Any Takers For The Taliban’s New Investment Visa?
Any Takers For The Taliban’s New Investment Visa?
Notes From the Field By James Hickman (Simon Black) February 23, 2026
Just imagine how tranquil your retirement could be in... sunny Afghanistan! You could wake up in the morning to the pleasant sound of celebratory gunfire... then artfully dodge landmines left behind by not one, but two different superpower invasions on your way to witness the day’s beheading.
You could cap off the afternoon spelunking through mountain caves where you might bump into actual jihadists, then end the day with a stroll through a war-torn city’s desperate poverty.
If this sounds ideal to you, then you're in luck! The Taliban now offers an investment visa for foreigners to obtain residency in Afghanistan.
This is a real thing; earlier this month, Afghanistan's Economic Commission approved a proposal to offer foreign investors residency permits of up to ten years. Put your money into Afghan mining, construction, or energy, and you too can call Kabul home.
Sure, the banking system is cut off from the international financial network, US sanctions make it effectively illegal for Western companies to operate there, and girls aren't allowed to attend school past sixth grade. The roads, power grid, and water systems are barely functional. And the country has been at war, in some form, for over forty years.
Any takers?
Fortunately the world is a big place, and there are plenty of other options besides Afghanistan.
And while we poke fun at the Taliban, the core concept of obtaining residency in another country is one of the smartest things you can do to give yourself a Plan B.
The logic is simple. If your home country feels like an increasingly unfamiliar place— as a lot of people in the West feel right now— then it makes sense to have a backup... a place you can go, legally, on your own terms, even if borders close or things get weird.
We saw this play out during COVID. When governments around the world slammed their borders shut in 2020. Tourists were locked out— flights canceled, entry denied.
But people who had established legal residency in a foreign country still had the right to enter and stay, just like citizens.
Families who had taken that step years earlier found that they had options— another place to leave the chaos, work remotely from their second home, and wait out the insanity on their own terms.
Those who hadn't were stuck wherever they happened to be, subject to whatever restrictions their local governments decided to impose.
That distinction— tourist versus legal resident— became the difference between freedom and lockdown. Overnight. And this might matter again.
But a second residency isn’t about crises and pandemics..
A lot of people start by simply finding a place they enjoy. They visit somewhere on vacation — Costa Rica, Portugal, Malaysia, wherever— and they love it. They go back a few times. Eventually they start looking at property. Maybe they buy a place and rent it out when they're not using it.
Over time, they realize they've built something more than a vacation spot. They've got a home in a country where life is slower, the food is better, and their money goes a lot further.
And that last part matters more than most people think.
The cost of living in much of the world is a fraction of what it is in the West. A couple living on Social Security and a modest level of savings— money that barely covers the basics in most American cities — can live extremely well in dozens of countries.
We're talking beachfront property, hired help, great healthcare, and money left over at the end of the month.
There are plenty of ways to obtain residency abroad. In some countries, you can become a legal resident by purchasing property— something that you might want to do anyhow.
In Panama, you can become a legal resident by purchasing property for roughly $300,000 — and that buys you genuinely nice real estate in a country where property prices can be $100 to $200 per square foot.
In Europe, countries like Portugal and Greece have set up formal programs specifically designed to attract foreign capital in exchange for residency rights.
There are also plenty of countries that don't even require an investment— where simply demonstrating you have a pension (like Social Security) is enough to qualify.
Other places (like Australia or New Zealand) are looking strictly at skill needs, so younger people with valuable work experience can obtain residency.
Everyone's situation is different. For some people it's a beachfront villa in Central America. For others it's a flat in Lisbon. For others it's a farm in New Zealand. The world is full of options.
The point is that none of this is radical. It's not about fleeing. It's about having the option to go somewhere you actually enjoy — somewhere you might already vacation — and having the legal right to stay there indefinitely if you ever need to.
It's the same logic as any insurance policy. You don't buy fire insurance because you want your house to burn down. You buy it because you'd rather not find out the hard way that you needed it. That’s what a Plan B is about.
To your freedom, James Hickman Co-Founder, Schiff Sovereign LLC