Financial Checklist for Moving Abroad (+ 10 Mistakes to Avoid)

3–4 minutes
Avoid these 10 common financial mistakes when moving abroad

Moving to another country is exciting. But ignoring your finances can cost you thousands.

This guide covers:

  • A timeline and step‑by‑step checklist
  • Banking, taxes, retirement accounts, insurance, estate planning
  • 10 common financial mistakes to avoid

Let’s get started.

Quick Timeline

TimelineKey Tasks
6‑12 months beforeResearch visas, housing, health coverage.
3‑6 months beforeRenew passport, build moving budget, plan banking.
1‑3 months beforeBook movers, arrange insurance, review taxes, notify banks.
Final monthClose local services, digitise documents, confirm logistics.
First 90 days abroadOpen local account, register, track tax deadlines.

Step‑by‑Step Checklist

1. Visas & Residency

  • Know your visa type (work, study, retirement) and financial proof requirements.
  • Ensure passport validity (many countries require 6+ months).

2. Banking & Currency

  • Before moving: Keep your home account active; notify your bank of your move.
  • Open a multi‑currency account (Wise, Revolut) for low‑cost transfers.
  • After arrival: Open a local bank account as soon as possible.
  • Currency risk: Convert gradually over time, not all at once. Use limit orders.

3. Credit Score (US readers)

  • Your credit history does not transfer abroad.
  • Keep one US credit card active. Apply for a secured card in your new country.

4. Taxes (Critical)

  • US citizens: File taxes every year on worldwide income. Report foreign accounts (FBAR/FATCA).
  • Singapore citizens: Taxed only on Singapore‑sourced income. Foreign income brought in is exempt.
  • Malaysia citizens: Similar territorial system; foreign‑sourced income exemption extended to 2036.
  • Always check the double‑taxation treaty between your home and new country.

5. Retirement Accounts

  • US: Keep 401(k)/IRA in the US. Roth accounts may not be tax‑free abroad. Update your address.
  • Singapore (CPF): Update contact details. Withdrawals at 65 are tax‑free in Singapore.
  • Malaysia (EPF): Update address. Full withdrawal at 55. Tax‑free in Malaysia.

6. Health Insurance

  • Domestic policies rarely cover long‑term international stays.
  • Buy international health insurance (IMG, Cigna Global, Allianz Care) before you move.

7. Estate Planning

  • A home will may not be valid abroad.
  • Update your will with a local attorney. Appoint a power of attorney in your home country.

8. Property & Business

  • Decide before you leave: sell, rent, or hold? Each has tax and cash flow consequences.
  • If renting, understand local landlord‑tenant laws.

9. Moving Costs (Hidden)

Hidden CostExample
Shipping insuranceLoss/damage during transit
Temporary housingShort‑term rental
Visa & permit feesFiling, medical exams
Pet relocationQuarantine, vet checks
Utility depositsElectricity, gas, internet

Budget 20‑30% extra beyond your initial estimate.

10. Final Pre‑Departure Tasks

  • Digitise important documents (passport, visa, tax returns, bank statements).
  • Obtain apostilles for documents that may be needed abroad.
  • Set up mail forwarding (USPS, SingPost, Pos Malaysia).
  • Keep a tax folder with prior returns and proof of foreign address.

10 Financial Mistakes to Avoid

#MistakeQuick Fix
1Assuming credit score transfersKeep a home credit card active
2Closing all home accountsKeep at least one account open
3Ignoring brokerage restrictionsCheck expat policy before moving
4No plan for property/businessDecide: sell, rent, or hold
5Underestimating moving costsBudget 20‑30% extra
6Ignoring currency riskConvert gradually, use multi‑currency account
7Not reviewing investmentsShift to global ETFs if needed
8Wrong health insuranceBuy international health coverage
9Outdated estate planUpdate will for cross‑border validity
10Waiting on tax residencyDetermine status before you move

Your 30‑Day Action Plan

WeekAction
1Check visa requirements, passport validity, and brokerage expat policy.
2Open a multi‑currency account. Notify your home bank and credit card issuer.
3Get international health insurance quotes. Decide on property/business.
4Update your will. Digitise documents. Set up mail forwarding.

My Take (Finance Mojito Style)

Moving abroad is a financial reset opportunity – but only if you plan properly. I have watched friends lose thousands because they assumed their credit score would transfer, or because they closed their home bank account and could not pay a final tax bill.

None of these mistakes are complicated to fix. You just need to know they exist.

Use this checklist. Tick every box. Then move with confidence.

Here is to your financial clarity. One sip at a time. 🍸

Siljack Wong

Related Guides


🔗 External Links

LinkPurpose
IRS – Expat Tax InformationUS tax rules
Wise Multi‑currency AccountLower‑cost international transfers
IMGlobal – International Health InsuranceExample expat health provider

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