Home Blog About Wayborne →
Second Citizenship · Residency · Descent

You probably already have more options than you think.

Most people assume a second passport is reserved for the wealthy. It isn't. The pathways exist — citizenship by descent, naturalization, democratic memory laws — and ordinary people qualify every day.

Valletta at dusk
The premise

Optionality isn't a luxury. It's a principle. The legal mechanisms to build a life with more flexibility — a second home, a second passport, the right to belong somewhere else — have always existed. They just weren't explained to the right people.

A word from Garrett

This is the information I wish I'd had earlier.

I've spent years in this space — researching pathways, navigating the process myself across multiple countries, building tools to make it easier. I'm not a lawyer and I won't pretend to be.

But I know this territory well. And I've watched too many people assume the door was closed before they ever tried it. This channel, this blog, this toolkit — it exists to change that.

The work is real. The pathways are real. And the people who use them aren't special — they just knew where to look.

Garrett
Three ways to use this.

YouTube Channel

Deep-dive video guides on citizenship pathways, country by country. One video per week. Real research, plain English.

Watch the channel →

The Blog

Long-form guides on every pathway, country, and legal mechanism. SEO-indexed, always free, no paywalls.

Read the articles →

Wayborne

A citizenship and residency pathway tracker. CRS calculator, document checklists, milestone timelines. Launching soon.

Join the waitlist →
From the blog.
View all articles →
Our mission

"Most of the information that could change your life is sitting behind a paywall, buried in a lawyer's retainer, or just never talked about in plain English. That's what this is for. No hype, no investment minimums, no agenda. Just the real pathways — explained clearly, pursued honestly, built for people who are willing to do the work."

— Garrett, Founder · The Common Optionalist