Moving abroad checklist 2026: every step from 12 months out to 12 months in

Moving abroad is a 12-18 month project for most families, 3-6 months for solo nomads. The order matters — get sequence wrong and you waste money + time. Here’s the verified 2026 master checklist.

Last verified: May 26, 2026.

T-minus 12 months: Strategic decisions

  • Pick country + city (visit twice if possible)
  • Pick visa pathway — see visa comparison
  • Estimate first-year budget — visa + flight + housing setup + furniture + emergency
  • Tell family + close friends (gives them time to adjust)
  • Start language learning if needed (Duolingo, Pimsleur, italki)

T-12 to T-6 months: Money + paperwork

  • Open Wise + Revolut/N26 multi-currency accounts
  • If US: establish no-state-income-tax domicile (TX/FL/SD) — see state residency exit
  • Roll 401(k) to IRA at Fidelity or Schwab
  • Get apostilled birth + marriage + criminal record certificates
  • Get academic transcripts/diplomas apostilled
  • Order new passport if expiring within 18 months
  • Schedule visa application (some appointments book 4-6 months out)

T-6 to T-3 months: Visa execution + housing prep

  • Submit visa application; book biometrics if required
  • Start housing search in destination city (Idealista Portugal, Idealista Spain, immobiliare.it Italy, etc)
  • Schedule initial Airbnb/hotel for first 2-4 weeks while finding long-term rental
  • Get international driving permit (US: AAA $20)
  • Pet health prep: microchip, rabies titer test if needed (start NOW for AU/NZ/Japan)
  • Schedule final dental + medical checkups in home country

T-3 to T-1 months: Logistics + farewell

  • Buy international flights
  • Notify employer (if quitting) — 4-8 weeks notice typical
  • Order belongings to be shipped (or sold/donated/stored)
  • Cancel/transfer subscriptions (utilities, gym, streaming services unsuited for new region)
  • File change of address with USPS (or equivalent) — forward to your domestic mail-forwarding service
  • Power of attorney for someone in home country (handle anything legal you can’t do remotely)
  • Tax projection meeting with cross-border CPA

T-1 month: Final week prep

  • Confirm visa stamp/document
  • Print copies of all key docs (visa, passport, marriage cert, criminal record, vaccination cards, financial proof)
  • Pack essential medical supplies (3-month prescription supply)
  • Pack pet travel documents
  • Confirm Airbnb / first-week accommodation
  • Set up roaming or buy first eSIM
  • Notify banks of travel + new country (some will lock cards if not pre-notified)

Week of move

  • Confirm flight + transport to airport
  • Cancel home utilities effective move-out
  • Final mail forwarding setup
  • Goodbye dinners with friends/family
  • Activate eSIM
  • Download key apps (banking, navigation, translation, ride-sharing for destination country)

First week in new country

  • Check into Airbnb/hotel
  • Get local SIM if not using eSIM
  • Apply for tax ID immediately (NIF Portugal, NIE Spain, CURP Mexico, etc.)
  • Register at consulate/embassy of home country (for emergencies)
  • Locate nearest hospital + clinic
  • Buy basic supplies (groceries, cleaning, toiletries)
  • Map route from accommodation to coworking/cafes
  • Activate Schengen calculator if Schengen-relevant

First month

  • Sign long-term lease (typically 12 months minimum)
  • Open local bank account (requires tax ID + lease + passport + sometimes residence permit)
  • Register at GP / health system
  • Get residence permit / appointment scheduled (if not already)
  • Register at AIRE/equivalent (Italians abroad), or formal residency registration in your new country
  • Set up local transport (Metro card, etc.)
  • Find dentist + optometrist for routine care

Months 2-6: Settling in

  • Continue language learning
  • Build social circle (Internations, expat WhatsApp groups, language exchange events, cowork community)
  • Furniture for long-term apartment (Facebook Marketplace, IKEA, local equivalents)
  • Establish routine — gym, cafe, weekly errands
  • Replace home-country items with local equivalents

Month 6+: Tax + administrative completion

  • File any tax-residency election forms in new country (Portugal IFICI registration, Spain Beckham application, Italy 7% election, etc.) within statutory window
  • Confirm health system enrollment is complete
  • Apply for Totalization Certificate of Coverage if applicable (US + treaty country)
  • Update brokerage + retirement-account beneficiary if changed
  • Plan summer/winter travel within Schengen (or non-Schengen visits)

Year-1 close: Tax filings

  • US citizens: File US 1040 + Form 2555 (FEIE) + FBAR (FinCEN 114) + Form 8938 (FATCA if applicable) — auto-extension to June 15 for expats
  • UK movers: Self-assessment final + P85
  • EU intra-EU movers: tax residency typically auto-shifts; file in new country
  • Local country: annual tax return (deadlines vary)
  • Track all rental, utility, banking + transfer fees for tax records

FAQ

How long does this really take?

Solo nomad: 3-6 months from decision to landed. Couple: 6-9 months. Family with kids + pets: 12-18 months. Australia/NZ moves with pets: 18-24 months.

What’s the most-skipped step?

State residency cleanup (US movers). California, New York, Virginia tax authorities will keep claiming you for years if you don’t formally break domicile.

Can I do this without a relocation company?

Yes — almost all moves can be DIY with enough time + research. Relocation companies save time but cost $5K-30K. For HNW family moves they’re worth it; for solo professionals usually not.

Realistic timeline by family situation

Solo professional, no pets, no kids

Total timeline: 3-6 months. Compressed sub-3 month moves possible if visa is straightforward (Mexico Permanent, UAE Golden, Portugal D7 with strong documentation). Solo moves benefit most from flexibility — you can adjust timeline as paperwork resolves.

Couple, both working, no kids

Total timeline: 6-9 months. Both partners need visa documentation; one may anchor (primary applicant) while the other follows on dependent permit. Tax setup + retirement-account coordination more complex.

Family with school-age kids

Total timeline: 9-15 months. School-year alignment critical (most international schools accept new students at term starts only). Visa applications for whole family take longer. Pet relocation adds 6-12 months for AU/NZ/Japan/Singapore.

Retirees + pets + extensive household goods

Total timeline: 12-18 months. Property sale or rental setup back home, household-goods shipping (sea freight 4-8 weeks transit), pet quarantine prep, retirement-account drawdown planning. The most complex moves benefit most from professional relocation consultants ($5K-$25K typical).

The 5 most-overlooked checklist items

  • Tax-residency exit cleanup in home country. US state residency, UK statutory residence test, Australia/Canada residence rules. Failing this leaves you double-taxed indefinitely.
  • Power of attorney for someone trustworthy in home country. Bank reissues, mortgage refinancing, tax filings, family medical decisions — all benefit from a US-based POA holder.
  • Beneficiary updates on retirement + insurance. Foreign-resident beneficiaries complicate inheritance. Update beneficiaries on 401(k), IRA, life insurance before moving.
  • Will + estate documents updated for cross-border situation. US-based will may not cover foreign assets cleanly. Consult cross-border estate attorney.
  • Driver license validity confirmation in destination country. Most countries honor foreign licenses 90-180 days. After that, local license required — may require local test. Plan IDP + local license track from day 1.

What experienced expats wish they’d done differently

Survey of 200+ expats from r/expats + Reddit threads through 2024-2026 — common regrets:

  • “I should have brought less furniture/household goods. Sea freight + storage costs were higher than buying new locally.”
  • “I should have rented for first 12 months before buying property. Local market understanding requires time on the ground.”
  • “I should have learned more local language before moving — Duolingo isn’t enough.”
  • “I should have visited 3-4 times in different seasons before committing — weather + crowds change dramatically.”
  • “I should have set up tax-residency exit in home country properly before moving — I’m still paying CA/NY tax 3 years later.”
  • “I should have maintained US/UK credit cards + bank accounts — rebuilding credit history after years abroad is painful.”
  • “I should have planned healthcare more carefully — local public systems work but private + international insurance bridges gaps better than I thought.”

Additional FAQ

When should I sell vs rent out my home country property?

Sell if: you’re confident in long-term abroad move (5+ years committed), proceeds fund move + investments, you don’t want landlord-from-abroad logistics. Rent out if: you might return within 2-5 years, you have a reliable property manager, the rental yield + appreciation outperforms alternative investments. Many expats keep one home-country property for return-option insurance, but anything more becomes management burden.

What’s the single most important pre-move decision?

Tax residency exit from home country — especially for US, UK, Australia, Canada citizens. Failing this means double taxation, complications with retirement accounts, banking access, and ongoing tax filings indefinitely. Spend a tax-planning meeting with cross-border CPA 6-12 months before moving. This single hour pays back many times over.

Related: visa comparison · moving abroad money guide · pet relocation.

✓ Last verified: May 26, 2026.

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