2. Look into the visa requirements & start the visa procedure
Expand the basic inventory that you made in the orientation phase.
Use online communities and forums, check recent experiences from people who requested the visa and have the same nationality as you do. Double check their advice.
Check for everyone if they need a work permit or residence permit, if they meet the requirements for that and which documents are necessary.
Some countries have extra requirements, such as medical clearances or police certificates.
Arrange a definitive contract or proof of employment with your future employer.
Contact the consulate or embassy before you emigrate and (double) check the current state of (visa) affairs.
Download all required documents and read the notices.
Plan way ahead, visa procedures can take long, up to several years (be flexible in purchasing/selling housing, finding temporary housing etc.).
Consider using a visa service company, especially for popular emigration countries.
3. Check which documents you need to legalize
Find out if your new country has a treaty with your native country.
Find out which documents need translation and into which language.
Find out which documents you need to legalize.
Provide birth certificates, marriage certificates, evidence of (special) (work) skills, diplomas, recommendation letters.
Start on time.
4. Check your insurance policies and ask for advice
Create an overview of your current policies, contract terms, contact information.
Ask about the consequences of your emigration with regards to current insurance policies and make sure that you terminate them in time.
Make sure that you terminate home insurances, property insurances, car insurances etc. at the correct time: not too early (not insured), not too late (double costs).
Whether your new country has treaties with your home country.
Whether to get local insurance or not.
Whether the insurance provided by your local employer provides enough coverage.
Getting international health insurance.
Start on time, mindful of how long medical checks can take to complete.
4. How to prepare documents?
Check the validity of all passports. Or arrange passports for family members with a different kind of ID.
Also bring: passport photos, drivers licenses (possibly a temporary international driver's license), birth certificates, marriage certificates, last wills, documents on euthanasia, police certificates, divorce papers, death certificates (if your previous partner died), recommendation letters, diplomas, resume/CV, medical files, evidences of being creditworthy, school files, insurance papers, student ID's, medicine recipes and proof of the vaccinations you had.
Make an easy-to-find archive for every family member with (copies of) personal documents.
Make sure you know about recent developments concerning double nationalities and find out how to extend your passport in your new home country.
Consider using an online/digital safe or cloud functionality and give access to your lawyer or someone you trust.
Gather receipts of the properties you take with you (proof you own them already, to avoid breaking import laws).
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