Where Would You Go?

The survey answers reveal more than wanderlust. Americans aren’t just chasing pretty views; they’re imagining healthcare that feels manageable, work that leaves room for life, cities that are walkable, and cultures that make daily living feel richer. If money vanished as a barrier, the map would get very interesting.

Gallery 1253  743 - 2026-06-11T181531.863ArtHouse Studio, Pexels

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Sources: 1, 2, 3


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