Another month, another round of policy moves quietly reshaping taxation, migration, and global mobility.
Switzerland is one of the few moving in the opposite direction, locking cash into its constitution. While most countries push toward fully traceable, controlled systems, the Swiss are making sure a parallel system still exists.
At the same time, the value of CBI passports continues to erode at the margin. The UK and US have both tightened access in just the past few weeks. If your strategy relies on visa-free travel, that’s the part governments can change overnight.
In Europe, wealth taxes are back on the table. Still aimed at the top, for now. That rarely lasts.
And some well-known jurisdictions are showing their real mechanics. Panama naturalization looks simple on paper, but remains discretionary in practice. Bhutan’s new visa is innovative, but untested. Uruguay still works—but with higher thresholds and more conditions than before.
Here’s what’s inside:
- Switzerland locks cash into its constitution
- Panama naturalization: still slow, still selective
- Bhutan’s digital nomad visa: interesting concept, weak rollout
- CBI countries continue losing visa-free access to Western countries
- Wealth taxes creep back onto Europe’s agenda
- Uruguay’s tax advantages begin to erode
Questions & Answers
- Argentina CBI: worth the wait—or not?
- Are “ocupas” really a major risk in Spain?
- After Italy: what are the best ancestry-based options left?
As always, we focus on what actually matters—where the rules are tightening, where the opportunities still exist, and where the narrative doesn’t match reality.
World Events and Updates Switzerland Locks Cash into the Constitution View of Lugano lake from Monte San Salvatore, Switzerland Switzerland keeps surprising—on the sane side of things. Just last month, we reported that the country is planning a June 2026 referendum on capping its population at 10 million. Today, the population sits at roughly 9…
