25 comments

  • keiferski 28 minutes ago
    I think this is probably useless information considering that legal restrictions largely limit the ability of people to move from one to the other.

    Speaking as an American that “accidentally” moved to the EU a decade ago, my impression is still that ambitious EU citizens, particularly those in tech or finance, would move to the US in a second if it was possible to.

    That said, I don’t personally plan on moving back anytime soon, although I do miss certain aspects of the American identity and experience constantly.

    • schnitzelstoat 19 minutes ago
      Yeah, given that it's much easier to get a visa to work in the EU (albeit still not easy) than in the US, the default position ceteris paribus would be that more people would move from the US to Europe than vice versa.

      The fact that wasn't the case before just goes to show how big an impact the economic disparity has.

  • hellcow 42 minutes ago
    I'm moving from California to Portugal this week. I get to retire much earlier with low-cost healthcare and a cost of living lower relative to CA, and the Portuguese people I've met have all been wonderful. The food is great too!

    I'd rather be on the side that supports Ukraine, clean energy, and stable trade agreements. I don't feel safe in the US anymore.

    • NalNezumi 15 minutes ago
      I know a guy that worked for good UK salary (fintech) that moved to Portugal(Lisbon) almost a decade ago. It seems to be a lovely place, he also happily tell me how much he manage to save and how early he will be able to retire. He got many friends there too, but mostly expats.

      If I'm to believe my Portuguese friends however, the extreme influx of digital nomad types have really changed Lisbon. There's almost no authentic Portuguese thing there anymore, just thing LARPING as it. The rent is too high for any local young Portuguese to pay for, while the landlords are super happy for these influx of wealthy expats, so the young either move out of the city or move all together.

      In a very utopia like set up, there's something depressing about that reality.

      When I asked about to my expat friend living there, he acknowledged it, shrugged, and said "don't hate the playa, hate the game".

      Anyway, enjoy the game!

    • schnitzelstoat 33 minutes ago
      Are you going to have a Portuguese salary or an American one?
  • comrade1234 1 hour ago
    I'm American and moved to Europe (Switzerland) 17-years ago. Sometimes I laugh to myself when I think how whatmy long-dead immigrant grandfather (from Vilnius to Midwest USA) would think of my reverse move.

    Growing up we always thought my grandparents were the weirdest people. They roasted and ate whole chickens, not cut up chicken parts from the grocery store. They drank tea and ate weird Russian tea cake cookies. They made their own sausage. They hunted ducks and deer. They ate raw beef.

    Since moving to Europe I buy a lot of my food from neighborhood farms, roast whole chickens, make tartare, make cheese and sausage... hunting and fishing isn't so easy here though - I can do that when I visit relatives in the USA though.

    • rmind 1 hour ago
      Ironically enough, Vilnius is now a very beautiful, safe and high quality of life city that is a better place to live than, probably, quite a lot of American cities..

      How times have changed..

      • ceejayoz 1 hour ago
        When I was a kid, "starving children in Ethiopia" was a reason to eat your whole dinner. My formerly Swiss grandma once said "starving children in Europe" and I was very thrown for a moment.
  • schnitzelstoat 28 minutes ago
    If they can work remotely and keep their American salaries then they can live like Emperors here.

    If not, I imagine they will get tired of the low salaries and high taxes and move back to the US. It might be better here for artist types etc. who can benefit more from the social welfare systems than they have to pay in. But for engineers, it makes little sense - you are the one who has to pay for the party.

    • chneu 8 minutes ago
      Yes and no. American salaries are great but our cost of living is insane. The amount of time wasted in the US doing basic stuff also can't be discounted. Our cost of healthcare adds up, as does the cost of everything here.

      I think this data shows that a lot of Americans are waking up to our brand of "freedom" being bullshit. The American dream is a bit of a myth nowadays.

      Americans lie to ourselves. If one isn't wealthy in the US, think top 15%, you're better off living outside the US. But Americans are "not yet billionaires" so most of us don't realize this. Our media pumps our hubris and egos using "freedom" and nationalism. Most Americans never travel outside of the US and believe our lives here are infinitely better than anything else in the world. It's something I see constantly when I talk international stuff with rural Americans(and the suburban cosplayer), an absolute fantasy version of the world.

      • keiferski 3 minutes ago
        Cost of living in comparable EU cities is very high as well, except salaries aren’t really correspondingly higher.

        The American dream is and has always been kind of a national myth but honestly if you limit it to purely making a lot of money by working hard, I think it’s still quite true, and the best place in the world to do so.

  • dredmorbius 7 minutes ago
  • lava_pidgeon 51 minutes ago
    If you look up the graph this is a 20 years old trend .

    One thinks of course about Eastern Europe which had a decent economic growth. Compare to many American HN Readers thinking, "Europe" in General tried to make a place better for living. What it means is of course very dependent on person, but consider thinks like better health care, no war (that's the EU for), better indro, but also economics but to certain percentage it worked out!

    Though I can't say about American but health care and guns are still a problem. Compare to Europe which hadn't a start up 20 years ago and "Europe" tries to fix t.

  • comrade1234 1 hour ago
    Surprisingly, the vote on limiting Switzerland's population to 10 million may actually pass. Usually votes for things that will hurt the economy don't come close to passing but right now the limit is a few percent ahead.
    • sidewndr46 1 hour ago
      how would that even work? mandatory contraception or something?
      • fainpul 1 hour ago
        The birth rate in Switzerland (just as in many highly developed countries) is already way below 2.1 children per woman, which would be required to sustain the population. Any population growth comes from immigrants. Xenophobic people are scared by that.
      • cybrox 1 hour ago
        It's just a buzzword to say limit immigration with rising population.

        I'll leave out my opinion on the topic but Switzerland has become noticeably more crowded in the last 20 years.

        • sidewndr46 1 hour ago
          I was surprised to learn that Switzerland's population is still that small.
      • ceejayoz 1 hour ago
        Immigration and naturalization restrictions.
        • esperent 1 hour ago
          So if they hit ten million do they start kicking people out for every native baby born?
          • crote 1 hour ago
            Switzerland's fertility rate has been below the replacement rate of 2.1 babies / woman since the 1970s. There is zero chance of births pushing it above the 10M count. If anything, immigration is the sole reason the Swiss aren't going extinct.
            • nalaj 32 minutes ago
              Immigration doesn’t create more Swiss people.
              • ryoshoe 12 minutes ago
                What counts as a Swiss person? Would children of immigrants growing up in Swiss society, going to Swiss schools, and speaking the national languages of Switzerland count?
          • thefounder 1 hour ago
            No, they just stop accepting immigrants.
    • HPsquared 1 hour ago
      "A good economy" means different things to different people.

      Expensive houses and low wages, vs appreciating assets and low labour costs.

  • aqme28 1 hour ago
    I moved to Berlin a few years ago. Anecdotally, my friends and family back home are jealous.
    • hylaride 56 minutes ago
      I am jealous of the lifestyle of most of Europe, but not the rigid labour markets and lower salaries. I wish we had more people-oriented cities in North America, though. I don't want to be anti-automobile, but the hostility to the "15 minute city" idea was quite depressing to me.
    • chneu 6 minutes ago
      My good friends moved to Germany before they had their kid. They are extremely happy with their decision.

      Everyone I'm aware of who moved because of Trump/Republicans are happy with their choice.

    • haght 1 hour ago
      [dead]
  • garbawarb 1 hour ago
    Is a green card the equivalent to a first time residence permit in Europe? It's notoriously hard to get a green card: it'll take 3 years for a normal skilled worker who's already in the US and that's assuming nothing goes wrong in the process, and something always does. Plus many visa categories don't even have a path to a green card. "Long term stay visas issued" might be a better comparison.
    • rmind 1 hour ago
      While each EU country has its own immigration rules, there is an EU-level route for the highly skilled workers, called the EU Blue Card:

      * https://home-affairs.ec.europa.eu/policies/migration-and-asy... * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Card_(European_Union)

    • piva00 1 hour ago
      Each EU country has its own rules about immigration.

      A green card is probably equivalent to a permanent residence permit, those vary quite a bit between countries, and skills. Some countries might give a permanent residence in as few as 3 years, I believe quite a few have the 4 years threshold. Depending on what skills you have or how much you invest in the country you are moving to this timeline also shortens.

      • agentcoops 1 hour ago
        Generally continental Europe -- except the Scandinavian countries -- makes it relatively easy to get long-term residency and even a passport. The UK is considerably more difficult, but very easy to work in for an extended period of time (intra-company transfer visas etc).
        • piva00 45 minutes ago
          Scandinavia had Sweden until yesterday's vote in Riksdagen, I moved here 10+ years ago, got my permanent residence after 4 years, citizenship after 5.

          Rules have been changed now, citizenship in 8 years will become law on June 6th, also requiring language and cultural tests which weren't required before.

          Continental Europe used to vary, Germany was stricter with 8 years to citizenship but permanent residence would vary depending on work skill and language skills.

        • rmind 43 minutes ago
          Can you give some specific examples? I would say that, unless you have some additional qualifications (European ancestors, EU spouse and similar), the majority of EU countries actually don't make it that easy. Of course, it depends on your definition of "relatively easy".
    • aqme28 1 hour ago
      It's not that hard to get a temporary residence permit somewhere in the EU if you're well-employed. Every country has its own rules and some are more lax than others, but there are plenty of e.g. "tech worker" visas you can get. You often don't need a job to officially sponsor you.
    • comrade1234 1 hour ago
      Just depends where and where you're from. Even though it's the EU each country has its own rules.
      • sidewndr46 1 hour ago
        Can't you basically buy citizenship through "investment" in one of the countries?
        • geremiiah 1 hour ago
          If you're rich enough, you can buy a small local business, like a local pizzeria, and hire x amount of people or invest x amount of money and you get a permanent residence visa through investment. This path is available in pretty much countries including the US.
        • comrade1234 1 hour ago
          I think more than one. I think Portugal's program is over but you can still do it in others (Greece? Romania? I can't remember). You can do it in the USA too.
        • CGamesPlay 1 hour ago
          Many countries, this is often called a golden visa (term predates the current US president).
  • sublimefire 1 hour ago
    IMO metrics are not well represented when looking into chart, eg european resident/student permits are not the same as green cards, they had to include students in us as well. another thing is the use of eu+uk+switzerland would it not be better to use eea instead (think about iceland and norway)?

    it is an interesting stat, but it might be good to understand the diff among US folks getting passports vs residence permits vs studying

  • amarcheschi 1 hour ago
    The community note gives more information on the comparison
    • fragmede 1 hour ago
      > The chart compares permanent green cards issued to Europeans moving to the US with first-time residence permits (often temporary, for work/study) issued to Americans moving to the EU, which are not equivalent metrics.

      For those that don't have Twitter.

      • shaky-carrousel 1 hour ago
        A classic example of mistaking the finger for the moon. There's a trend there, no matter what.
  • idiotsecant 1 hour ago
    I suspect there are a lot of American hegemony trends that look like this. The US is burning good will and soft power that took centuries to accumulate in days or hours. This was a long term trend but the current American government is really stepping on the gas.

    The american century is over, but I'm not sure what comes next will be better, we will see.

    • chneu 4 minutes ago
      Agreed. The US, as a result of basically a conservative tantrum for 60 years, has undone most of the progress after the WWs.
  • Isamu 1 hour ago
    Fairly steady trends since 2000 with a drop during covid, America becoming less popular for Europeans and Americans
  • sleepyguy 1 hour ago
    My kid moved from the US to Vienna for work. Loves it, says there is no reason to come back...I know a few more folks whose kids left after Uni to work in the EU and have no plans on returning. For a young person who values working to live more than living to work, the EU is very attractive.
    • agentcoops 1 hour ago
      In my niece's (relatively rural) US high school class several students decided to attend university in Europe with no family ties to the countries in question. It was pretty common in my generation to see, as you note, kids moving to Berlin etc after their studies, but this strikes me as relatively new. Anecdata that seems supported in some of the public numbers [0].

      [0] https://www.forbes.com/sites/michaeltnietzel/2025/07/21/reco...

      • rembal 59 minutes ago
        Many countries in Europe have free universities: avoiding a few hundred thousands in debt maybe be worth moving in the long run.
    • ramesh31 1 hour ago
      It's an infinitely higher quality of life if you're not in the 90th income percentile in the US already. You'll never make that much, but you'll never have half the worries we do here for lower income people.
      • rbanffy 1 hour ago
        I'd say even if you are on the 99th percentile, the quality of life will be much better. You'll make less money, but you also won't have to spend on things like health insurance, good schools, and so on. Your house might be smaller though, unless you opt to live further from urban centers, which will demand a car, but it'll be a safer and more efficient one.
        • sleepyguy 43 minutes ago
          Don't know why you were junked, you're not wrong.

          My child’s situation is somewhat different from many others in the U.S. He never has to worry about money because he benefits from the security of multi-generational wealth. He simply finds Europe and its values to be culturally superior to the United States.

  • danayfm 1 hour ago
    I've been pulling it off, but I have dual citizenship with EU/USA but still get paid in the US because it saves me 2k a month in taxes. There are also workarounds in avoiding paying the higher EU taxes.
    • McDyver 1 hour ago
      > it saves me 2k a month in taxes. There are also workarounds in avoiding paying the higher EU taxes.

      Interesting how in a different comment you say

      > I want the same for all Spaniards and will gladly pay high taxes if my family, friends, and my neighbors can also have that same opportunity.

    • agentcoops 1 hour ago
      If you're living and working in California or New York, as I suspect a large number of hacker news readers are, EU taxes on income are generally not prohibitively more expensive, especially relative to increase in quality of life. 'Native' salaries are considerably lower, however, and tax treatment of equity-based compensation is very much not in favor of employees...
    • iainmerrick 1 hour ago
      I hadn’t realised that’s a thing (although I probably shouldn’t be surprised) -- I thought all these dual-citizenship tax agreements worked such that you aren’t double-taxed, but the total amount paid needs to meet the minimum for each country.

      For example, I thought if you’re resident in the US you might pay your main taxes there, but you’d need to “top up” in the EU.

      What’s your specific workaround?

    • hyperpower 1 hour ago
      So you want to take advantage of European quality of life, social nets and infrastructure, but you don't want to help pay for it? How very American.
      • piva00 42 minutes ago
        I've met a few Americans living like that in Portugal, there are communities that formed in some villages away from the main cities where real estate is very cheap since most villagers had died or moved out. They were proud of not paying Portuguese taxes, I couldn't understand how you can be proud of taking advantage of a society while not contributing financially to it to support the services you enjoy.

        It's hard for me to understand this mentality...

    • beAbU 1 hour ago
      How much do you pay for health insurance in the US?
    • aggakake 56 minutes ago
      Do you spend more than 6mos in the EU?
  • josefritzishere 1 hour ago
    Aside from the authoritarian problems, the US is also clearly sliding into some kind of severe economic recession. I'm just envious of people who have that ability, really.
    • rbanffy 1 hour ago
      I'd even go as far as saying the authoritarianism has a causal relation with the impending recession, the acceleration of the de-dollarization of foreign commerce, and the unavoidable collapse of the "Pax Americana" that came after the fall of the Soviet Union.

      Moving to Europe is a smart move, but, having complete freedom, I'd think about someplace in the southern hemisphere. I believe Chile and Brazil will be stable for the next 20 years or so and have good overlap with US timezones. And both are quite far from most of the impending clusterfuck happening in Eastern Europe.

  • pjdkoch 1 hour ago
    Notice that a lot of the graphs count people from the Americas. Not USA.
  • tosti 1 hour ago
    I, for one, welcome our new American fellows.
    • rbanffy 1 hour ago
      They are nice people fleeing an oppressive regime. We must work hard to integrate them into our societies, despite the large cultural differences.
  • sublinear 1 hour ago
    [dead]
  • irishcoffee 1 hour ago
    I had an issue at work, stuck all night on the phone trying to get a license activated. The first fellow I talked to was Australian, great guy. Really helpful, patient. He discovered the issue was indeed on their end.

    I took a nap at my desk for an hour (the license was needed on an airgapped system sneaker-netted over via an encrypted drive so I couldn't do this from home and the deadline had arrived).

    Woke up and called back, different fellow, European. Every answer, in perfect english, was about 3 words long on average in a very dismissive tone.

    I'd rather move to Australia.

    • gdhkgdhkvff 1 hour ago
      That’s quite a takeaway from an interaction with only 2 different people.
      • irishcoffee 1 hour ago
        Oh, well I guess you can just read this forum to see how Europeans feel about Americans too, the Australian guy was the interesting one. I wasn’t surprised by the European.
        • rbanffy 1 hour ago
          Expecting a place the size of Europe or the US to be culturally homogeneous would be a huge mistake.
          • aggakake 53 minutes ago
            The US and Mexico share the same continent, and the populations are exactly alike!
  • BoumTAC 2 hours ago
    Americans enjoying their huge American salaries while working remotely from poor European countries
    • crote 1 hour ago
      What makes you believe you'll be able to do so?

      Most European countries have surprisingly strict visa requirements - and those apply to Americans as well. Unlike a short holiday trip, you can't just move because you feel like it!

      The most likely path for the HN public is probably a "highly-skilled worker" visa, but that requires you to have a sponsoring employer in Europe - which means you won't be getting that fancy American salary. And you'll also have to pay local taxes...

      • rbanffy 1 hour ago
        I'm always surprised by how many American tourists have to turn back because they thought they wouldn't need a visa.
        • triceratops 30 minutes ago
          Were they wrong? American tourists mostly don't need a visa to be tourists in Europe. Working is a different matter.
    • garbawarb 1 hour ago
      In practice almost no companies let you do this.

      If you know of one that does and is hiring, please share...

      • coreyh14444 1 hour ago
        It is also the EU Countries and Visas. Before I moved to Denmark I just assumed they'd just welcome Americans with money but you can't just have any job, you have to be paid by a Danish company, over a certain level or found a startup with very specific requirements, etc.
        • optionalsquid 48 minutes ago
          Danish immigration laws are also very strict. Most of our political parties have been competed to further tighten those rules over the last couple of decades. We literally have people advocating to leave the convention on human rights, since it’s getting in the way of that
      • BoumTAC 1 hour ago
        I don't know how they do this, but Paris is full of Americans living there.

        I think they stay for a few months. Maybe they just don't tell their company and the company still think they are working in the same place.

        • dminor 19 minutes ago
          French immigration is currently allowing remote workers on the one year visitor visa, so long as your company doesn't have a presence in France. Basically, as long as you are not doing business in France or taking a job from a local they are fine with it.

          However, it's difficult to proceed to a residency permit in this situation, and you can't join the national healthcare system.

        • jbstack 18 minutes ago
          VPN. Simple as that. Most companies aren't bothering to check anyway, most that do aren't detecting VPNs, and for the few that do that, there are ways to circumvent detection if you are really determined.
        • crote 1 hour ago
          Visa-wise, they are probably just committing fraud by staying on a tourist visa.
          • rbanffy 1 hour ago
            At least Europeans won't send them to labor camps in El Salvador.

            edit: burn karma burn

      • rbanffy 1 hour ago
        > In practice almost no companies let you do this.

        And, if they do, they might have legal issues brewing they are not aware of.

    • officialchicken 1 hour ago
      QoL is more important than hustle culture to most people
    • aianus 1 hour ago
      Yeah, pretty much. You can make enough money in 10-15 years in tech in America to last a lifetime in Europe, even without the remote job.
      • rbanffy 1 hour ago
        You still might need a resident visa.
    • kolinko 1 hour ago
      With 6-9h timezone difference? Even if a company will allow this (and few will), it's very hard to pull off, and your social/family life will suffer big time.

      I know people who manage to do this, but it's difficult, and not really worth it unless you have a seriously amazing job.

      • rbanffy 1 hour ago
        > and your social/family life will suffer big time

        Not sure about family, but you can get new friends here. When I go to the office, on my walk back home, I often pass by some very nice pubs overflowing with extremely happy and friendly people, and that is when I leave at 17:00.

        You'll also get nice things like the metric system. And, in Ireland, one of the sanest political systems on the planet. It's so sane it's almost boring.

      • aqme28 1 hour ago
        Most remote jobs don't require you to keep the exact same hours, but rather to have some overlap. So it can effectively only feel like ~3h timezone difference.
    • the_70x 1 hour ago
      Maybe during Covid. Now many companies are making employees RTO
    • afpx 1 hour ago
      Where is the Frisco, TX of Europe?
  • ineedaj0b 1 hour ago
    the inflow to the US is historically low, and this increase of US to EU immigrants is a very good thing imo - the US should be more US, the EU more EU, China more China etc etc.
    • rbanffy 53 minutes ago
      Isolation breeds difference, but not diversity.
  • geremiiah 1 hour ago
    Almost all of these are 1st or 2nd gen European diaspora, or the spouses of such people, who 1. still have financial ties to the European country from which they originate through inheritance of assets from their parents/grandparents 2. have citizenship through descent.

    The amount of "unaffiliated" Americans who move to Europe is probably negligible.

    • crote 1 hour ago
      You'd be surprised. I personally know plenty of American LGBT+ people who are at least considering moving to the EU, simply because recent political developments has made the US an increasingly-unsafe country for them to live in.
    • sebastiennight 1 hour ago
      Wouldn't this (unsubstantiated claim, but let's play along) be more troubling though?

      It would be one thing if people who are "unaffiliated USA citizens[0]" moved to an imaginary place where the grass is greener. You could argue they don't know about all the problems of that place.

      It's maybe more concerning if the people who flew Place A, because of all the problems of Place A, looking for greener grass in Country B, are looking around and going "hey you know what? Place A wasn't so bad after all. The grass only looked greener because it's plastic!" and then go back.

      [0]: let's acknowledge we're just talking shades of the same color, when referring to a country that's 250 years old. Nobody's "from there" really

      • rbanffy 55 minutes ago
        > Nobody's "from there" really

        I once had a Native American on one of my teams. That, and a lot of my fellow Brazilians here are at least partly of the original people.

        Which came from Asia, through an ice bridge between Asia and North America a couple ice ages back, so, in the end, I guess we are all Africans.

      • rbanffy 58 minutes ago
        Doing research prior to moving is extremely important.

        At the time I moved to Ireland, I learned a vicious gang war was happening in the northern regions of Dublin. Up to April 2016, when I arrived, four (four!) people had been murdered in that unprecedented violent event.