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by cinquemb
1772 days ago
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It was more inconvenient in the past, but with things like (transfer)wise/paypal/stablecoins+crypto it's not that big an issue. Easier for me to be bankless as an american abroad than to try bother to jump through all the hoops and getting a "real" bank account. |
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At some point you need a long-term visa, which means you need a job, and that job will require you to have a (local) bank account.
Need to pay bills? You can't pay in cryptocurrency, and they expect local currency. Some may accept credit cards, but most will probably only accept debit or bank transfer. Ones that accept credit cards may only accept national cards.
If you're a US citizen and you have a bank account in the US (or credit cards), and they find out you're no longer residing in the US, they'll probably close your accounts to avoid dealing with FACTA. You'll need to setup special bank accounts, and may also need to switch your brokerage accounts.
At some point credit card companies will realize you're living somewhere else and will close your accounts, because they're intended to be used on vacation in other countries, but not long-term.
To use crypto, you need to convert it into fiat, and you can't do that without a bank account.