The Surprising Truth About My New Hometown in Portugal

The Surprising Truth About My New Hometown in Portugal

I officially started my new life in Portugal this week. After nearly five years of living and working in Prague, I’ve grabbed one of Portugal’s new D8 Digital Nomad visas and have relocated to the Iberian Peninsula with my family. As I’ve mentioned in previous dispatches, we’ve chosen to live in Cascais, a highly popular beach town about an hour west of Lisbon...

Grandma Made Goulash? You May Be Due a Euro Passport

Grandma Made Goulash? You May Be Due a Euro Passport

The Treaty of Trianon. You’ve likely never heard of it. It happened in the summer of 1920, a year after the Treaty of Versailles, the summit that ended World War I. Trianon carved up the Hungarian Empire, the eastern half of what had been the Austro-Hungarian Empire. That cleavage left the new country of Hungary with about 7.6 million people...

Crete and Corfu: For a Healthy, Simple, Greek Island Retirement

Crete and Corfu: For a Healthy, Simple, Greek Island Retirement

Today, the birthplace of democracy can still be a messy place—just as it increasingly is across the U.S., the United Kingdom, and elsewhere. But this, too, is Greece: A country so beautiful, calm, relaxing— and so relatively inexpensive—that it’s attracting retirees happily trading the messiness elsewhere for the messiness of a more fulfilling...

Grandma Made Goulash? You May Be Due a Euro Passport

Grandma Made Goulash? You May Be Due a Euro Passport

Most of the time, countries cut off the family tree at grandparent. A tiny few go back to great-grandparent. Italy goes so far as great-great-grandfather. And then there’s Hungary. The country quietly passed a citizenship law in 2011 that might just be the most generous citizenship-by-ancestry plan ever. If you can prove that anyone in your family tree was Hungarian...